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-   -   Adding reverb to hi-fi (https://www.audiobanter.co.uk/uk-rec-audio-general-audio/6733-adding-reverb-hi-fi.html)

tony sayer July 7th 07 01:21 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
In article et, Deputy
Dumbya Dawg writes

"Laurence Payne" lpayne1NOSPAM@dslDOTpipexDOTcom wrote in
message ...
On Fri, 06 Jul 2007 20:26:57 +0200, "Mogens V."
wrote:

Of cause not. However, I fail to see how the fixed room can
provide
what's not present in a 2D stereo recording.


But, somehow, you CAN get 3D from 2-channel playback. It's
non-intuitive, and easy to argue against. But it happens.

Rather like the infinite resolution of analogue versus the
quantised
resolution of digital :-)


Tell you what. Put Madonna's Immaculate Collection on and if
you don't hear 3d from your stereo with that overdone example
of a recording your system is being drown out by the acoustics
of your room.

No matter how much you spend on equipment you will never hear
the detail that is in the recordings if your room is not
acoustically optimized. It amazes me how people will spend
thousands on cables and new tubes and then wonder why they
cant hear anything different.



Possibly they don't know anything about how to do so?..

Like putting Channel
#5 on a pig
and wondering why all you can smell is pig in the morning.


Chanel 5 mon ami;)


peace
dawg



--
Tony Sayer


Mogens V. July 7th 07 03:45 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
tony sayer wrote:
In article et, Deputy
Dumbya Dawg writes

"Laurence Payne" lpayne1NOSPAM@dslDOTpipexDOTcom wrote in
message ...

On Fri, 06 Jul 2007 20:26:57 +0200, "Mogens V."
wrote:


Of cause not. However, I fail to see how the fixed room can
provide
what's not present in a 2D stereo recording.

But, somehow, you CAN get 3D from 2-channel playback. It's
non-intuitive, and easy to argue against. But it happens.

Rather like the infinite resolution of analogue versus the
quantised
resolution of digital :-)


Tell you what. Put Madonna's Immaculate Collection on and if
you don't hear 3d from your stereo with that overdone example
of a recording your system is being drown out by the acoustics
of your room.

No matter how much you spend on equipment you will never hear
the detail that is in the recordings if your room is not
acoustically optimized. It amazes me how people will spend
thousands on cables and new tubes and then wonder why they
cant hear anything different.


Possibly they don't know anything about how to do so?..


That, and that a sound treated room doesn't look like a normal living
room, plus furnitures gets arranged according to indoor decoration
rules, leaving those speakers to look nicer and unobtrusive halfways
hidden next to some bookshelf.
Yes, I'm aware nice looking materials do exist; still...

--
Kind regards,
Mogens V.


tony sayer July 7th 07 04:29 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
No matter how much you spend on equipment you will never hear
the detail that is in the recordings if your room is not
acoustically optimized. It amazes me how people will spend
thousands on cables and new tubes and then wonder why they
cant hear anything different.


Possibly they don't know anything about how to do so?..


That, and that a sound treated room doesn't look like a normal living
room, plus furnitures gets arranged according to indoor decoration
rules, leaving those speakers to look nicer and unobtrusive halfways
hidden next to some bookshelf.
Yes, I'm aware nice looking materials do exist; still...


Come to that any websites advising on the subject?....
--
Tony Sayer



Bret Ludwig July 7th 07 11:08 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
On Jul 5, 4:36 pm, wrote:
Has anybody tried using a studio reverb unit, or other processors,
with a hi-fi system?



Yes. It turns the hi-fi into my-fi.


Mogens V. July 8th 07 01:12 AM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
tony sayer wrote:
No matter how much you spend on equipment you will never hear
the detail that is in the recordings if your room is not
acoustically optimized. It amazes me how people will spend
thousands on cables and new tubes and then wonder why they
cant hear anything different.

Possibly they don't know anything about how to do so?..


That, and that a sound treated room doesn't look like a normal living
room, plus furnitures gets arranged according to indoor decoration
rules, leaving those speakers to look nicer and unobtrusive halfways
hidden next to some bookshelf.
Yes, I'm aware nice looking materials do exist; still...



Come to that any websites advising on the subject?....


Surely quite a lot, like these ones:
http://www.ethanwiner.com/acoustics.html
http://www.realtraps.com/
http://www.whealy.com/drumming/Soundproofing/index.html
http://www.rivesaudio.com/
http://www.soundproofing.org/sales/GreenGlue.htm
http://www.hometheatershack.com/roomeq/
http://www.ymec.com/products/rade/

Not really links to materials, but search for what's mentioned.
Sometimes just pics of how it's been done can be helpful.

--
Kind regards,
Mogens V.


William Sommerwerck July 8th 07 02:07 AM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
No matter how much you spend on equipment, you will
never hear the detail that is in the recordings if your room
is not acoustically optimized.


This is a misleading statement -- its opposite (or contrapositive) is not
true -- good room acoustics do not guarantee the audibility of detail if the
electronics and speakers don't deliver it. Ideally, you want both good (that
is, appropriate for playback) acoustics, and good equipment.



Mogens V. July 8th 07 10:49 AM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
William Sommerwerck wrote:
No matter how much you spend on equipment, you will
never hear the detail that is in the recordings if your room
is not acoustically optimized.



This is a misleading statement -- its opposite (or contrapositive) is not
true -- good room acoustics do not guarantee the audibility of detail if the
electronics and speakers don't deliver it. Ideally, you want both good (that
is, appropriate for playback) acoustics, and good equipment.


Well, he has a point, despite some choise of phrasings...
'won't hear _all_ detail' and 'acoustically treated' would be better.

If rooms would have to be fully optimized, not many private homes would
have a decent musical experience. I agree that large expenditure on
equipment may be a halfways waste in a less than adequate room, but even
so, it will help - it's just the wrong way around, of cause.


Many years ago I was totally broke and couldn't afford good gear.
All I had was a Kodak Photo CD player into an Aiwa gettoblaster with
somewhat decent amplifier, provided modest listening levels.

I was working in a shop building amps, speakers and lights for band
rental, and grapped hi quality filter components and a set of Wifa
trebles for my set of seemingly crappy Philips speakers with 6½" drivers
and slaves. I modified the drivers/slaves spider suspension, treated the
paper cones against breakups and reinforced the boxes. Put the whole
setup up on mic stands to get it off floor coupling.
The room was quite good with a large carpet and bookshelves to partially
break refelctions. A bass problem in a corner was solved with a large
foam matress wrapped in thick velvet cloth behind a bookshelve.

We had a bunch of hifi freaks in'n'out of the shop. One of them paid me
a visit and was all open mouth in shock over the sound quality from such
crappy gear.
Once I got my used Hieraga class A amp copy, things changed incredibly.

This is of cause nothing but a totally irrelevant (high end wise) story,
but still serves to point out the importance of even just very modest
room treatment and especially decent (modified) speakers.

--
Kind regards,
Mogens V.


Deputy Dumbya Dawg July 8th 07 01:02 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 

"tony sayer" wrote in message
...
No matter how much you spend on equipment you will never
hear
the detail that is in the recordings if your room is not
acoustically optimized. It amazes me how people will spend
thousands on cables and new tubes and then wonder why they
cant hear anything different.

Possibly they don't know anything about how to do so?..


That, and that a sound treated room doesn't look like a
normal living
room, plus furnitures gets arranged according to indoor
decoration
rules, leaving those speakers to look nicer and unobtrusive
halfways
hidden next to some bookshelf.
Yes, I'm aware nice looking materials do exist; still...


Come to that any websites advising on the subject?....
--
Tony Sayer


http://www.recording.org/forum-34.html
http://forum.studiotips.com/index.php

peace
dawg





Deputy Dumbya Dawg July 8th 07 01:05 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 

"William Sommerwerck" wrote in
message . ..
No matter how much you spend on equipment, you will
never hear the detail that is in the recordings if your
room
is not acoustically optimized.


This is a misleading statement -- its opposite (or
contrapositive) is not
true -- good room acoustics do not guarantee the audibility
of detail if the
electronics and speakers don't deliver it. Ideally, you want
both good (that
is, appropriate for playback) acoustics, and good equipment.


But no matter how good the equipment and recording techniques,
the program in recordings will be masked by room issues if the
equipment is listened to in an untreated room. Guaranteed.

peace
dawg





William Sommerwerck July 8th 07 01:25 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
But no matter how good the equipment and recording techniques,
the program in recordings will be masked by room issues if the
equipment is listened to in an untreated room. Guaranteed.


You're overstating the case. "Masked by" -- without qualification -- implies
it isn't audible at all. Which is not true. It's rather that the better the
setup (including treatment), the more one can hear what the recording
"really" sounds like.



Bob Lombard July 8th 07 02:23 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 

"William Sommerwerck" wrote in message
. ..
But no matter how good the equipment and recording techniques,
the program in recordings will be masked by room issues if the
equipment is listened to in an untreated room. Guaranteed.


You're overstating the case. "Masked by" -- without qualification --
implies
it isn't audible at all. Which is not true. It's rather that the better
the
setup (including treatment), the more one can hear what the recording
"really" sounds like.


--------
William, you have the habit of quoting the immediately previous post without
attribution. That can be annoying, though not in this case.

Reading this thread has caused me to note that I share at least one
sentiment with 'abbedd': What the recording 'really' sounds like is not of
great importance. I want the music to sound good.

Mr. 'abbedd' and I disagree on specifics, is all.

bl


Deputy Dumbya Dawg July 8th 07 04:22 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 

"William Sommerwerck" wrote in
message . ..
But no matter how good the equipment and recording
techniques,
the program in recordings will be masked by room issues if
the
equipment is listened to in an untreated room. Guaranteed.


You're overstating the case. "Masked by" -- without
qualification -- implies
it isn't audible at all. Which is not true. It's rather that
the better the
setup (including treatment), the more one can hear what the
recording
"really" sounds like.



Perhaps overstated I agree, but my overstatement complements
the understatement that preceded it. My point is, too often
many people search for sonic reality in a very unbalanced way,
heavy on the equipment and light on acoustics. Had I met just
one person in the past who would have impressed the importance
of acoustics on me I would have spent a lot less money chasing
sonic nirvana purchasing equipment and more time enjoying the
equipment I already had for the last 30 years.

I want to be that voice crying in the wind for some people
chasing sonic nirvana here today. Perhaps even some of those
who are or will be mixing music I want to hear over and over
in the future.


peace
dawg



William Sommerwerck July 8th 07 05:04 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
Reading this thread has caused me to note that I share
at least one sentiment with abbedd: What the recording
"really" sounds like is not of great importance. I want the
music to sound good.


This is an aesthetic issue of profound importance, but I'm so busy that I
don't have time to discuss it at length, except to say that it's been my
experience that, the more-accurately a recording is reproduced, the more one
(or at least, I) enjoy the performance. I don't want the music to "sound
good" -- I want to hear the recording, without "editorial comments" from the
amps, speakers, room, etc.

I might add that abbedd is indeed defending accurate reproduction -- what
the recording "really" sounds like. Room treatment is one element of
high-fidelity reproduction.



ansermetniac July 8th 07 05:14 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
On Sun, 8 Jul 2007 10:04:25 -0700, "William Sommerwerck"
wrote:


I might add that abbedd is indeed defending accurate reproduction


Even against an army of trolls equipped with forked tongues and mouth
flung bovine manure

Abbedd
There is only one difference between a madman and me. I am not mad.
Salvador Dali

Deputy Dumbya Dawg July 9th 07 02:29 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 

"Deputy Dumbya Dawg" wrote
in message

One tweek I did that makes reverb in stereo much more
audible was to treat my room acoustically with bass traps,
broadband absorption and diffusers.

Once the room acoustics were in check the reverb in the
recordings became much more a part of the music. Fact is if
the room is blowing back early reflections from your
speakers you are masking the low level detail that provides
the reverb in the recording. Adding after the fact reverb
is not going to fix your room.


peace
dawg


I guess what I really want to say is that; I have found
through 35 years of fooling with stereo, PA, playing bass,
recording and listening to the best equipment I could get my
ears in front of, listening in an acoustically optimized
listening environment is essential to hearing what is in the
recording. That being said, the reverb (natural or added) in
recordings, being low level in nature and most audible when
the music program stops, is the first sonic component to
become masked by the reproduction rooms own sound.

Conversely since I feel the reverb in recordings is first to
be lost in the blowback of an acoustically untreated room it
is only logical to assume that reverb will be one of the first
"WOW sounds" that a listener will benefit from when he
adequately acoustically optimizes his reproduction system.
Listeners can be quoted as saying " I heard this a million
times and I never heard xxxxxxxx before" They will describe
hearing individual sounds that were always there just masked
by the acoustics of the listening room.

This same experience can be obtained in the bass once the room
treatment reaches critical mass, bass instruments become more
tame and musical playing individual notes in there own space.
Impossible in a room with room modes overhanging and
overpowering what is coming out of the speakers.

A professional bass player who listened to Led Zep II a
million times heard it on my system in a treated room and said
about one of the songs " oh that's how it goes". And he heard
it here before treatment.

I hope this helps some people to peruse treating your
listening rooms and perhaps stop wasting time with equipment
upgrades until you get your listening room optimized.


peace
dawg





William Sommerwerck July 9th 07 04:10 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
I guess what I really want to say is that; I have found
through 35 years of fooling with stereo, PA, playing bass,
recording and listening to the best equipment I could get my
ears in front of, listening in an acoustically optimized
listening environment is essential to hearing what is in the
recording. That being said, the reverb (natural or added) in
recordings, being low level in nature and most audible when
the music program stops, is the first sonic component to
become masked by the reproduction rooms own sound.


Unless the room is unusually -- or pathologically -- reverberant, this is
not so. The average room's decay time is considerably shorter than the
reverb time of most recordings, and is incapable of masking it.

The improvement you hear is to better imaging, and the resulting ability to
better appreciate the recording's ambience.



Deputy Dumbya Dawg July 9th 07 09:33 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 

"William Sommerwerck" wrote in
message . ..
I guess what I really want to say is that; I have found
through 35 years of fooling with stereo, PA, playing bass,
recording and listening to the best equipment I could get
my
ears in front of, listening in an acoustically optimized
listening environment is essential to hearing what is in
the
recording. That being said, the reverb (natural or added)
in
recordings, being low level in nature and most audible when
the music program stops, is the first sonic component to
become masked by the reproduction rooms own sound.


Unless the room is unusually -- or pathologically --
reverberant, this is
not so. The average room's decay time is considerably
shorter than the
reverb time of most recordings, and is incapable of masking
it.

The improvement you hear is to better imaging, and the
resulting ability to
better appreciate the recording's ambience.


Don't particularly know what the "average room" is but now
that I have become aware of what a rooms early reflections
bearing down on me sound like and what a room that does not do
this sounds like. Now I can easily hear and clearly
distinguish the room sound in untreated rooms. Not only in
playback but I can hear my friends room affecting his voice on
recordings he makes in his studio.

If this is what you mean by better appreciating the
recording's ambience then we agree 100%

I dont care to argue semantics with you but I know that to my
ears I can tell the difference in the reverb, bass, inner
detail of imaging and timbre of instruments and effects used
(what type effect, settings of it, where it is returned in the
soundstage) easily in my treated room where before treatment
they were never audible to me in the same way before.

So again I stress that room treatment be addressed by anyone
serious about really hearing what is in the recordings you
play. Make acoustic treatment your next upgrade quest and
don't futz around with adding reverb to recordings that
already have it.


peace
dawg





Anahata July 10th 07 08:22 AM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 
William Sommerwerck wrote:
the reverb (natural or added) in
recordings, being low level in nature and most audible when
the music program stops, is the first sonic component to
become masked by the reproduction rooms own sound.



Unless the room is unusually -- or pathologically -- reverberant, this is
not so. The average room's decay time is considerably shorter than the
reverb time of most recordings, and is incapable of masking it.


In terms of pure decibel levels, yes, but I think this is an area where
the brains's perception mechanism plays an important part. If the room's
acoustic is superimposed on the recording's reverb, the brain's auditory
processing get a confused muddle of sound that it knows cannot
coprrespond to a real physical space. Remove the listening room sound,
and if the recorded sound included the natural reverb of a real room,
suddenly you can hear the "shape" of that room and everything becomes
more realistic.

Just a theory, to try to explain DDD's observation.

Anahata

Deputy Dumbya Dawg July 10th 07 01:28 PM

Adding reverb to hi-fi
 

"Anahata" wrote in message
...
William Sommerwerck wrote:
the reverb (natural or added) in
recordings, being low level in nature and most audible when
the music program stops, is the first sonic component to
become masked by the reproduction rooms own sound.



Unless the room is unusually -- or pathologically --
reverberant, this is
not so. The average room's decay time is considerably
shorter than the
reverb time of most recordings, and is incapable of masking
it.


In terms of pure decibel levels, yes, but I think this is an
area where the brains's perception mechanism plays an
important part. If the room's acoustic is superimposed on
the recording's reverb, the brain's auditory processing get
a confused muddle of sound that it knows cannot coprrespond
to a real physical space. Remove the listening room sound,
and if the recorded sound included the natural reverb of a
real room, suddenly you can hear the "shape" of that room
and everything becomes more realistic.

Just a theory, to try to explain DDD's observation.

Anahata


Mission accomplished in the best of ways.

thanks

dawg




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