GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Ask Me" Archives

...to May 12, 2008

 

Dialogue imbalance

May 12, 2008

I have been searching the archives but can't find the answer to my question. I have a decent stereo system, but I wish to watch a movie with it. Whenever I use the DVD player I normally get the background music or sound effects louder than the spoken words, which drown out the actors' voices. I have been fiddling around with the DVD player by setting it to stereo out or 2.1 audio, but I can't get the voices to dominate. Given the fact that I would like to stick to stereo and minimize my equipment, do you have any other suggestions?

Rajan

Yours is a common problem. With a hard center channel you have the ability to adjust the level of the center signal, thereby increasing the dialogue intelligibility in the overall mix. When you run a phantom center channel you lose that ability. You can try reducing the signal sent to the left and right speakers and see if that helps (using the level controls in the DVD player's menu system). I’m not aware of any receiver or processor that allows the user to adjust the center signal before it is routed out to the left and right speakers. A product like that might exist, but I’ve never seen it outside of a custom solution that is used by a diehard four-channel enthusiast I know. One other thought: You could try the late-night mode on your receiver/processor and see if that lowers the dynamics, thereby bringing the dialogue more up front in the mix.


B&W or Axiom?

May 8, 2008

I have been looking at two brands of speakers and would like some help in choosing one of them: B&W CM7 and Axiom M60 or M80. I have heard the CM7 and love the sound, but I have not heard the Axiom. I came across your review in the Axiom newsletter and read the review from Sound & Vision. But I would like to know which speaker is better. I need help before I purchase.

Bernard

Having not heard either speaker myself I just can’t tell you which speaker is “better.” I could give you some general observations of other speakers made by those companies that I have heard, but ultimately that would be of little help and may be incorrect as it applies to those particular speaker models. Axiom offers a good return policy should you order their speakers and decide not to keep them, so perhaps the best approach would be to get the Axioms in and compare them with what you heard from the B&Ws. That will also remove any nagging doubts you have about which one will be better for you over the long term. Good luck in your decision.


Difference among receivers?

May 5, 2008

Is there really a difference in sound quality among home-theater receivers? I can’t imagine that much difference between all of these mass-market boxes, but maybe I’m jaded.

Edwin

There can be huge differences. I remember listening to a lower-end Sony receiver in my system a few years back and being struck by just how terrible it sounded. The highs disappeared, the bass became muddy, and the midrange sounded as if it had a wet blanket thrown on it. On the other hand, I had a chance to audition one of the nicer Technics models a short time later and it sounded superb: clear mids and highs, and deep, energetic bass. That doesn’t mean you’ll hear differences as striking as my examples between each and every model you audition, but it does mean that some sonic differences do exist and they can have a real impact on your enjoyment when listening to them.


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