Will you still like your hifi if it deviated from live sound?

BadEnglish

Well-known member
wusplay said:
Below is not my own opinion, i Just copy from Stereophile:
No matter how good your system is, there is no way to ever faithfully recreate the sound of the original performance.
When you create a sound, what gets propagated and what we hear is more than just the sound that the instrument made.
We are taught that a sound at a given frequency creates more sounds at frequencies that are multiples of the frequency of the first sound, and overtones get created that may actually differ from instrument to instrument.
So, a 100Hz tone would generate "fundamental" harmonics at 200, 400, 800, 1600, and so-on Hz.
The order for harmonics is that the actual tone is the first harmonic, and the second harmonic becomes the first overtone.
So, what makes it to the microphone is more than what you'd think was the original tone, and is one reason people think that sound reproduction above 20,000Hz may be important...
Overtones are kind of like harmonics that do not occur at such evenly distributed frequencies.
To quote Wikipedia: "Not all overtones are necessarily harmonics, or exact multiples of the fundamental frequency. Some musical instruments produce overtones that are sharper or flatter than harmonics. The sharpness or flatness of their overtones is one of the elements that contributes to their sound; this also has the effect of making their waveforms not perfectly periodic."
When we take what had been the original sound heard by the microphone during the recording and try to recreate that event on our home systems, we start creating harmonics of harmonics and harmonics of overtones that were never intended to be part of the sound.
Your speaker reproduces the original signal, but is also responsible for creating extra harmonics of the original harmonics and overtones that never existed!
(Say you have a flute note that created an original note a 400Hz. You'd have harmonics at 800, 1600, 3200, 6400, 12,800Hz; and overtones at odd intervals depending on the note or how hard the note was blown. Hypothetically, say 430Hz for just one of the overtones.
OK, now you want your speakers to create this melange of sounds, but when your speaker creates those tones, you create more harmonics and overtones!
So, that hypothetical 430Hx overtone now creates harmonics at the typical ratio of tone to harmonics, and those sounds were NEVER part of the original sound.)
Your speaker doesn't know that they were just harmonics, and now you get harmonics of harmonics!
No matter how good your system is, all it will ever do is create falsely exaggerated harmonic textures and add harmonics of overtones that are totally artifactual.


Alamak,  why do you need to cut and paste so long when one word is enough,: colouring.

A good hifi system can reproduce close to 80% of original sound. If someone ever claimed 100% , either he was dead or mad ;D

When the system reached to about 50% of transparency level,  piano sounded as a piano,  guitar sounded as a guitar,  and so on.
 

BadEnglish

Well-known member
I've Supertweeter ;D

At one particular angle,  the system reproduces very close to the real music. Changing angle be it 0.5 degree or 5 degree,  the system starts to colour the music and soundstage.

People who knows me well enough know that they didn't have chance to listen my system as good as it was for their a few early visit ;D
 

kennyluck2000

New member
Music with different equipment pairing can let us enjoy the sound and at the same time let us do some tweaking of the sound. If we already enjoying our current setup even if it is not 'realistic' or 'truthful' or 'accurate' to someone who thought how it should sound like.
We should somehow make every music we listen to become more enjoyable to listen to or somehow play 'better' than the 'original'. If music is part of our life... we are our own DJ, play the music the way we want our music to sound. 🤪😁
 

boxerfan88

Well-known member
After the live performances yesterday, I still prefer HiFi audio by far.

The only thing unique about live performances is the crowd energy & interaction. Clearly not a must have for me.
 
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