5.1 audiophile listening with repurposed home theater into a Sound Stage using VLC


I created a sound stage for 5.1 using balanced speakers arranged in a row and a home theatre receiver, with a subwoofer. The music is streamed from my website

       http://discretemono.com

into VLC, and consists of about 40 pieces of music that I mixed with Audacity from the multi-track projects into Dolby 5 channels and coded into .AC3. These projects are from the non-profit UK site 

       http://www.cambridge-mt.com/ms-mtk.htm

and my website is not sponsored, is free, and is all personally paid for. It's all about experimenting and spreading the word. The mixing graphs are associated with each piece on http://discretemono.com.

The sound that comes from the mono channels is open, with great clarity, and spatial to a degree that the sweet spot of stereo aspires to but does not match. Yet this mix is done by point and click in a few seconds, and encoded in less than a minute.

The streamed .AC3 files have a spatial quality that even comes across in stereo - listen on headphones, and compare the discrete mono mixed Dead Roses by Andrew Cole with the youtube mixes. You will be amazed - stereo mixes are so different from the open, spatial and transparent multi-channel mix.

I have more information about this in medium.com:

      https://medium.com/search?q=discrete%20mono

If you go so far as to repurpose your speakers to a sound stage, and visit discretemono.com, and listen to some of the mixes, may I recommend: dead roses (acoustic folk), milk cow blues (country), heart peripheral (techno), that's entertainment (musical chorus), and Mozart (classical).

I am part of a coming revolution in audiophile listening, streamed from the Internet, but to make it happen, the big companies that own the music will have to re-mix them for Dolby 5 or Dolby 7, and the concept of the sound stage may find a solution different from five wired speakers.

I welcome your experience and comments......thank you, please send to discrete.mono@gmail.com

ps
There is streaming AC3 music in jazzgroove.com which has no selection, and tidal.com has 5.1 music in its pay for play portfolio. I find that the loudness wars have won in many of these, and the nature of the sound is again different from what you get by using discrete mono to redirect the stems into channels. So you decide what you would prefer, and you would find Mark Waldrep's blog on this very interesting:

http://www.realhd-audio.com/?p=4443




multichannel
i am all about better listening experiences... multi-mono, whatevuh... i will have a listen
by the way, i have access  to some very affordable master-remix talent. we just need the system-hardware to mix on if it differs from the usual culprits...
it is all freeware Audacity to import stems and export to 5.1 or 7.1 and VLC to play...every piece in discrete.mono has its channel map
Two stereo tracks have been mixed....5.1 has five channels - centre, left, right, outside left, outside right....

so if you put the stereo L and R channel into the 5.1 L and R you get back what you started with....the channels may be more separated but not the individual stems....if you were to take the stereo L and R and put them into L and R and also both into Centre, that might be interesting but it would merge them rather than separate them....I will try it but don't think there will be much difference....can report back