wolf
With all due respect, let me clarify a few things.
wolf - The
"same as live" concept is irrelevant
If you
are listening to a live band on stage and you turn your head – what happens to
the band members? Do they follow your head and stay in front of your face? No.
Their
positions on stage are fixed. The drum set is still sitting where they set it
up.
The
stability I’m referring to does not have to do with turning your head – instead
its how you perceive their location while listening. When there are problems
with velocity, the resulting image is out of focus. You have a good idea where
the drum set is but not the exact location. When the focus becomes sharp and
crystal clear you begin to identify the exact locations of each drum in the set
separately.
wolf - (I’ve
mixed and recorded hundreds of live concerts from Richie Havens to the
Baltimore Consort)
I am no
stranger to recording. I have built
recording studios in the ‘70s. I also
recorded Duke Ellington live.
wolf -"black
backgrounds" exist in a vacuum only. We really have to ban the "black
background" term…really…perhaps the most overused and patently useless
audio bullshit term since it appeared a few years ago.
You can
have an amplifier that is dead quite when no music is playing. There is a big difference between noise at
the noise floor and noise that appears when music is present. What I am I
referring to is the simultaneous projection of sound objects into space while
STILL having a black background (like a canvas). That scenario is difficult if
not impossible to achieve with conventional amplifiers. Conventional amplifiers
produce a phase noise while trying present sound objects in your image. Objects
that are side by side on stage have clear air space between them. If your image
is out of focus (and it is) the blurry portion from both will overlap to some
degree and not allow the output to drop all the way down to the noise floor. This
results in a “grey” background. Once the music stops – it returns to a black
background or at least as quiet as the noise floor. That should be happening
between individual notes but it doesn’t.
Roger