Now that you mention it, I think this might be the root cause of the complaint I had with the Brahms recording.
I love the "sense of space and perspective", but I must admit that I could simply be used to the prevalence of closed mic'ing. The Gardiner series I mentioned earlier has both excellent resolution, AND sense of space.
That is interesting you mention the Gardner. I have quite a few of his recordings but no the Beethoven. Archiv have been using a multi mic technique, but using a digital system to correct the phase and time problems between the microphones.
I have found those recordings to be a significant improvement over standard multi mic recordings, but not as good minimalist ones.
The actual object in view was to improve the results from typical speakers and still keep guys like me happy. I vote it a partial success.
The real answer is improvement in speakers at the bulk of the sales price point. The problem is that over all the classical market is small. If you play the average pop recording on a good set of speakers in the $1000.00 to $2000.00 per pair range and a B & W 800 D, there won't be a chasm in the sound quality. If you play a good classical recording, especially a large forces work with chorus and orchestra, or even a very well recorded piano, on the two there will be a chasm of difference.
The funny thing is that B & W put together a CD of the most awful poorly recorded garbage to show off the 800 D. It would not matter much what you played that CD on!
I did have an interesting experience here though, a couple of weeks ago. An engineer who has mixed a lot of CDs for the rich and famous, is retiring here and has cleared a lot on Kabekona Lake three miles from here. We were introduced by Vince, who owns and runs the local Fort Benedict store. He thought we might have something in common.
He was excited and came in in two or three days. I played him some of my masters, and I think one commercial SACD. Of course what is in my library, is not what he worked with! However he was very excited about what he heard, and said he wanted to come back next time he visited and bring a collection of his mixes. In a few weeks he was back. He brought a lot of his mixes, and some CDs to show how the mastering engineers would destroy his work.
I have to say quite a few of the tracks were most impressive, even though the music was not what I would purchase or record. Some down frequency shifted bass guitars were quite impressive.
He was over the moon at what he heard, and his wife even more so. They were here into the wee hours of the morning. Anyhow I found out that a good set of speakers designed for classical music of all types can impress people form the pop world.
He thought that these were quite the best speakers he had ever heard, and would love to be able to master with them. He had his own studio, for some years, and did freelance work all over the country also. He sold his studio a few years ago for $3.6 million dollars. It had toys I had never heard of or imagined. He showed me the studio equipment list, which ran into pages. I had no idea of what the majority of it was for. His custom speaker system he told me cost over $100,000!
His comment about this system were, the relaxed feel to it, the clarity and naturalness of the voices reproduced without hurting your ears.
He thought the bass detail and performance was particularly outstanding. He like most people had never heard TLS speakers of the type I'm into.
I have found the universal comment from experienced listeners, that one of the things that really sets this system apart, is the quality and detail of the bass, as well as its reach. So needless to say I was happy with his critique. This was the first demo of this system to someone whose interests were outside the classical realm.