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Article: Attending a Mahler 3rd Recording Session: An Audiophile’s Perspective


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"even on a very basic DAC" 

 

So someone is surprised by the quality of RME conversion...?

 

RME doesn't get the mojo hype other brands get. But once you sit down even with a Babyface FS you'll notice that these things sound very good. There is a reason RME are ubiquitous in classical recording and broadcast contexts. It's not only their reliability, it's also that they sound good.

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9 hours ago, mcgillroy said:

"even on a very basic DAC" 

 

So someone is surprised by the quality of RME conversion...?

 

RME doesn't get the mojo hype other brands get. But once you sit down even with a Babyface FS you'll notice that these things sound very good. There is a reason RME are ubiquitous in classical recording and broadcast contexts. It's not only their reliability, it's also that they sound good.

 

I don't think surprise is totally the right word. A portable DAC with limited power supply and filtering options is a very different animal than a flagship DAC. I don't speak for Rajiv, but I'd say that's the gist of what he was getting at. 

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27 minutes ago, firedog said:

Obviously we can never really recreate that experience with a audio system - especially a 2 channel one.

Indeed.  How do those 64 streams translate to two (or more) speakers?

 

How do you miniaturize an orchestra into even a large listening space?  The dynamic range is a challenge too (in the listening room).  

 

It would have been cool if logistics had permitted Chris and Rajiv to listen live (that is, calibrate ears in the hall itself with orchestra playing) as well as through the recording setup.  For me, that would be the ultimate audiophile experience.

Grimm Audio MU2 > Mola Mola Makua > Mola Mola Kaluga > B&W 803 D3    

Cables: Kubala-Sosna    Power management: Shunyata    Room: Vicoustics    Ethernet: Network Acoustics Muon Pro

 

“Nature is pleased with simplicity.”  Isaac Newton

"As neither the enjoyment nor the capacity of producing musical notes are faculties of the least use to man...they must be ranked among the most mysterious with which he is endowed."  Charles Darwin - The Descent of Man

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10 minutes ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

would be interested in your observations about live vs. what you heard in the recording room.

 

That, and a caption for the photo of you listening through the headphones.  Rajiv seemed to think you were impressed with the sound.  I was thinking more along the lines of "I should have had the waffles this morning too."  Could be wrong about that.. 

Grimm Audio MU2 > Mola Mola Makua > Mola Mola Kaluga > B&W 803 D3    

Cables: Kubala-Sosna    Power management: Shunyata    Room: Vicoustics    Ethernet: Network Acoustics Muon Pro

 

“Nature is pleased with simplicity.”  Isaac Newton

"As neither the enjoyment nor the capacity of producing musical notes are faculties of the least use to man...they must be ranked among the most mysterious with which he is endowed."  Charles Darwin - The Descent of Man

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Very interesting article! Having sung in both fine chamber and symphony choirs for some 20 years, I can attest that the live sound when you’re inside it (as compared to far away in a hall, or from a recording) is something else…so I’m wondering, even if the article seems to say the contrary, if you were not listening to an analog mix (direct from the mics console) before any A/D processing. All I see is the headphones connected to an amp but the incoming wiring could be anything.

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On the of things that recordings generally don't capture well are the microdynamics of an orchestra.  I remember seeing Yuri Termirkanov a number of years a the Concert Hall of CW Post in Long Island (which has very good acoustics).  The dynamic ebbs and flows of an orchestra are effortless in a concert hall, I have not yet experienced any of this on my stereo system.  Loud is loud, but never grating or unpleasant, or even somewhat compressed.  We still have a ways to go.

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1 hour ago, steveoat said:

On the of things that recordings generally don't capture well are the microdynamics of an orchestra.  I remember seeing Yuri Termirkanov a number of years a the Concert Hall of CW Post in Long Island (which has very good acoustics).  The dynamic ebbs and flows of an orchestra are effortless in a concert hall, I have not yet experienced any of this on my stereo system.  Loud is loud, but never grating or unpleasant, or even somewhat compressed.  We still have a ways to go.

 

The microdynamics are there, in the recording; if you wind up the volume, so that the peaks are of a realistic level, then in a lull you can hear all the movements and scrapings of the musicians, and other extraneous sounds of the hall, etc.

 

The issue for most playback setups is that they can't reproduce the peak intensities of the music at realistic volumes, with integrity - one starts to cringe and wince, because the unpleasantness of the barrage of distorted sound is too much. There have always been systems with which enough effort has been taken to allow for, in the parlance of audiophiles, 'effortless' sound - but they were, are, pretty rare. The problems is, the more complex and higher in potential level the music is, the more obvious it is that the accuracy of the rig is not sufficient - there is no easy way to get around this, only careful optimisation of the whole chain provides the necessary standard of reproduction quality to make listening to recorded orchestral music comparable to the live experience.

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I know the Sennheiser HD650 well. Even on an excellent amp, with an excellent source, they can sound a bit closed in and wooly. Yet here, with this live mix, even on a very basic DAC and headphone amp, the level of clarity and palpable ambience was almost unbelievable.

 

Yes, has already been mentioned several times ... but you do have to wonder at the "expertise" of the recording engineers to be able to convert "almost unbelievable clarity and palpable ambience" into "a bit closed in and wooly", :D.

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