(I understood that you were talking about client's expectations)
It's not like being a mechanical/civil/electronic/etc engineer...where it IS mostly about the science.
Food for thought...
Our audio industry is based on a seemingly simple sequence of events. We capture a musical performance with microphones, whose outputs are blended into an electronic message stored on tape or disc, which is subsequently reproduced through two or more loudspeakers. This simple description disguises a process that is enormously complicated. We know from experience that, in some ways, the process is remarkably good. For decades we have enjoyed reproduced music of all kinds with fidelity sufficient to, at
times, bring tears to the eyes, and send chills down the spine. Still, critics of audio systems can sometimes point to timbral characteristics that are not natural, that change the sound of voices and instruments. They point to
noises and distortions that were not in the original sounds, rendering even the most eloquent tunes in a brittle and harsh fashion. They note that closing the eyes does not result in a perception that the listener is involved in the
performance, enveloped in the acoustical ambiance of a concert hall or jazz club. They point out that stereo, as we have known it, is an antisocial system – only a single listener can hear the reproduction as it was created.
For all of these criticisms there are solutions, some here and now, and some under development. All of the solutions are based on science. How can science, a cold and calculating endeavor if ever there were one, help with delivering the emotions of great music? Because, in the space between the performers and the audience, music exists as sound waves. Sound waves are physical entities, subject to physical laws, amenable to technical measurement and description and, in most important ways, predictable. The physical science of acoustics allows us to understand the behavior of sound waves as they travel from the musician to the listener, whether the performance is “live” or recorded.
Is this FUN or what?
