User Manual

Multichannel Monitoring Tutorial Booklet (M2TB) rev. 3.5.2
Masataka Nakahara : SONA Corporation
©2005 YAMAHA Corporation, ©2005 SONA Corporation
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3-5. Playback image compatibility with the playback environment
Differences in surround speaker placement and the spread between the L/R speakers rarely cause
profoundly different results in the playback image when a surround production is played back. Thus, the
end user can enjoy most surround productions even if their setup is not, for example, the ITU-R
configuration.
However, compatibility of the speaker placement does become important when creating musical
productions in which you intend to skillfully use the phase relationships between channels to generate a
precise sound field. Including situations in which such needs must be supported, it is sometimes necessary
that a certain “standard” be maintained in the production playback environment. The typical example of
this case is Rec. ITU-R BS. 775-1, and it is important to consider ITU-R as the primary basis for the
surround playback environment. On the other hand, there are cases in which room shape, room size, and
the production content cause disadvantages if you attempt to apply Rec. ITU-R BS. 775-1 to the
production environment, and in such cases, it is valuable to consider other placements. For example in an
extremely narrow environment, the ITU-R surround speaker placement immediately beside the listener's
ears may create an unnatural-sounding playback.
Although “standard placement” is an important element of the playback environment, it is also important
that the engineer find it easy to carry out the mixing process. It is important that the mixing engineer
engage in surround production in an environment in which he finds it easy to mix, and creating the multi-
channel product with consideration of compatibility with other speaker placement.
To ens ure this, it is important to understand the characteristics of various speaker configurations. Also, in
actual production, variances in playback image due to differing speaker configurations can be minimized
if signals highly correlated with other channels are kept out of channels (speakers) whose location is
indeterminate. For example in the case of L/R, it is easy to obtain equivalent playback even between a
variety of playback environments, so using highly correlated signals is not a problem. However for L/R
and C, or for L/R and LS/RS, different environments will have these located in different positions, so if
highly correlated signals are used, there is a danger that the playback image or playback response may be
significantly different. Caution is necessary if you're using a lot of delay processing to create a sound field,
or when using production methods in which the correlation between speakers (channels) is important.
[Fig. 28] Correlation images of the playback signals and Compatibility between different listening environment
L/R
Robust
Severe
C
LS/RS
L/R
C
LS/RS
Compatibility between
different listening environment
Low
High
Correlation of
the playback signals
( L/R vs C vs LS/RS )