<font color='#000000'>Friday night the g-f and I went to a performance of Hayden, Levin and Tchaikovski by the Albany (New York) Symphony Orchestra. The ASO was playing in a venue that is renowned for its excellent acoustics, the Troy Music Hall. Partly by luck, we ended up in fifth row center.
Since live music is the "holy grail" we all aspire to, as soon as we got home, we turned on the sound system for a comparison. If I had a recording of the live performance I just heard I would have played it, but since I didn't, I put on one of my favorites, a Telarc SACD called "Rossini Overtures." My initial impression was that my system playing this software compared very well with the live performance. The soundstage was not as wide as in the live concert, but my room is not 100' wide either. Nor was the soundstage as deep, but at the venue, I had the benefit of actually seeing the depth of the soundstage, which no doubt assisted my ears. The bass was more extended at home, and the midrange and treble seemed very lifelike, if more forward and in-your-face. If anything, transient speed and dynamics seemed better at home!
However, after a few minutes of listening, I realized that I had sat through 2 1/2 hours of live performance without listener fatique, something I cannot do at home. And why does my system push the midrange forward and why do I have the illusion of greater transient speed and dynamics. Is it because the treble reaches my ears before the midrange and the midrange before the bass? Is it because my speakers are not time-aligned? I also realized that when I listen at home, I am actually listening at levels louder than at the live performance, so I turned the volume down a bit.
So, maybe it's worth the time and expense to go to a live concert once in a while, to remind ourselves what it is we are striving for.</font>