Width of Stage


I now have a very good CDP to go with my high end TT.

Dave Brubeck Time Out, LP approx. 50yrs old, CD about 25yrs old and a Japan SACD new.

Comparing all three I hear symbols on the LP and  SACD that I do not on the CD.

The big difference (warmth of LP aside) is the width of the stage, is quit a bit wider when playing the LP! Is this normal?

Thank you for your input.

sabrejet
I have several sets of content: i.e. Beatles, Sgt. Peppers; others,

CD; LP; Reel to Reel Tape. 

Invariably everyone prefers LP to Cd and prefers R2R to LP.

I had 300 wpc McIntosh SS, and 30 wpc tubes. Invariably ...tubes!

It defies 'noise' logic, and it isn't 'warmth'

After listening for 50 years, I simply sum it up that Analog gets the Overtones 'right'.
LPs will always be the highest sound quality if you have a great TT and cartridge. 
LPs will always be the highest sound quality if you have a great TT and cartridge.

Well it's great this issue is finally settled. lol  
TT's are the one acoustic medium that enable you to hear cymbals and symbols simultaneously.  Quite a feat!
This is gonna trigger some people but you posted this in tech talk so let's talk tech. The auditory cues that allow us to localize sounds and create the sound stage in our minds are fundamentally timing in nature. There's frequency involved and a few other things, its actually quite fascinating when you did down into it. But the fundamental nature of the thing is timing. This is why speaker symmetry is so important, for example, and side wall reflections.  

Okay so you play your record, stylus traces the groove. Which by the way the smallest squiggles on the groove wall are so incredibly small they're on the order of some large organic molecules. So incredible detail. No idea how many times you'd have to sample to trace an organic molecule but got a pretty good hunch its more than thousands per second, and probably up there in the millions. Orders of magnitude at any rate above any current or even proposed rates of digital.  

Now as Ledermann and others rightly point out the stylus does not so much trace out the groove as bounce around sampling it. These guys call this jitter which for some reason infuriates (beyond merely being triggered) certain people. Whatever word you want to use for it bounces and samples. Its imperfect. Nobody saying its perfect. The stylus does not trace out organic molecules.  

Instead the whole thing- stylus, cantilever, motor, body, and arm and table too for that matter- starts vibrating. Really good to listen to Ledermann as he points out the phono cartridge is a generator that puts out a signal that is continuous as long as its moving. Does not know which is which, groove or harmonic resonance. The signal it produces is a combination of them all.  

Just like everything else in nature. Every twig, voice, trumpet and snare, every cymbal, and every room, they all resonate and generate vibrations and sounds- continuously. All the time.  

Consequently our nervous systems have evolved to live in this continuously vibrating continuous signal environment. We don't have time to think if that sound the tiger made came from 3 feet or 30 years to the left. It has to happen fast. It has to be automatic.  

Playing a record accurately reproduces this environment. With all its many flaws nevertheless the one thing it is not doing is chopping the vibrations up into lots of pieces of samples and putting them back together again.  

All this long-winded explanation to get to Michael Fremer's succinct, "There's more there there."
 


Hearing symbols..wow!

Playing my album, I can only hear the crash and shimmer of the cymbals on my system. Got me a  '59 mono-beautiful!

Must be missing something on my copy. 

Sorry, couldn't resist. Too much quarantine time. 
@millercarbon I don't disagree at all.  

Good to know. Thanks.

btw it should go without saying this site has the worst spell check anywhere ever. It turned "dig" into "did" and "yards" into "years". Oh well.

One question for sabrejet about the stage being wider with LP. This same thing has come up a few times recently. In my experience this is a combination of greater image focus and greater sense of the original acoustic space.

Take something like the cymbals. Any system any format they are somewhere off to the left. The better it gets the more palpable and precise this becomes until they physically embody an exact location in 3D space and you can practically see the light shimmering off them right along with the sound. Its been so long and the system has improved so much its hard to remember but it sure seems to me like they never really moved very much if at all but instead the sense of dimensionality became so much stronger they seem so much more real and that is what creates the feeling of bigger.  

This sense is of course much greater with LP because of its much better balance between leading edge transients and harmonic development of the fundamental tone, a crucial set of details thrown all out of balance when the signal is chopped up and reconstituted digitally. 

The other thing that happens is the sense of the natural acoustic signature of the recording venue comes through more clearly and so greatly improves the sense of space that it makes the whole stage feel wider and bigger. LP has to me an even bigger advantage here as the subtle balance is even more critical here with the digital sense of space seeming whispy and skeletal by comparison. 

So that is what I'm curious to know, is that your experience too?
If you can hear them on your LP and SACD, but not CD, unless your CDP has some issue, the odds are it is just not mixed the same. They are mixed differently, more often than not, especially a 25yr old CD, not to mention the record likely has some compression of the highest volume peaks that brings out the rest.


Is there any point in pointing out that the following statement shows a lack of understanding of the timing of multi-channel digitized audio (or any digitized system) for that matter?  All that matters is the analog bandwidth, jitter, channel to channel timing jitter, and signal to noise ratio assuming the sampling rate is sufficient to capture the analog and allow reasonable analog filters. Sampling rate has literally no effect on timing beyond supporting the analog bandwidth. Absolutely none. It is a common misconception that it does, but it does not. No room for a full course on Nyquist here, but feel free to research.
Okay so you play your record, stylus traces the groove. Which by the way the smallest squiggles on the groove wall are so incredibly small they’re on the order of some large organic molecules. So incredible detail. No idea how many times you’d have to sample to trace an organic molecule but got a pretty good hunch its more than thousands per second, and probably up there in the millions. Orders of magnitude at any rate above any current or even proposed rates of digital.

All that matters is the analog bandwidth, jitter, channel to channel timing jitter, and signal to noise ratio assuming the sampling rate is sufficient to capture the analog and allow reasonable analog filters.

No room for a full course on the history of Perfect Sound Forever, MP3, etc. But feel free to research.
Which does not change at all that what you stated was categorically wrong. Why not take the time to learn something critical to the hobby instead of repeating inaccurate information and misleading people?

No room for a full course on the history of Perfect Sound Forever, MP3, etc. But feel free to research.

The big difference (warmth of LP aside) is the width of the stage, is quit a bit wider when playing the LP! Is this normal?

Yes, no, maybe, and all open to interpretation.

Other than the additional mainly high frequency noise in vinyl, the other big variable is cross-talk, which can surprisingly improve imaging perception, especially in untreated rooms by reducing the impact of reflections which can make imaging fuzzy and bringing the image more between the speakers, though people will claim "wider" though really just better.  Realistically, when you go to a live music event, how often are instruments or amplified sounds coming from outside an angle of the typical listening position with speaker placement. For many, speakers are 30 degrees on either side of center which is wider than most viewing positions. The reflections you are going to get from your own room.


+1 heaudo123! Channel cross-talk in LP playback is an oft-overlooked factor! And something not present in digital recording and playback!
Generally there is information missing on CD playback. It not very obvious because you get used to the medium and you don’t know what you’re missing until you compare mediums. There are a number of reasons why stock out-of-the-box CD playback cannot match the tonality, dynamics or the resolution of LP playback, or even cassette playback for that matter! Those reasons include, as I oft counsel, the interference of scattered laser light getting into the photodetector, the interference of external vibration induced by the transport mechanism and transformer, the fluttering of the CD during play and seismic-type low frequency vibration coming up from the floor.

There are other reasons, too, but time doesn’t permit. Those are the main ones. Sorry to be a bear 🐻 of bad gnus. 🐃 🐃

The good gnus 🐃 is that CD playback can sound dynamic, analog and tonality correct when those main problems are rectified. Otherwise, I guess you’ll have to live with sound that is compressed, rolled off, bass shy, two dimensional, boring, congealed, generic, like elevator music.
The interesting thing about channel cross talk in LP playback is that it is in reverse polarity, which potentially mimics the effect of stereo widening methods such as Polk SDA and Carver Sonic Holography, except it lacks the time delay and any HRTF effects. There also can be significant pre-echo in LP playback. I don't know that either of those cause a perceptible effect in stereo width, but it makes me wonder. There's a lot going on there that doesn't happen when listening to a live acoustic instrument. 

There was an article written years ago about a visit to a Telarc orchestral recording session. I searched google but can't seem to find it. Anyway, the guy, who I recall had complained about the sound of CDs in other articles, was shocked to be listening to the orchestra playing right in front of his eyes yet producing sound that was like CD playback! He concluded that the extreme push for quiet background noise by using tight fitting clothing, squeak free chairs, no music pages turning or audience coughs, had led to an unnatural sound. 

I've been to live orchestral performances in recent years that sounded very uninspiring to me due to overly dead playback venues. I'll take a well recorded CD played through my speakers and a run-of-the-mill consumer CD player or even MP3 player over that sound any day. 

All pressings / recordings are not created equal.  Even CD's vary from release to release. Engineers juice the recording each time based on expected audience and their own mastering equipment.


BINGO! ... though I am not sure the level of crosstalk is sufficient to cancel enough of the sound from the opposite channel such that the signal from each speaker is isolated to each ear, at least at some level.  Look up ambiophonics, a modern take.

asctim6 posts05-14-2020 2:41pmThe interesting thing about channel cross talk in LP playback is that it is in reverse polarity, which potentially mimics the effect of stereo widening methods such as Polk SDA and Carver Sonic Holography, except it lacks the time delay and any HRTF effects.