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In Reply to: RE: conflict between accuracy and impressive posted by unclestu on May 18, 2012 at 17:29:30
Kavi Alexander's classic Blumlein recording of Mahler's Fifth Symphony is the most natural sounding Mahler recording that I have, but for some reason some audiophiles do not like it.
Tony Lauck
"Diversity is the law of nature; no two entities in this universe are uniform." - P.R. Sarkar
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recording technique sounds best if the speakers are at a 90 degree angle pointed directly at the listener. When oriented as such, the hall realism is very natural and rather spectacular at least to my hearing. Unfortunately not many want to reorient their speaker for one recording.Another source of very realistic recordings is Kimber Kable's IsoMike technique. AS they now have professional musicians being recorded, the sonic realism makes them a joy to listen to.
Ray Kimber's approach is quite different: he tries to place the mikes in the typical position one would have their playback speakers. Unorthodox, but it seems to work very well. On one of his demo discs he has a track entitled Roll Call, whereby the choir, standing in a circle around the microphone array, simply calls out their individual names. Set up in surround sound, the presentation is extremely realistic and Kimber's Isomike technique utilizing four speakers in a surround sound mode has the most natural and realistic soundstaging I have heard thus far.
StuPS: It should be pointed out that Kavi's Russian recordings used a digital recorder. IIRC, Kavi actually borrowed the system Kimber uses. Prior to that, Kavi used a custom EAR one inch tape drive tubed reel to reel recorder. I'm not sure if Kavi used the same dual recorder set up that Ray uses, however.
Edits: 05/23/12
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