castleofargh
Sound Science Forum Moderator
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- Jul 2, 2011
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"Headphone panning" means "illegal/impossible" spatial information which doesn't make sense to our brain. It is no wonder such information annoys.
1Most people are not aware of the concept of spatial distortion so they don't know the full potential of headphone listening (I was one of these people until 6 years ago). I personally think investing money on expensive headphones and listening to them without cross feed while pretending the sound quality is good is silly. Those who don't like cross-feed (know about it and have tried it) do not in my opinion fully understand what cross-feed is about and they misunderstand in my opinion what being a purists means.
2"Basic" cross-feed is right in the sense that it reduces or removes spatial distortion making the signal "legal/possible" for the brain. In other words, a recording could have be done in real world that sounds exactly the same when played back perfectly. How do you know what the sound originally was? Isn't the most important thing that the recording sounds as if it is identical to the original sound? If cross-feed places the drums 5° too left, then what is the problem really? The drums could have been 5° more left in the studio. At least the drums won't sound "fake" and "all over the place" because of spatial distortion.
3How much can we improve sound quality by going from basic cross-feed to "customized solution?" Is it worth the increased complexity and price? I ask this because I am a "bang for the buck" guy.
Technically vinyl is abysmally bad compared to digital audio formats, but still many praise it being superior. This is an interesting issue and I think I have found some explanations for it.
1 yeah, lack of experience and in general simply poor choice of reference can most certainly lead to different ideas of what is right. but I know many people who simply don't seem to mind much. you and I simply aren't among them.
2 well that's the all Hi-Fi idea. getting a little closer to whatever reference. I'm like a very lazy audiophile in that aspect, but the all hifi bizz runs on people who find small improvements very relevant and "worth it".3 follows on that, to each his own idea of what is worth it. I can talk only for myself and say that I'm rather cheap about audio, my headphone rig right now is odac/o2 and a hd650. not exactly TOTL. but when I saw the kickstarter campaign for the Realiser A16, I took my credit card out of my pocket and started filling in the required information to get one. ^_^ didn't need to think, and didn't for a second reconsidered since, despite how we'll probably get it in 2037(well that's in the game with kickstarter).
and I'm not even after any idea of perfection or hifi, I just wish to get something close to the sound of my speakers when it's late at night and I can't use them. because ... neighbors. what I use now feels to me slightly better than using Xnor's crossfeed VST with settings that honestly worked pretty well for my head I sure was glad to have found it at the time. and that felt slightly better than any other crossfeed, and any crossfeed felt better than nothing at all. what's worth it is the most subjective thing there is.
