Roy Allison in the latest BAS newsletter
Posted: July 2nd, 2016, 10:35 am
As you probably know Roy Allison passed away recently. David Moran did an excellent piece on Roy as both a speaker designer and person. One of the things that was most interesting to me was one of Roy's statements about reproduction flatness that is shown below. Very smart cookie that Roy Allison.
Tom
Ideally every element in the reproduction chain should be flat, with
deviations from flatness (when desired) controllable by the user. This
should include loudspeakers too, of course. But even if it were practical
to make such loudspeaker systems at reasonable prices — which it is
not — what could be done about the hundreds of millions of loudspeakers
in use now, all of which do have rolled-off high-frequency power output?
The answer is that you continue to make records that sound properly
balanced when played on these loudspeaker systems, or you won't sell
records. Thus records will continue to have inherently a ‘brighter’ balance
than is intended by the recording engineer to be actually heard. That will
be true of ‘concert’ recordings, jazz and chamber recordings, and even
ambience-type four-channel recordings. Playing such records at home
on truly flat loudspeaker systems will produce a sound considerably
brighter than the producer had in mind.
Tom
Ideally every element in the reproduction chain should be flat, with
deviations from flatness (when desired) controllable by the user. This
should include loudspeakers too, of course. But even if it were practical
to make such loudspeaker systems at reasonable prices — which it is
not — what could be done about the hundreds of millions of loudspeakers
in use now, all of which do have rolled-off high-frequency power output?
The answer is that you continue to make records that sound properly
balanced when played on these loudspeaker systems, or you won't sell
records. Thus records will continue to have inherently a ‘brighter’ balance
than is intended by the recording engineer to be actually heard. That will
be true of ‘concert’ recordings, jazz and chamber recordings, and even
ambience-type four-channel recordings. Playing such records at home
on truly flat loudspeaker systems will produce a sound considerably
brighter than the producer had in mind.