F
Floyd Toole
Acoustician and Wine Connoisseur
Concert halls minimize absorption - except for the audience/chairs which are a given. The reason is that the voices and musical instruments have finite sound output, and it is the task of the concert hall to sustain that energy through reverberation (but not too much) and reflections (for diffusion to deliver the sound to all parts of the hall). Technically, concert halls are elaborate comb filters that sound wonderful - I go to about a dozen symphony concerts a year and no stereo recording is in the same league.
So, the acoustical design of concert halls has nothing to do with fiberglass. It has a lot to do with scattering. Sound reproduction is a different thing. Unlike your ballroom, the reverberation time in a home listening room is probably less than 0.5s, more like 0.3s in a well furnished room. You will also very likely be in a dominantly direct sound field at middle and high frequencies, so transients will be well delivered.
So, the acoustical design of concert halls has nothing to do with fiberglass. It has a lot to do with scattering. Sound reproduction is a different thing. Unlike your ballroom, the reverberation time in a home listening room is probably less than 0.5s, more like 0.3s in a well furnished room. You will also very likely be in a dominantly direct sound field at middle and high frequencies, so transients will be well delivered.