Here! Here! (Goes back under stone. Now, where's my old Minim and my relatively 
uncompressed CD's?)

On 29 Oct 2012, at 14:28, "Ronald C.F. Antony" <r...@cubiculum.com> wrote:

> 
> On 28 Oct 2012, at 22:34, Stefan Schreiber <st...@mail.telepac.pt> wrote:
> 
>>> When Ambi VLC happens, I predict the re-surrection of UHJ.  Simple 2 
>>> channels will remain the most important distribution format in the 
>>> forseable future.
>> 
>> This is real surround sound? Why not Dolby Surround...    :-D
> 
> Despite a lot of stupid badmouthing, UHJ works, Dolby Surround does not; and 
> things like SACD, DVD-Audio etc. have been sunk effectively by the cost of 
> playback systems and the greed of the record industry which was unable to 
> read the signs of the times (more things competing for the same little bit of 
> disposable income) and thus insisted on premium pricing rather than at price 
> levels that would have pitched the new formats as CD replacements.
> 
> As I said countless times before it's about REALISTIC AMBIENCE, I'm not 
> trying to train my sniper rifle on any musician while listening to music, so 
> I could care less if the localization isn't as accurate as some full B-format 
> or HOA recording as compared to the real layout of the people. 
> I wasn't at the concert, and 99.99% of listeners weren't there either, and 
> nobody knows or cares if the first violin was indeed 2 feet to the left of 
> where we think it is.
> 
> What realistic people care about, that there's a distribution channel for 
> stereo, and that UHJ is stereo compatible, meaning that the audience is 
> bigger, and the few people who are interested in surround sound actually have 
> a chance of getting a reasonably sized catalog of stereo recordings that are 
> also surround compatible; and for the foreseeable future, that's as good as 
> it's going to get, because the music industry doesn't produce music for less 
> than 1% of the market.
> 
> So you get some stereo compatible music, or you get nothing. Frankly, who 
> cares about the 3 dozen high-end surround recordings being made? For the most 
> part they are esoteric pieces, and rarely do they have the type of 
> world-class musicians that major labels attract, and even if they did, I 
> don't care to listen to the same 50 recordings over and over again.
> 
> Surround sound will not progress as long as the people involved refuse to be 
> part of a process that on the commercial side takes baby steps, and instead 
> insist on "certain minimal standards" that constitute too big of a leap of 
> ever being considered by commercial interests, both in the music industry and 
> in consumer electronics.
> 
> Ronald
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