In spite of all your eloquent verbosity, this statement is pure garbage. ...and now you're trying to baffle us with bull. We're not talking the ".1" channel. We're talking the two rear channels on a SACD. We're not talking the 6th and 7th channels on a DD or DTS blue ray. We're talking a SACD where 5.1 is it's limit.
I'm familiar with the RCA Living Stereo 3.0 remasters. I'm also familiar with the current batch of 4.0 (Pentatone?)releases from Audio Fidelity. In either case, this is moot to your overly broad statement. In cast, the latter actually proves your statement false.
Again, you said They never use the back channels. for SACD and, if you haven't realized by now that that's false, well, that says more about you than you think.
Don't feel bad. We get many people her who think they are God's gift to this hobby. They either wise up or leave if they can't stand being called on it.
That is the point. The back channels are definitely intended to be used on some SACDs and not the side surrounds.
You mention the Pentatone remastered Philips Quad recordings for one. Those remasters sound wonderful, but the surround speakers need to be at the back.
In addition the circular drummers on the Aho symphony No. 12 recording are all round Latte Hall.
The drummers do what Laplanders are prone to do, and that is beat in a fashion, that makes the drumming whorl round the room. That will not happen if you use the movie 5.1 set up. In addition the rear will not be distinguishable from the side brass choirs.
If you play this recording using very capable rears, and believe me this recording requires five very powerful beefy speakers and a response down to 20 Hz from either good full range speakers or the use of good subs in addition, you need to use the rears. If you don't then it makes nonsense of the circular drumming and you will loose the effect of the side brass choirs.
This recording works marvelously using the rears as the engineers intended. Only an idiot would master it any other way. The drums locate round the whole room as they are banged sequentially in a circular fashion. All the five brass choirs image perfectly.
When I play the Motet SACD of the two great organs of Cologne Cathedral, I want them front and back. I don't want one of them playing over my head, or the rear one in front of me if I sit in my second row.
The other thing is my fronts and rear cast a wonderful perspective and it really sounds like the front organ is way in the front and the rear organ way in the rear. There is a huge dynamic range on this recording and it is positively atmospheric.
In Helmuth Rilling's recording of the War Requiem, the musicians are located as Benjamin Britten instructed for the dedication of the new Coventry Cathedral. This will NOT play back correctly if the arrangement is traditional 5.1.
If the rear channels are used just for ambience then the traditional 5.1 arrangement works fine.
For antiphonal music the 5.1 traditional arrangement only works if the antiphonal choirs are front and side to side. It does not work for front and rear, which so much of it is.
Optimally systems should be able to switch the surround channels to the rear.
I do not agree that 7.1 is a waste of time. More movies should be 7.1 War Horse for instance is superbly recorded and on this rig things like vehicles can move seamlessly between front and rear. The 7.1 puts you much more in the middle of the battle field than 5.1.
In addition PL II x music works much better in a 7.1 set up then 5.1. Others have noted this also.
This algorithm works very well for minimally miked ambient recordings.
My own masters using intensity stereo rather than phase difference using an M-S technique with a Neumann SM-69 FET is as good as discreet recordings. The applause and audience clapping almost all comes from the four rear speakers and not the three fronts. Due to the way M-S works with a center microphone it makes the front three essentially discrete.
The BPO concerts are recorded in multichannel but mixed to 2 channel for streaming until they move to multichannel streaming. They issue some of their concerts in DTS Master Audio5.1.
The Pl II x does a really good job of returning those recordings back to multichannel. If the phase relationships in the recording can be preserved, Pl II x actually works wonderfully well and returns preserves the ambience of the recording venue very well.
I agree for pop music those algorithms are awful and not recommended.