Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/03/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Mar 5, 2009, at 11:01 AM, Gary wrote: >> Hi Jan - Beautiful violins! Just yesterday I was at our local >> theater, comparing its acoustical qualities to a Stradivarius. >> Check a photo of it at: >> http://www.northcoastphotos.com/Lympa_2007_07_05.htm >> It was built as a vaudeville theater in about 1920 when someone >> really knew how to design un-amplified acoustics. While the theater >> was recently being restored, I did the photo-documentation of the >> project. A simple guitar solo or small orchestra without >> microphones sounds wonderful there! But put a loud amplified band >> in there and it all turns to mush. The good acoustics of older concert halls owes more to the type of construction than to careful design. Older buildings featured a beam and masonry construction that was both massive and reflected sound well. Further, the ornamentation schemes were fussy and provided a number of angled and rounded surfaces that reflected sound to all portions of the hall. The acoustics of some halls were fabulous, although mostly created by accident. The old Carnegie Hall, the Milan Opera House, the Mormon Tabernacle, and Harvard's Sanders Theater were praised by musicians and audiences alike. In contrast, recent concert hall construction with stronger but lighter materials and modern design, flat surfaces, and austere decoration often reflected sound in unusual patterns, producing dead spots in the hall. A number of these halls have had to have extensive acoustical reengineering before the sound was up to the old standards. For a number of years I had an office and lab in the Gramercy Park Stables, a building owned by the City Univ. of New York. True to it's name, the building was constructed around 1880 to house the horses and carriages of rich Gramercy Park area residents. It was constructed very solidly to bear the weight of the horses. A large riding paddock was on the ground floor to exercise the horses during bad weather. By the late 60s, when I worked there, the horses had moved out and the stalls converted to offices. The riding paddock became an auditorium. Both the RCA Symphony orchestra and the NY Symphony orchestra used the auditorium as a recording studio because its acoustics were exceptional and could not be duplicated modern New York buildings. Similarly Sanders Theater, built in the decade following the Civil War, was used as a recording venue by the Boston Symphony. Many of the great musical records were created in antique concert halls. In a similar sense, many great photographs were made by antique Leicas and lenses. They had a signature that can't be duplicated by modern equipment. Alas, they don't make cameras or concert halls like they used to. Larry Z