I love the intrinsic sound of Hancock's Grieg Violin and Piano Sonatas
recording(where Hancock plays the piano part!). But there is not
real stereo. One can hear in a rather obvious way that there
are two spaced microphones being used. The tonal character
of the sound is so attractive that one forgets about stereo
except in the sense of there being right/left--a lot of it!--
but it is really not realistic stereo being offered.

Robert



On Fri, 5 Jul 2013, Bob Katz wrote:

Blumlein has certain virtues that transcend the concept of spaced versus 
coincident. The out of phase lobe is one of the contributors so it is unfair to 
lump Blumlein into the universe of coincident sound. The sound of the following 
three coincident techniques is so different from one another that this argument 
becomes moot. Just exercise and listen without prejudice!

1) two councident hyper cardioids (with their slight out of phase lobe at about 
150 degrees)

2) coincident cardioids (pretty boring and far from spacious to my ears)

3) two coincident figure 8s (Blumlein). Something special, beats spaced miking 
in many cases. But not because it's coincident! Folks, thats not the answer. 
The answer is ---- the special way the room reflections and ambience are 
spatially decided by the microphone patterns themselves.

The late David Hancock employed spaced figure eights and it worked well for him. He used 
to call coincident miking "monereo". And I know what he was talking about, but 
I do think he missed the point about the big difference between two cardioids with their 
in phase boringness and the richness that even two coincident fig eights bring to the 
table.


BK

If you think what I just typed on my iPhone is funny you should visit     
http://damnyouautocorrect.com/.
Please excuse the excess quoting ----deleting text is a job. Thanks!

On Jul 5, 2013, at 1:04 PM, Robert Greene <gre...@math.ucla.edu> wrote:


I should add that this is not "academic" for me.
From (nonscientific) personal experience, I
have formed the impression that spaced mike techniques
color instrumental sound. Even ORTF--not  very space--
is not as spot on for tone color as Blumlein.(Widely
spaced omnis are all over the map on timbre as a function
of location I think). But this immpression is just another piece of anecdotal 
evidence.
No one needs to take it seriously, however much I personally
believe it.
But I would actually like to know in some systematic
way if this is true!--or not.

I cannot imagine why people would not want to know this
sort of thing themselves.

One other point: I have read a great many book on
recording techniques, as I am sure we all have.
I have never seen a systematic treatment of this
subject. If the information JN alludes to actually
exists, it is surely a well kept secret from
the authors of those books.(In my experience,
such audio information tends to be like the
midnight kisses in "When I fall in love"--
not there in the sun the next morning. All this supposed
literature of reliable scientific information
tends to turn out to be very dubious stuff if
it even exists , once one starts to look for it
and look at it hard. Even the localisation literture
is not all that convincing in detail as far
as microphone technique is concerned, though there
is a good bit of it. And a lot of it is contradicted
by other parts of it.)

Robert




On Fri, 5 Jul 2013, Robert Greene wrote:


I answered a lot of messages in succession without going
on the the next. So please forgive evolving answers!

I do note the complete discontinuity between
the response to my original post to the effect
that no one needs or wants what I was suggesting
(simple tests recorded) and JN's claim that
these exist and everyone know they exist- or the
implication of the latter.

Apparently few people actually do know of such things--
since only JN claims they are there.

I believe they might be there in private. I am
asking where one can find them in public.
Private science is not science. Science
is about shared information. I know a proof
of the Riemann hypothesis--but I am not telling.
Everyone would laugh , if they even noticed.

Information kept private is not really scientific
information at all.

Robert


On Fri, 5 Jul 2013, Robert Greene wrote:

If they are out there, please tell me where
I can buy a recording of what I indicated--
pink noise sources recorded at various positions
on stage with various mike techniques?
that people may have done this in private
I can believe.
But public information seems limited.
Source please? Things people can actually obtain?
Localization--lots of literature and Boyk's recording
Timbre--sources please?
Robert
On Wed, 3 Jul 2013, J?rn Nettingsmeier wrote:
On 07/03/2013 06:31 AM, Robert Greene wrote:
I apologize if people took offense.
fwiw, i did not take offense at your clear preference for realistic recordings 
(which i share and aspire to as well). i do object to hand-wavey cultural 
pessimism that postulates the end of scientific thinking.
stereophonic techniques have been scrutinized and researched in very great 
depth and detail, and test recordings of the sort you were alluding to are 
routinely done by sound engineering students and seasoned recordist alike. the 
papers and data are out there.
stating otherwise doesn't change that fact. let's not make sursound into a 
boring solipsistic debate club that negates everything which hasn't been 
discussed here before.
<snip>
Except in audio, where no simple question ever seems to
get definitively answered and every almost discussion turns into
mush by means of enlarging the complexity of the situation
to the point that there are so many variables that no analysis is
possible without wild difficulties, if at all.
Personally, I would just like to know which mike technique
does what to the tonal character of sources at different
locations around the recording stage. If you don't care, you
don't care. But I wish I had a disc where I could listen
and find out. I find it hard to believe that other people
are not interested in this.
that's because they demonstrably _are_ interested in this.
it's just not as easy as you make it sound.
let's begin with the simple definition of "tonal character".
you won't be able to separate tonal character from spatial rendition. 
coloration and comb filtering are a fact of life, and a perfectly uncolored 
monophonic source will often sound less pleasing than a comb-filtered stereo 
reproduction (unless your listening room helps a bit). moreover, the brain is 
able to extrapolate from severely comb-filtered sensory input and gives us the 
impression of hearing an uncolored auditory event. good luck simplifying that 
:) i'm looking forward to hearing about your test design.
Science works like that:one step at a time. Assuming that
people are interested in science.
yeah, that's why we have complete understanding of the human brain. because 
it's sooo easy to understand, if only people would read more sursound and not 
add needless complications. come on!
Years ago I decided to learn the piano(I am a violinist!)
just to see how it would go, by learning the Rachmaninoff 3rd
piano concerto --a measure at a time. As you can imagine I
did not get very far!
q.e.d.
your approach to scientific evaluation of recording techniques seems similar.
Audio seems to be missing a lot of the basics.
yes, because psychoacoustics is _hard_.
PS There is a good bit of this sort of thing about
LOCALIZATION. But not so much about timbre.
check out for example theile's "spectral objection to summing localization", 
but do get a case of wine and cigars before you dig in, because it's going to be a loong 
and very interesting night if you follow through some more papers.
best,
j?rn
--
J?rn Nettingsmeier
Lortzingstr. 11, 45128 Essen, Tel. +49 177 7937487
Meister f?r Veranstaltungstechnik (B?hne/Studio)
Tonmeister VDT
http://stackingdwarves.net
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