As with all recordings.You'll never really know how well it has been 'reproduced', unless you were the engineer.
How the soundstage got there is irrelevant to me. The important thing is that it is there and can be reproduced.
Right or wrong, that's how I think of it as well, though @Sokel is correct that these terms should be defined in such threads.Whenever there are sounds in a music mix appearing behind the plain of the two loudspeakers in a stereo setup, the recording has depth.
@Keith_W Thanks for sharing that research in the first post. I've been under the impression that reflections off the wall behind the speakers were too low in level to be perceptually relevant (dipoles and omnis as exceptions). Others profess experiences to the contrary.There are multiple threads on ASR about reflections, including:
Perceptual Effects of Room Reflections - @amirm
Research on Reflections - @aarons915
However, it is mostly lateral reflections which are being discussed. There seems to be good science on lateral reflections, so we will NOT be discussing that here. Instead, what I would like to discuss are frontal reflections.
For a long time, I believed that frontal reflections are just like lateral reflections, in that within a certain window of time and amplitude, they create spaciousness. I simply transposed my understanding of lateral reflections to frontal reflections and used the same target - ETC should show a peak which is >-15dB with respect to the main impulse within the Haas fusion window of 20ms.
Then I came across this paper by Dr. Matthias Johansson (co-founder of Dirac). Although most of the paper is on mixed-phase DSP, he does mention this on page 7:
View attachment 391749
And on page 11:
View attachment 391740
Regrettably, Dr. Johansson does not cite a reference for his statement. So I did a literature search and came up with nothing. I looked up both Toole and Everest and whilst there is plenty of discussion on lateral reflections, there is no discussion on frontal reflections.
I sent @Sean Olive a message (given that he and Toole did a seminal paper on lateral reflections). He could not recall any papers on frontal research off-hand, and he theorized that:
View attachment 391742
So it appears that the experts think that frontal reflections are detrimental. Lacking in Johansson's paper is information about exactly how early and how attenuated the frontal reflections are.
Now I have a question: dipoles radiate sound front and back. The rear wave would produce copious frontal reflections. Linkwitz seemed to believe in dipoles, after all he designed the LX521. My personal experience of dipoles is that they seem to produce more soundstage depth than a monopole (and yes, I have heard dipoles and monopoles side by side in the same room, although it was an informal unblinded listening session).
I have also been doing my own experiments using bookshelf speakers as ambient speakers. Using DSP, the bookshelves were equalized and delays adjusted so that they are 15ms delayed and -15dB compared to the main speakers. I then compare the effects of spaciousness with the ambience speakers placed in different parts of the room. I found that if these speakers were placed so that they fire towards the front wall, there is no additional sensation of spaciousness. Instead, what I hear is smearing. On the other hand, if the speakers are placed to the left and right of the listening position, a remarkable sense of spaciousness and envelopment is the result.
If frontal reflections do not create the illusion of soundstage depth, then what does? And, in light of this, are dipoles a fundamentally misguided design?
Yes,these are choices.
And recordings are the most important factor as I already wrote at the first page of the thread.
The best of them combine these virtues and oddly enough some of these are 60 years old.
Is it the flaws of the time back then that created this effect?Is it pure skill?
I was amazed seeing the big powered(!) speakers of the venues that these works were made.
Sadly lately this is either a lost art or the fixed flaws straightens things to a degree that stuff is like a flat painting.
Very few,usually small ensembles,usually made in purpose with boring music demonstrates it.
Right or wrong, that's how I think of it as well, though @Sokel is correct that these terms should be defined in such threads.
I speak of sounds narrower or wider than the speaker is apparent source width, and sounds out in the room and to the sides and even behind the listener as "envelopment".
When I hear vocals or instruments that project from a space in between the two speakers but at different locations sometimes as if they’re a few feet behind the plane of the speakers is that just imaging quality or is depth a separate affect?For hearing the soundstage depth, the recording is the only factor.
No, it's not a flaw, and it has nothing to do with the speakers used for the audio productions...
The old recordings were more about documentation of musicians playing together in a real room, while new audio production has unfortunately mostly shifted towards a post-production approach where things in the mix are created artificially instead of capturing the real deal, to begin with.
Only in the sense that everyday depth perception exists from our ears outward, but for purposes of discussing depth in a recording it's considered from the plane of the speakers and beyond.But is there really anything that needs to be defined?
You will probably laugh, Madonna the Immaculate collection is an obvious example. The whole disc sounds like it was recorded in surround sound or something. Most other times I heard it, it was just a tiny portion in the song, there’s a Pink Floyd song can’t think of the song right now, where a laughing man’s voice sounds like it’s right at your head.Only in the sense that everyday depth perception exists from our ears outward, but for purposes of discussing depth in a recording it's considered from the plane of the speakers and beyond.
And strictly speaking, envelopment also involves playback "depth", but as you said, from a different mechanism and therefore it's a different discussion. See the post immediately above as a case and point.
@Todd68 are you willing to share any specific tracks that have sound from the sides and rear? I alway enjoy new leads for engaging new music!
Best of Chesky Jazz & More Audiophile Tests, Vol. 2, track 47 - General Image and Resolution Test.specific tracks that have sound from the sides and rear?
Only in the sense that everyday depth perception exists from our ears outward, but for purposes of discussing depth in a recording it's considered from the plane of the speakers and beyond.
I’m always fixing grammar errors, my writing skills are terrible, but it doesn’t stop me from posting.Ah, that’s how plane is spelled, not plain as I have wrote it in all the previous posts.
... as the recorded depth information can only come with the direct sound, the ratio of direct sound must be the dominating factor over anything the listening environment will add to the equation.
My experience has been that the spatial impression of being inside the music venue (whether the venue spatial cues be real or creations of the recording engineers or both) is not present when the direct-to-reflected sound ratio is too high. My hypothesis is that spectrally-correct, relatively late-arriving reflections arriving from many directions act as "carriers" for the reverberation tails on the recording, conveying those venue spatial cues in a way that is more natural than if they were only delivered by the direct sound.
Excellent question!I'm not saying that you are wrong about your "carriers" for the reverberation tails theory, but as the listening room can hardly make a distinction between the recorded direct sound of the instruments and the room reverberation from the recorded room, how can the late reflections of the listening room be "carriers" of the recorded reverberation tails in specific?