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Alpine PXE-H660 Audio PRocessor with an EpicenterPlus Bass Processor?
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<blockquote data-quote="Boss T-Dot" data-source="post: 7626415" data-attributes="member: 639157"><p>Ya man....imagine this: it's June 28th, 1975; Ivor Wynn Stadium, Hamilton, Ontario: Pink Floyd's final stop on their North American tour. The event was so memorable, so life-changing, that my father never stops relating the feeling to anyone who even brings up the band (with its original membership...Waters et al.). He said that the sound-levels were so loud that the virtually un-attenuated waves were enjoyed by listeners sitting on the Hamilton Mountain's ledge nearly 1.5km from the stadium!! My dad said that his seat vibrated with the bass! The concert caused such an uproar and controversy that afterwards the conservative business "community" rallied to have such "hippie" concerts banned from Hamilton altogether. A TRUE HISTORICAL EVENT IN MUSIC!!</p><p></p><p><a href="http://hamiltonthisis.blogetery.com/2010/09/10/june-28th-1975-pink-floyd-rocked-ivor-wynne/" target="_blank">Recordings of the event still exist</a>, but do you think that the actual sound could possibly have been accurately-recorded? NEVER. Even with studio cuts, genius bands and artists from the 60s and 70s can never be heard as they intended to be heard. Thanks to digital remastering and bass reconstruction, however, we can get a better idea and approximate the sound that was once produced in those historical performances.</p><p></p><p>Bass is VERY important for music. Whether it's the drum&amp;bass of Massive Attack, the heavy beats of Dr. Dre or DJ Green Lantern, the overwhelming synthesized sub-bass sounds of Pink Floyd or the low-end countersubjects of Beethoven's Diabelli Variations, without the low-end, music tends to be dry and lifeless. I would say that, in general, music that lacks great bass lines is music that lacks great power over the emotions. Every great composer understood this and every audiophile can appreciate it.</p><p></p><p>So, if yo trunk got BASS, it wouldn't hurt to get a "restorer"!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Boss T-Dot, post: 7626415, member: 639157"] Ya man....imagine this: it's June 28th, 1975; Ivor Wynn Stadium, Hamilton, Ontario: Pink Floyd's final stop on their North American tour. The event was so memorable, so life-changing, that my father never stops relating the feeling to anyone who even brings up the band (with its original membership...Waters et al.). He said that the sound-levels were so loud that the virtually un-attenuated waves were enjoyed by listeners sitting on the Hamilton Mountain's ledge nearly 1.5km from the stadium!! My dad said that his seat vibrated with the bass! The concert caused such an uproar and controversy that afterwards the conservative business "community" rallied to have such "hippie" concerts banned from Hamilton altogether. A TRUE HISTORICAL EVENT IN MUSIC!! [URL="http://hamiltonthisis.blogetery.com/2010/09/10/june-28th-1975-pink-floyd-rocked-ivor-wynne/"]Recordings of the event still exist[/URL], but do you think that the actual sound could possibly have been accurately-recorded? NEVER. Even with studio cuts, genius bands and artists from the 60s and 70s can never be heard as they intended to be heard. Thanks to digital remastering and bass reconstruction, however, we can get a better idea and approximate the sound that was once produced in those historical performances. Bass is VERY important for music. Whether it's the drum&bass of Massive Attack, the heavy beats of Dr. Dre or DJ Green Lantern, the overwhelming synthesized sub-bass sounds of Pink Floyd or the low-end countersubjects of Beethoven's Diabelli Variations, without the low-end, music tends to be dry and lifeless. I would say that, in general, music that lacks great bass lines is music that lacks great power over the emotions. Every great composer understood this and every audiophile can appreciate it. So, if yo trunk got BASS, it wouldn't hurt to get a "restorer"! [/QUOTE]
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