@rbach
There, he said it. Concise correct reply.
There, he said it. Concise correct reply.
My Long List of Amplifiers and My Personal Review of Each!
To shift gears a little, I am posting a preview of a virtual upcoming live concert at my music club, The BohemiansNYC. Listen to this 1 min video and enter into the real world of the sound of live, unamplified and unprocessed music. It is also a YouTube video, so even the mediocre YT medium is able to show the obvious worlds of difference. I hope some will be interested to hear the whole two virtual concerts on their website, clicking on YT on Mon May 3 and June 7 at 7:30 PM. The music is esoteric classical, but often great striking live sound is enough to inspire appreciation and learning new things. https://youtu.be/qVngRnQvoo0 Next, few people here will admit that Steve's video of the GTA speaker I posted on p 302, shows that none of these dynamic speakers even driven with megabucks of components, can compete with the GTA's liveness and clarity. Steve is not a professional recording engineer, and I watched him casually make several GTA videos using the same microphone as Jay into his phone. My own unique electrostatic main speaker and tweeter go beyond even the GTA for liveness and clarity, although I can admit my system's deficiency in loud dynamics and bass. The GTA video is good enough evidence to show that it comes much closer than any dynamic speaker to the live video I just posted. That said, I do thank Jay for his efforts at presenting his work and presenting Mike's valuable experience in describing sonic differences in electronics, which is all useful objective information to have, regardless of tastes. If Jay can find great natural recordings of music he likes, it will more informatively demonstrate the differences he is learning about. |
So on the video you posted, at the 29 & 30 second mark, he makes my ears hurt when he screams. Are you saying that magico is actually closer to the real thing then ? Because i hear this exact shouty feeling when a singer hits their notes hard through the magico while other speakers just ended up mellowing out these particular passages. I’d love to know what is truth or a lie about sound reproduction. I don’t believe for one second that ALL music sounds smooth and yes some speakers smooth out everything and yet we think of this as a damn good sound reproduction. |
Jay, Thanks for listening and making valid observations. At 29-30 seconds, the singer's peak is at 300 Hz, with harmonic overtones much higher. This recording was made in a small room that I am not familiar with. But in the regular hall where they usually present concerts, I have heard male and female singers, piano and other instruments. In one concert I was sitting in the 1st row about 6 feet away from a female singer. Even I was shocked at the power of her voice, unamplified. These classical music singers have incredible training like you do as a top rated bodybuilder. On peaks, it was probably 100-110 dB at fundamentals of 600-1000 Hz, and much higher freq overtones. The ear is most sensitive in the midrange, esp 3000 Hz. If you thought the male singer was screaming, then YOU would have screamed and covered your ears if your heard that female singer! Her tonality was actually even dryer than I anticipated, which confirmed my understanding of what sonic truth is. More revealing audio components are neutral and dry. In a room with carpets and soft wood walls, the tone is warmer and sweeter due to HF absorption, but recordings with close microphones are not made in such rooms, so to tell the truth about the live sound, the audio system should be neutral and on the dry side. This illustrates that live music is often loud and unpleasant. But it is the truth, and if you want to hear all the complexity of the music, it is desirable to have a truthful, revealing system. My solution to this problem is to keep listening levels modest. For most of my favorite small scale music, live levels are average 60-70 dB with rare peaks to 90 dB, so my electrostatic speakers maximally reveal the truth at live, natural levels. My system does well at 80-90 dB, which accommodates a lot of large scale symphonic music. Even the music you have presented, like Iron Hand, Keith don't go, and the latest Sara K video of the guitar and female voice, have modest SPL's in the low 80's, although for Keith don't go I enjoy listening at home at 70 dB whereas you like 82 dB. But I hate smoothed over hifi which robs me of the full enjoyment of the intricacies of my music. I have tried many euphonic amps, and I can't get the exhilarating sparkle I know is present in the music by cranking the system to loud levels. Euphonic mud won't develop life by pushing the SPL, just as a blurry photo will actually be worse if you magnify it. Today's high rez TV screens let you maximally enjoy your videos, even from a small screen, much better than a large screen of outdated low rez. |