@MS said:
Sitting inside a nice concert hall, in a good position, is a nice experience - but I wouldn't want a recording from that position.
I would - in fact, this is one of my main ideals, derived from the great classical recordings by Capitol, Columbia, Mercury Living Stereo, of the 1950s-60s, which sought to place just one, two or three microphones in the ideal position in the ideal concert venue to record every nuance of sound and still rank among the best recordings of classical music ever done. Not easy to achieve, but an ideal for recordists to attempt to emulate since it has the great advantage of doing exactly what the human brain does every time one hears any sound.
It is _way_ beyond the scope of a little forum message to discuss this in depth (the topic is about as old as the art of recording itself). But I think it is important to point out that a recording can't and won't be a "pure" representation of a real acoustic event any time soon. Even those highly reputable efforts form the early days of stereo are anything but a faithful representation of the actual audience's perception. 😊
There are several well-understood technical and a handful of psycho-acoustic reasons. The main reason for _me_ is that a "pure" recording (assuming that it could exist) is about as interesting as filming a theatrical performance with one camera from one perspective only, without edits and specific lighting. It might have documental values, but there's a reason that the creation of a _movie_ (which uses the possibilities of the medium to the fullest extent) needs much more effort and of course different technical approaches than that. 😉
In other words: Concert music and recorded music have to be understood as the equivalents of theatre and cinema: There might be convergences and overlaps, but they are not the same art form. They adhere to very different artistical, aesthetical and technical premisses.
Kind regards,