If you’ve been to Leslie’s Audiophile garage on a nice day, you’ll remember that the listening room on a nice day is anything but your standard indoor space. When the weather is nice Leslie will roll up the back wall (garage door) and place wrestling mats, stood on their sides, at the now open back wall. The result is that you’re listening to music in a three sided room which eliminates most of the detrimental bass problems that occur in a standard enclosed listening space. If you’re a bass lover, Leslie’s with the door up is a nice, though not perfect, place to hear well defined bass. But even with the door up there were other areas left to correct, or calibrate, in the room. Manny was able to improve the highs from the somewhat beamy tweeters on Leslie’s Lawrence Double Bass Speakers by adding a bit of toe in to the speaker positioning. Small tweaks like this can gain you some measureable improvement in how your system sounds, but I if you’d like to fully hear how good your system can sound, you need to measure and adjust for the room interaction digitally. The digital processors that are available today let you bump up the 60Hz dip in your bass, or tame that brightness that comes from a glaring reflection off your windows or the ceiling. Or maybe your speakers’ crossovers were intentionally (or not) designed with a bump or a dip in a frequency that sounds good in one room, but in your home leaves you less than happy? With DSP (digital sound processing) you can fix problems with room interaction and tailor the sound to suit your preferences.
Manny started out the event by fielding a variety of questions from those in attendance before we even listened to any music, modified or unmodified. And there were lots of questions! Everyone seemed well prepared to question the validity of modifying the purity of their sound reproduction in order to get “better sound.” Manny’s view on this is that the sound is already modified by its interaction with your room dynamics, and that any possible sound degrading effect (which he doesn’t believe in anyway) from digitizing the source is much less of a detriment than that which comes from the speakers’ interaction with the room before it reaches your ears.
After putting BSS Audio’s Omnidrive professional DSP unit into Leslie’s playback set up, SFAS members were played a variety of tracks with DSP calibration and no calibration. Instantaneous switching between DSP correction and no correction was made with a custom made A/B box.
The amount of difference you heard depended upon the track being played. For me, some small portions of the live recordings actually sounded better without correction as I felt they were recorded “too hot” to begin with and the correction allowed this irritation in the music to be more pronounced. In the future we’ve decided doing these demonstrations with music that people are more familiar with would be of greater benefit than introducing new unknown variables into the mix. I was familiar with the tracks played, so that I knew that what sounded better in spots without the correction in place was actually an elimination of fidelity in a particular frequency. But overall, I thought there was far and away an improved clarity that was obtained with the correction in place.
For those who were unsure about how putting the signal through a DSP unit changed the sound even without correction, at the end of the day Manny played tracks and let people switch between running the signal through the DSP unit- no correction applied- and just listening to the signal passed through the AB box. Some thought they could perceive a difference, some could not tell a difference, but the results of audience members correctly “detecting” a difference, or incorrectly identifying a change was 50%, or no better than random guessing. Manny admitted that for this test to be completely valid it needed to be done with an A/B/X style test, but there was not time for that. The bottom line was that the differences, if any, when inserting digital processing with no room correction, were subtle, if there were any at all, and not at all like those heard when the signal was processed to calibrate the sound for the room. That was not subtle, and was always clearly differentiated.
In conclusion, for demonstration purposes, I have to give Manny kudos for trying to correct the sound not only in Leslie’s room, but in the greater outdoors as well. I have a feeling this was the first time he was presented with a challenge quite like this. I say this not because he wasn’t up to the task, the task was accomplished, but because the significance of the results of the correction were less dramatic than I know them to be in rooms conventionally enclosed within a building.
For example: Albert Dall, the SFAS Director of Amplification Research, came by his directorship title as a result of his perpetual search for the perfect amplifier to increase the bass and overall fidelity on his YG Acoustic speakers. After spending gobs of time and money, he ended his search only after Manny came and inserted a DSP unit in his system to correct his speaker voicing and the room interaction. To quote Albert directly: “Quite simply I can say the result is stunning! In all of the switching of gear, trying to bi-amp, and wondering if different speakers would solve my wish for proper mid-bass, nothing sounded as good as it does now. Not only do I have deep believable bass/mid-bass, but the measuring after the parametric EQ settings were put in place, have shown that the low output ability of my speakers is such that subs are not necessary, and that nothing sounds better with the correction out of my system. The sound is locked in!”
I’ve heard Albert’s system before the insertion of room correction and was amazed that the quality of gear he possessed produced such a tepid listening experience. I was amazed, but ultimately not surprised. As I like to say, the room is king. But now, I think I’ll say, and Albert would agree- DSP wielded in the hands of an expert like Manny can slay the king. Long live DSP and better sound!
Leslie’s gear on the 26th:
AMR 777 Signature DAC, windows gaming computer (i-7, 16GB RAM, SSD) running J-River, Pass Labs XP-30 Pre-amp Prototype Magnetic Conduction Amplifier (circuit designed by Steve Kaiser from B&K), High Fidelity Cables throughout. Lawrence Double Bass Speakers