Mary, ah now there is the difference. Most of were talking about commercially 
available music recordings which by nature are stereo and no matter what signal 
processing goes on are still meant to be a stereo recording. A concert hall is 
a much different experience. I once had a high end Harmon-Kardon a/v receiver 
with several different concert hall DSP options. With a 5.1 surround system it 
was quite the effect. However not being into that type of thing myself I didn't 
go that route when I moved to this house. 
Frank

-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Mary Otten
Sent: Monday, May 26, 2014 10:22 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: listen to music in surround sound

I haven't had the ability to listen in surround sound for a long time.
Indeed, most of my experience was with an analog system years ago, made by ADS. 
And it was awesome. I also had the Carver sonic holography unit, which was 
good, but not as good as the ads, which actually required two speakers in the 
rear. The thing is, if you like classical music, full orchestra etc, there is 
no way you get anything approaching a concert hall experience with two stereo 
speakers, unless there is some magic happening in the background, ala the 
Carver holography. I have been impressed with Polk Audio in the past and also 
with the Magna planar speakers, which I really wanted in the worst way. Talk 
about 3-dimensional sound! But the listening environment demanded by that set 
up is not one that your average guy or gal can manage. That's why I'
m intrigued by sound bars and various digital signal processing techniques. I 
want to simulate the concert hall experience in my living-room. And 2 speakers 
will never do that.

Mary



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