- Thread Author
- #1
In the past two weeks I attended a couple of live concerts. One was a pop music concert; the other a performance of Mahler's Resurrection Symphony.
The sound of the Pop concert was not good at all. To be fair, it was set in a basketball arena which is not a music venue. The sound was so loud that the sound waves would travel the entire arena and reflect from the back wall muddling the sound. I recall thinking: I can do much better at home.
By contrast, the sound of Mahler's 2nd in a concert hall (Kennedy Center) was nothing short of spectacular. My stereo system, by comparison, sounds puny compared to the expansive landscape of sound and the dynamics of a full orchestra with over 200 performers on stage. This is the true "absolute sound" and while we can enjoy listening to our stereo systems, there is absolutely no way that a two-speaker system can replicate that.
The sound of the Pop concert was not good at all. To be fair, it was set in a basketball arena which is not a music venue. The sound was so loud that the sound waves would travel the entire arena and reflect from the back wall muddling the sound. I recall thinking: I can do much better at home.
By contrast, the sound of Mahler's 2nd in a concert hall (Kennedy Center) was nothing short of spectacular. My stereo system, by comparison, sounds puny compared to the expansive landscape of sound and the dynamics of a full orchestra with over 200 performers on stage. This is the true "absolute sound" and while we can enjoy listening to our stereo systems, there is absolutely no way that a two-speaker system can replicate that.