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View Full Version : A paradigm shift....


TroyD
04-10-2006, 10:08 AM
Have you ever had an experience where what you though what was a 'standard' or 'reference' has just been completely negated?

Well, that's what happened to David and I last night. While browsing through LP's at a shop downtown a couple weeks ago, I met Leonard Gibbs, recording engineer for, primarily, the Charleston Symphony. Very nice gentleman in an odd sort of way. Anyhow, we chatted a bit about music and audio and he promised me a copy of some music that he recorded and an invite to hear his system and room which had been featured in Stereo Review some years ago. His premise was that all commercially recorded music was crap, regardless of label, pressing etc etc etc.

Fast forward to yesterday, David and I went to Leonards home in an older neighborhood in Charleston. From the outside, I was wondering where this huge listening room exactly was as it is, from appearances, a small house. Anyhow, got inside and led down the hall to a foyer literally CRAMMED with RTR , mixing and recording gear that opened up into a 20x30 (roughly) full-on acoustically treated, dedicated listening room. Accross the front were 3 Dahlquist DQ-20's, each sitting on a DQ-1W woofer. Backend was vintage Perreaux gear. Anyhow, we chatted about the room, music etc for a while and then we got down to business.

Now, my version of hifi, is fidelity to what is recorded as opposed to what the performance sounded like live. In my opinion, this makes sense because, well, most of the stuff, I've never heard live and I sure as hell didn't hear the recording live that I'm listening to. Leonard's perspective is different and much more ambitious. He, unlike most of us, has a wealth of live recording and his setup is geared to recreate the live performance. Doing this he explained is impossible with a standard 2 channel setup. He employs an identical (his speakers were hand tweaked by none other than Carl Maschitto (SP) the designer of the DQ-20, primarily to ensure identical tweeters) center speaker set at -2db playing mono to anchor the image. Anyhow, we ran through a number of live recordings done with just 2 microphones and, honestly, I've NEVER heard anything so seamless, transparent and lifelike in my life. All from standard 16bit 44.1 CD's (albeit transferred direct from the master tapes) My whole frame of reference has been altered. Then for fun, he put in the SACD version of Also Sprach Zarathustra by Reiner and the Chicago Symphony. A reference for me interms of range and dynamics. Hell, we might has well have been listening to Camptown races through a plastic Fisher Price record player. Oh, and for a source? His reference player took a dump so we were listening through a modded 39 dollard Toshiba DVD player, that wasn't the 3950/3960. Ultimately, Leonard has very good, but hardly esoteric, gear. However, the setup is second to NONE.

The big takeaway from this for me, is, that in most cases, what we are listening to is substandard due, mainly to processing and compression. THAT is the real limiting factor in our rigs. We are spending all this money on gear to extract more and more information off discs that largely, just aint' there. How you like THEM apples?

Anyhow, thought I'd share. Leonard is a GREAT guy and I look forward to picking his brain for a long time to come. He will be in attendance at Polkfest '06 with some of his recordings. Also MAY be able to work in some demo's of his rig (this is TBD as logistics and so forth would have to be worked out)

BDT

Early B.
04-10-2006, 11:07 AM
Damn, damn, damn. Excellent write-up. Among the best I've read on this forum.

I'm amazed at his use of the $39 DVD player. I went to a "high end" audio store and they were using Rat Shack DVD players on their reference systems. It pissed me off so next time I took my CD player and hooked it up. Night and day difference -- mine sounded much better. Just wondering what that guy's system would have sounded like with a higher quality source. But hell, he's the expert, so maybe I'm missing sumthin'.

TroyD
04-10-2006, 11:12 AM
Well, his premise is that it's the material that makes the biggest difference. Obviously, a 'better' player would result in better sound but the point is that an excellent recording on properly set up gear will sound good. Honestly, after last night, I'd be hard pressed to disagree.

Now, there are a couple of caveats to that, one is that your speakers and amplification have to be up to the job. His room and system was designed to the minutest detail for a very specific purpose. The room has a LOT to do with it. Probably more than the gear.

BDT

TroyD
04-10-2006, 11:25 AM
Also, this was not an off the shelf DVD player, it's got some extensive modifications and has hard-wired interconnects....if I didn't mention that, but, yes, I do plan to plug my Jolida into his rig for shits and giggles.

BDT

Early B.
04-10-2006, 11:31 AM
Hard-wired interconnects? Man, this dude is hard core. Gotta love that!

Early B.
04-10-2006, 11:37 AM
The big takeaway from this for me, is, that in most cases, what we are listening to is substandard due, mainly to processing and compression. THAT is the real limiting factor in our rigs. We are spending all this money on gear to extract more and more information off discs that largely, just aint' there. How you like THEM apples?

At some point perhaps we ought to focus more effort on acquiring better recordings, not more gear. I'm off to do some research...

madmax
04-10-2006, 11:54 AM
I've read of people (most of whom have connections) collecting their own recordings from live performances. That is their thing. I recorded a live band one time in a basement. Actually we did about 5 takes. It takes some skill and equipment. All though it turned out ok there were leaps and bounds which could be made.
madmax

TroyD
04-10-2006, 12:46 PM
Leonard's contention is, and it's hard to argue, that most commercial recordings simply by virtue of so many microphones, can't be realistic. They can sound good, but aren't going to be realistic.

Chuck, got to remember this guy has been making recordings for 30 years and has the gear to do so properly in a proper venue.

BDT

Joey_V
04-10-2006, 01:00 PM
I like how you brought up that we spend so much on gear in an effort to extract every minutia of information yet we try to extract data that isnt there to begin with.

Dennis Gardner
04-10-2006, 01:02 PM
Most of the mass produced cds that we listen to were mastered for playback in cars and portable players. Why would we think they would sound good on audiophile equipment? Compression is the order of the day to make it listenable in a high noise environment.

Telarc, Mapleshade, Chesky, Stockfisch are a few that make at least an attempt to create hi fidelity, but the music choices are less than stellar.

TroyD
04-10-2006, 01:06 PM
Agreed but, for example, the Reiner performance of Also Sprach Zarathustra is not really the standard commercial dreck. In his system, it wasn't unlistenable but it fell FAR short of anything else we listened to.

BDT

Early B.
04-10-2006, 01:06 PM
Telarc, Mapleshade, Chesky, Stockfisch are a few that make at least an attempt to create hi fidelity, but the music choices are less than stellar.

Agreed.

madmax
04-10-2006, 03:02 PM
Chuck, got to remember this guy has been making recordings for 30 years and has the gear to do so properly in a proper venue.

BDT

Yea, that was my point.

So, now that we know, how do we find these people and get them to make copies for us? :)

madmax

amulford
04-10-2006, 05:34 PM
here here

PolkThug
04-10-2006, 05:56 PM
We are spending all this money on gear to extract more and more information off discs that largely, just aint' there. How you like THEM apples?

Yep, same applies to HT also. DD & DTS are slivers of the master audio track.

TroyD
04-10-2006, 05:58 PM
Well, the problem is that the material is, by and large, property of the Charleston Symphony therefore copying it for any sort of distribution is prohibited by law.

Sorry guys.

BDT

Joey_V
04-10-2006, 06:01 PM
I suppose we just have to make do with what we got.

madmax
04-10-2006, 06:19 PM
It sure would be cool to have a sample. Surely a sample would be ok...
madmax

Zero
04-10-2006, 06:20 PM
There are tons of great recordings out there that will make a HTIB sound damned impressive.

I like this guys un-orthodox approach. Thats usually the way to the best results...

DAGLJAM6
04-10-2006, 07:04 PM
There are tons of great recordings out there that will make a HTIB sound damned impressive.
That's pretty much Leonard's point, the recorded material in his opinion should not "make" the equipment sound better (Coloration which we normally associate with the components in line not the recorded event). The material ,as well as the recording process, is of a caliber that without compression or other processes it translates as close to the original "live" sound. As an example most avid "listeners"(audiophiles if you will) would not think of running bass boost(loudness) on a given recording it's an enhancement ,good or bad sounding, that takes you further from the original sound as intended. Compression will increase the perception of volume of softer passages but at the expense of dynamic range for the piece as a whole.(FM radio is the prime example) What Mr.Gibbs has accomplished is to capture the "live" experience with all the dimensionality and natural dynamic range that is at the performance.

Zero
04-10-2006, 07:26 PM
David,

I understood his point... just re-itterating is all. I think its pretty cool what he has going on.....and this is just from *reading* about it.

Tour2ma
04-11-2006, 06:53 AM
Fine write up, Mr. D. And happy to read that Mr. Gibbs is going to attend the fest.

... but now I'm trying to figure out how a dual mic recording requires 3-ch playback for realism...

EDIT: Just remembered that when I auditioned the Vandy 5A's, the set up included a Vandy center channel (VCC-5, I think) that was definitely doing some anchoring.

TroyD
04-11-2006, 08:24 AM
It's not a third channel per se. It plays in mono (L+R)....set -2db. It's absolutely seamless.

BDT

Tour2ma
04-11-2006, 09:39 AM
It was the same in the Vandy set up, i.e., center was L+R.

"Channel" was not the best choice, but at 04:53...

And on the whole compression thing... remind me to bring/ send you a dbx expander to play with. I think you'd love what it can do for your vinyl...

TroyD
04-11-2006, 10:07 AM
You'd LOVE to talk w/ Leonard, he was good friends with David Blackmer who founded dbx and later Earthworks (he uses thier microphones)....

BDT

organ
04-11-2006, 01:33 PM
Very cool story, Troy. Thanks for sharing. Didn't you own DQ's before?

TroyD
04-11-2006, 02:51 PM
I owned the DQ-10's which I believe doro still has.

BDT

McLoki
04-11-2006, 03:04 PM
Anyhow, we ran through a number of live recordings done with just 2 microphones and, honestly, I've NEVER heard anything so seamless, transparent and lifelike in my life. All from standard 16bit 44.1 CD's (albeit transferred direct from the master tapes) My whole frame of reference has been altered. Then for fun, he put in the SACD version of Also Sprach Zarathustra by Reiner and the Chicago Symphony. A reference for me interms of range and dynamics. Hell, we might has well have been listening to Camptown races through a plastic Fisher Price record player. Oh, and for a source? His reference player took a dump so we were listening through a modded 39 dollard Toshiba DVD player, that wasn't the 3950/3960.

The big takeaway from this for me, is, that in most cases, what we are listening to is substandard due, mainly to processing and compression. THAT is the real limiting factor in our rigs. We are spending all this money on gear to extract more and more information off discs that largely, just aint' there. How you like THEM apples?

I would be remiss if I did not mention that we have heard a quote similar to this recently (http://www.polkaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?t=39395) and the member who made it was smacked repeatedly for it.

What does matter and deserves our special attention(and money)in audio is the source material(e.g. CDs and DVDs, not the devices to play them), the speakers and the listening room. It isn't realistic to assume that any of these three factors are the same for different source materials, speakers and locations, but if it was arranged to have exactly the same source material playing through exactly the same speakers in exactly the same room setup, then by definition there'd be no difference in sound. There can be no effect without a cause.

While I do still feel his knowledge is incorrect in that there is no real differences in source, amps, pre/pro's and wire. His basic logic of what should you change to have the largest impact on your system may in fact be correct. (or at least worth more consideration that I had at first given it)

I guess I am willing to admit that his opinion, as incorrect as I find it, does have as much merit as mine.. :o

Not trying to bring up another wire debate - just trying to let others in on thinking in a new paradigm.....

Michael

Tour2ma
04-12-2006, 03:48 AM
If Troy and John K are gonna start agreeing, the end of time must be upon us...

Troy,
Agree... that's a conversation I would enjoy. I did some reading on Blackmer and dbx a while back. Interesting guy...

fatchowmein
06-06-2007, 01:47 AM
Did Leonard show up at Polkfest 06? That is if anybody recalls considering how late my response is?

shack
06-06-2007, 10:12 AM
Did Leonard show up at Polkfest 06? That is if anybody recalls considering how late my response is?

No .

shack
06-06-2007, 10:13 AM
If Troy and John K are gonna start agreeing, the end of time must be upon us...

The end of time may not have occured but Bruce has disappeared....

F1nut
06-06-2007, 02:47 PM
No, he didn't. I'll let Troy explain why.

shack
06-06-2007, 05:02 PM
No, he didn't. I'll let Troy explain why.

Why Leonard didn't come or why Bruce didn't disappear?