How important is sound stage to you?

Mr Peabody

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I have heard comments like, "I hate when the piano is stretched across the room" or " the singer sounds 10 feet tall" or "there's no depth" etc.

So if you were listening to an audio rig where the tone, frequency balance was just about perfect, is there something about the sound stage that could ruin the pleasure for you, so to speak?

I can deal with large images pretty well but smaller than normal seems to bug me. For instance, the Wilson/ARC system I heard with 160M's, had a large wide piano and tall cello but I could live with that in my room :) On the other hand if that cello seemed smaller than normal, it would bug me.

I don't know what you call this character, I prefer a dark background. Some ARC, for instance, gives me a feel of whitish or sort of industrial. Some either never noticed or didn't realize what I was talking about. Someone else mentioned this on another thread, and, I was like, I'm not so crazy afterall. Whatever, that feel or character is, I seem to be sensitive to. The wrong feel can turn me off.
 
Good post! To me, SOME solid state amps sound flat and 2D. That bugs me!


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Proper soundstage including size, depth, width and placement is one of the most important aspects of my decision in choosing a speaker. Most speakers today are pretty transparent and have pretty accurate timbre; of course this varies. Bass accuracy is where most modern day speakers is vary as this is also so room dependent and equipment dependent.

Assuming tonality, timbre, transparency and bass is accurate and relatively linear which most great speakers today are (of course setup, room and associated equipment can’t and shouldn’t be dismissed) soundstage is where there is the most variation, IMHO.

As I said nothing short of “accurate” works with me. I’m not a fan of a distorted soundstage. Many are and good for them. Many like to hear a piano take over the whole front or a singer sound 10 feet tall. That’s not my thing.

Currently listening to Gobels Aeon Fine demos until mine are delivered and have to say they push all my buttons in every aspect. They replaced my Nola Concert Grands and required a little diffferent room setup to get the best out of them. I recently installed Art Novion front wall treatment which has really worked wonders with the Gobel and were unnecessary with the Nola.

These speakers with my CH precision being directly driven by my MSB SELECT II have the best soundstage I have ever experience. Actually remarkable.

Been doing this both selling early on since 82 and a strict hobbyist and lover since 87 and soundstage has always been my main priority; of course the assumption being that most other things are correct as well.
 
It's critically important to me. Many recordings are superb with depth, width, placement and focus. Yes, some are very strange for sure.
I'm not sure I could pick one aspect over another, e.g. Great Sound stage with Glare, although I guess I'd be able to listen to a "mono" sound stage much longer that I'd be able to live with a system with a lot of glare or etched sound character.
 
The good news is that soundstage is adjustable in set-up to your taste. :)


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I have also found this to be true within the limitations of the room.
Some are limited by decor or their better half and must make sacrifices.
A good friend is in the above catagory. His system is tonally accurate and basically enjoyable but not emotionally involving.
To steal part of a phrase from Dick Olsher, it's like a black and white sunset.
 
So if you were listening to an audio rig where the tone, frequency balance was just about perfect, is there something about the sound stage that could ruin the pleasure for you, so to speak?
Spatial reproduction has long been recognized as sort of the "final frontier" with recorded audio.
Stereophile founder JG Holt was saying this decades ago: https://www.stereophile.com/asweseeit/1107awsi/index.html
Here is a great laymans discussion by an old Bell labs guy http://www.linkwitzlab.com/Recording/acoustics-hearing.htm relating to domestic soundfields (no pun intended). Yes, some of it might make an audiophile head explode try to comprehend, so skip to around pg 22~26 if needed.
As Jim noted, there are preferences too, so some folks might prefer a slightly more diffuse (live acoustics), while others may listen mostly to stereophonic studio constructed electronic music, thus a "dryer" presentation, as afforded by the loudspeaker/room/you interaction. So of course YMMV applies.
Btw, there is a huge amount of research going regarding spatial reproduction systems.

cheers,

AJ
 
i listen to a lot of ambient electronica so soundstage is probably my top priority. being able to hear the full soundscape and all the layers in the depth of the soundstage are my "chills" moments.

i used to love the tube soundstage because of the depth and holographic nature. i switched around a bunch of components and ultimately found that a soulution 721 pre was giving me the best stage because it also varied the most from track to track. the other pieces seemed to have that homogenized "big sound stage". ultimately i prefer it this way as each track has variations in staging and since the soulution is able to rip apart all details, i can still here deep into the depths of the stage
 
Spatial reproduction has long been recognized as sort of the "final frontier" with recorded audio.
Stereophile founder JG Holt was saying this decades ago: https://www.stereophile.com/asweseeit/1107awsi/index.html
Here is a great laymans discussion by an old Bell labs guy http://www.linkwitzlab.com/Recording/acoustics-hearing.htm relating to domestic soundfields (no pun intended). Yes, some of it might make an audiophile head explode try to comprehend, so skip to around pg 22~26 if needed.
As Jim noted, there are preferences too, so some folks might prefer a slightly more diffuse (live acoustics), while others may listen mostly to stereophonic studio constructed electronic music, thus a "dryer" presentation, as afforded by the loudspeaker/room/you interaction. So of course YMMV applies.
Btw, there is a huge amount of research going regarding spatial reproduction systems.

cheers,

AJ

Yes it's a "time machine".
 
My system presents a huge sound stage, probably unnaturally large, especially with my Maggies. I can understand how some people may not like it. I prefer a large sound stage with width and depth, even though a guitar can sound 10 feet tall.

About 2 years ago, I did a review for Exogal on their Comet DAC prototype. In my system it gave a 3D holographic sound that gave the impression that I was using surround sound. It was very strange and took time getting use to.
 
Good post! To me, SOME solid state amps sound flat and 2D. That bugs me!


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Funny...To me most tube amps sound bloated and give a way too big sound stage that is totally unrealistic......

What is real important to me is dimension. Height is the real test. Most systems are too short, some are too tall. The best are most realistic.
The elephant in the room here are the recordings. Who's to say they are all perfectly recorded regarding sound stage? For me I resort to "take an average" of what I listen to to determine if I have it or not.....for most YMMV.
 
Sound Stage is one area that I enjoy the most about my listening to my system. It is very important. Not so much about how "big" it sounds, but more to how "natural" or "real" it sounds. I know this is very subjective :)... but it is one thing I have always enjoyed about KEF speakers.

And as Jim stated, much of this seems to be able to be adjusted or fine tuned with room setup, if the equipment is capable of producing it.
 
I certainly understand about the room and set up and I have never heard a system with good electronics in a standard shaped room (by that I mean, square or rectangle) that did not have a good sound stage. However, I have heard systems in odd shaped rooms that just sounded awful despite great gear. But many here have much more experience than I do.
 
The good news is that soundstage is adjustable in set-up to your taste. :)


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I have also found this to be true within the limitations of the room.
Some are limited by decor or their better half and must make sacrifices.
A good friend is in the above catagory. His system is tonally accurate and basically enjoyable but not emotionally involving.
To steal part of a phrase from Dick Olsher, it's like a black and white sunset.

agreed, on both posts, the room and set up in it are every bit as important as the speakers. It drives me nuts to see high end systems compromised.
 
I certainly understand about the room and set up and I have never heard a system with good electronics in a standard shaped room (by that I mean, square or rectangle) that did not have a good sound stage. However, I have heard systems in odd shaped rooms that just sounded awful despite great gear. But many hear have much more experience than I do.
IMO, if it was awful - regardless of the room - it was a poor set-up. I say this, having successfully voiced 800-1000 systems to all kinds of rooms (including a number of shows where we were awarded Best Sound of Show) in my career.
 
I have also found this to be true within the limitations of the room.
Some are limited by decor or their better half and must make sacrifices.
A good friend is in the above catagory. His system is tonally accurate and basically enjoyable but not emotionally involving.
To steal part of a phrase from Dick Olsher, it's like a black and white sunset.

FWIW - In 2000, at CES, Dick Olsher proclaimed (he was reviewing for Enjoy the Music then) my Avantgarde room (Duos) not only the best in show, but the best sound anywhere in Vegas! :)

OK, enough boasting, Jim!!! :whoa:
 
I prefer a large sound stage with width and depth, even though a guitar can sound 10 feet tall.

Nothing wrong with that. That´s when the system exceeds the "real thing", creating a new reality.
Nobody seems to care when we see a face with 5 or 6 feet tall in the cinema. Most of times we feel crushed by that huge face and we feel glad to see all the detail...
 
Nothing wrong with that. That´s when the system exceeds the "real thing", creating a new reality.
Nobody seems to care when we see a face with 5 or 6 feet tall in the cinema. Most of times we feel crushed by that huge face and we feel glad to see all the detail...

That’s a different viewpoint. Never thought of the cinema connection.
 
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