| Publication
detail: |
| Adelman-Larsen,
N. W., Thompson, E. R., and Gade, A. C. (2008) The importance of bass
clarity in pop and rock venues,
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 123(5),
p. 3090. |
| Abstract |
| High levels of
bass sound have been shown to stimulate the part of the
brain that controls such basic instincts as sexual desire
and hunger [Todd, 2000]. In rock and pop music, the bass
frequencies from 40-125 Hz get amplified to very loud
levels. Easily half of the electrical power of the PA and
monitor system goes to these 1.5 octaves. A recent survey
[Adelman-Larsen et al., 2007] showed that the most
important subjective parameter for a rock and pop music hall
to score a high rating was 'bass clarity' which correlated
with a coefficient of 0.74 to 'overall impression'. Informal discussions
with audio engineers and bass players give the perspective that
artificial reverberation is rarely, if ever, added to bass-frequencies.
In fact the ideal hall should be as dry as possible
at low-frequencies. In the mid-treble frequency range, sound absorption,
and thereby 'clarity', is easily obtained through the
presence of the audience that absorbs 4-6 times more
mid/high
frequency sound energy than bass sound energy. In the
low-frequency range 'clarity' is not so easily obtained.
This paper discusses the challenge in depth and proposes
design solutions. |
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