rip dusty hill
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rip dusty hill
It is interesting, but I think it is more beneficial for film (especially obviating reason for installing 5.1 or 7.1 speaker systems) and some types of music like atmospheric styles, experimental and electronic.
Unless you were born with an extra ear, we really only hear in stereo anyway and the brain interprets the space, so it makes sense that simulated “spatial” 2.0 could be just as good.
On the whole, I think that when it's good, it can be really good. Sweet Child O Mine, for example, sounds like Axl & Izzy are right in front of you and Slash & Duff are behind you. (I'd add that some classical mixes can sound incredible too.)
But I've also found some Atmos-enhanced tracks that, imo, didnt really add anything. I've got a kid currently into that Olivia singer. Her tracks sound substantially the same to me with and without spatial.
And some Atmos mixes I feel actually detract from the original. Whoever spatial-ized the Replacements "Please to Meet Me" sounds like they were just playing around with the equipment to see what would happen.
rip nanci griffith
GREAT song, Inudesu. You knocked it out of the park with this one. "Signs" --a song mostly about generational bias and bigotry back in the 60's and 70's-- has proven to have legs for the last 50 years. The song's lyrics --"Do this, Don't Do That, Can't You Read The Sign", are just as powerful today as they were in 1971. Especially with today's signs about COVID, mask wearing, get your vaccine, etc.... People just love to tell other people what to do. This is a song with powerful lyrics that will still be admired a hundred years from now.