What makes instrument immediacy, -separation & -bo


What makes instrument immediacy, -separation & -body density ?

Most speakers i´ve heard present a "you are there" presentation, where you have the feeling of sitting in the recording room/hall. But instrument separation is mostly poor and body is thin even with high end systems.

My ideal reproduction paradigm is : the instruments are playing in my room, 5ft in front of my feet and i "look" into the stage which is ideally extending beyond wall boundaries of the front wall.
The goal is:
maximum instrument body density already at moderate levels.
high contrast between soundstage,air around the instruments and dense instrument body. grip.
instruments appear deep anchored, earthed, energized,
Immediacy while having a cohertent not forward presentation.
deep soundstage

which products (cdp,preamp,amp (300b?),speakers) favourize these design goals ?

yet i´ve found bookshelfs and tube amps to be good in these categories, but havent found a excellent system yet.
Energy speakers were not bad.
Didnt like B&W 805, Dynaudio, JMlab micro utopia - possibly with wrong (cheap) amplification.

What do you think of Reference 3a MM Decapo i with VAC ren 30/30 in a 20x17x9 room ? system budget: 9k

greets

stonedtemplepilot
stonedtemplepilot
agree with pbb....i would add that most recordings are inherently flawed (in an audiophile way)and were never intended to emulate live music.
What model Energy speakers did you like?

The early models spent a lot of effort on very wide and even dispersion and probably lead to their success as a start up company with people who left AR.

IMHO it is wide even dispersion which produces the most convincing small jazz club soundstage with precise positioning of instruments (of course you need a good recording to). A speaker with too much directivity gives the game away at once....the sound is coming from the speaker and it fails to be convincing!
Another huge factor is reverb which I should have mentioned...this is what gives the game away on the venue...as opposed to your room.

The kind of mixes you see are ones that are close miked in acoustically damped sound rooms and then engineered to convey a "real" presentation with instruments in various places (in fact it is generated by the sound engineer). These recordings do not convey any telltale room acoustics from the venue.

I have a few examples of some good recordings like this.

Dave Grusin's "Hommage to Duke"
Tower of Power "Soul Vaccination"
Steve Ferrone's "More Head" (with STP bandmembers)
George Benson "Live - Weekend in LA" (Harvey Mason's drums "On Broadway" are particularly interesting on this recording as you actually feel as though you are five feet from the drummer - perhaps a bit over done by the sound engineer but impressive nevertheless - definitely feels as if they are jamming in the room with you!)

An example of a good recording but one that definitely lets you know you are in a concert venue with lousy acoustics from the stage and hall (i.e. the opposite to what you seek) is Talking Heads "Stop Making Sense". Another of this type is Eva Cassidy "Live at the Blue Note".

At the end of the day, most of what you are seeking is down to the sound engineer mix, microphone placement and acoustics of stage or sound room. To recreate perfect positioning it usually requires separate sessions for each instrument in acoustically damped environments that are later carefuly mixed together - ever see typical video footage of a vocalist in a sound room alone with headphones and a microphone.....now you know why!

You also now know why those magical moments when a live recording sounds great are so magical....
StonedTemplePilot,

There's a trade-off relationship between immediacy and richness. The more dominant the first-arrival sound, the more immediate (front-of-the-hall) the presentation. The more dominant the reverberant energy, the more rich and ambient (rear-of-the-hall) the presentation. Room acoustics, speaker positioning, and speaker radiation characteristics come into play here.

In my opinion, the characteristics that would give what you're looking for in a loudspeaker are a slightly downward-sloping on-axis response and smooth power response along with a somewhat narrower-than-normal radiation pattern. You also want a speaker with good dynamic contrast (minimal thermal compression), as this correlates well with liveliness at low volume levels.

If you listen from more than 5 feet away from the speakers, most of the sound energy that reaches your ears is reverberant sound. A key difference between live (unplugged) and reproduced music is this: Live instruments produce natural-sounding reverberant fields, but most home sound systems don't. For example, listen to a piano from the next room, through an open doorway with no line-of-sight to the instrument. All you can hear is the reverberant energy, but it sounds totally natural and convincing. On the other hand, very few sound systems will sound real when listened to from the next room, and this is because they do not generate a spectrally (and dynamically) correct reverberant field.

Now the idea is not to have a system that you can listen to from the next room - the idea is to have a system that replicates as close as possible the sound field of a live performance. And in my opinion this cannot be done without getting the reverberant field right.

In your listening room, you want a strong, diffuse reverberant field that ideally begins to arrive as long after the first-arrival sound as possible. You do not want an overdamped room, and most home listening rooms are overdamped (carpeted, with overstuffed fabric furniture). Large plants and lots of wooden furniture are good for diffusion, or you can get dedicated diffusors. Since most of the sound energy that reaches your ears is reverberant sound (assuming you sit more than 5 feet away from the speakers), in my opinion it makes sense to start with speakers and proceed to room treatments that give you a natural-sounding reverberant field.

Regarding amplification, SET and OTL amps along with low feedback Class A solid state amps have distortion characteristics that are in harmony with how the ears work. The commonly used total harmonic distortion specification has no useful correlation to how we perceive sound - the amplifier industry has been measuring the wrong thing for years.

Duke
dealer/manufacturer
Shadorne, I'm not convinced that recording in an actual performance hall is necessary to create a sensation of live performance in playback.

In any case, there are certainly many recordings that are made live-in-the-studio & combine a sense of room acoustics with correct placement of instruments & good separation. All the CIMP direct to two-track jazz disks are recorded with musicians in one room & no close miking or compression. Or a Ry Cooder ensemble outing like "Buena Vista Social Club." The excitement of Derek & the Dominoes "Layla" is partly due to the (mostly) live-in-the-studio recording with leaks across multiple microphones. Though the sound of this session is sometimes maligned, the original LP is actually a pretty good test LP. On a good system you can hear both good instrumental separation and fidelity, as well as a very active room that communicates the energy & dynamics of a live performance in spades. In a larger setting, MTV Unplugged gigs like Alice in Chains, Nirvana, and Pearl Jam at Benaroya Hall manage to be remarkably good at separation, fidelity, and you-are-there in a real performance space.

But even many recordings that don't have technically "correct" instrument separation and obvious room effects (such as ECM or Chesky jazz CDs with the drum kit spread all over the soundstage from left to right and other instruments layered on top or behind), the sound can be uncannily real in terms of fidelity, separation, & sense of real life.

But a bad playback system deadens that sense of living, breathing performance in every case.