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I visited (in SF) for the first time a few nights ago and just keep thinking about it! It's a space for immersive audio. You sit in the center of a room, surrounded by a 32-channel hemispherical speaker array. I heard a mix of Dark Side of the Moon—really amazing.
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My first thought was that this is is a really good format for high-fidelity recording and playback of live performance. It feels like I'm in the room with Pink Floyd, playing right now. But I'm more interested in how the medium lets you do things that aren't possible in realtime.
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The instrumentalists are roughly locked in physical location, but there are all kinds of other layers of sounds roaming around the room: phaser effects dancing around the room, the choir rising and falling vertically, cash machines jostling, heartbeat in the floor, etc.
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It seems quite demanding on the source material: you need to have a ton going on musically to take advantage of the extra degrees of freedom. I wonder how the mix was made, practically. They note that they started from the quadrophonic… but the isolation must have been so hard!
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Thanks for listening with us! You heard the quadraphonic version of DSOTM, unaltered yet upmixed for the 32 speaker sphere of sound in Envelop SF. This creates 4 walls of sound instead of 4 speakers. We didn’t pan or adjust any stems, we want the artist’s vision to be heard 🔊🌐
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Wow—that's fascinating. So what seemed to be vertical distinctions were actually just perceptual! Even more reason for me to come back and enjoy audio created specifically for the full hemisphere.
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