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Why are stereo recordings not played on monaural systems?

By James Holden

Why are stereo recordings not played on monaural systems?

During playback, the listener’s brain uses those subtle differences in timing and sound level to triangulate the positions of the recorded objects. Stereo recordings often cannot be played on monaural systems without a significant loss of fidelity.

Who was the inventor of stereophonic sound technology?

Modern stereophonic technology was invented in the 1930s by British engineer Alan Blumlein at EMI, who patented stereo records, stereo films, and also surround sound.

What was the first stereophonic radio station in Chicago?

Chicago AM radio station WGN (and its sister FM station, WGNB) collaborated on an hourlong stereophonic demonstration broadcast on May 22, 1952, with one audio channel broadcast by the AM station and the other audio channel by the FM station.

How are stereophonic sound systems supposed to work?

How stereophonic sound systems work. The main diagram shows a simplified situation in nature. The inset shows the electronic simulation. Notably, such electronic systems require more than one speaker.

Is the old stereo system still in use?

Indeed, the days of the old-fashioned component stereo system are pretty much over, says Alan Penchansky, an audiophile and former columnist for the music trade publication Billboard. “What’s happened in the marketplace, the midmarket for audio has completely been obliterated,” he says.

What was stereo design like in the 1970s?

Stereo design reached glorious excess in the 1970s, and we desperately wish it would come back. Every step forward in the 1970s seemed to come with an equivalent step back. One President stopped shooting. Then his replacement was fired on twice.

What was the name of the first home audio system?

This was, after all, a decade that started with the first VCRs, pocket calculators and Atari, and ended with the founding of Microsoft and Apple and the launch of the Sony Walkman. The sense of progress ran just as deep in the home audio industry, sparking a golden age in hi-fi aesthetics I wish would come back.

Why was the portable stereo system killed off?

A portable musical stereo bra, designed by Geoffrey Weston for Philip Garner’s spoof “Better Living Catalogue,” never busted through. Music videos and their primary channel, MTV, became a huge outlet for music in the 1980s. One audiophile believes they helped kill off interest in great-sounding audio.