Here is what I noticed. Some music is converted perfectly with SPEC, while other files sound a bit flat after conversion. Don't misunderstand me. The fact that a software can take ANY Stereo source and make it sound 5.1 and sound good is simply staggering. But some sources are not designed for this process. I am simply trying to ascertain what CDs those might be so I can stay away from them. For example, Michael Franks's "Barefoot on the Beach" (a smooth jazz CD) converted perfectly. Phil Spector in his unincarcerated days couldn't have done a better job. SPEC, in its default settings, brings it to life. The voices where they belong, the guitars, the sax solos - all are near perfect with occasional rear channel instrument sounds. What shows up in the rear belongs in the rear - seldom quiet second guitars, backup solos, rare bongos and chimes. Basically, to create a sound like that you need a professional sound engineer and mixer, a professional studio for about six months and access to the original 24 channel master soundtrack with a separate channel for each instrument and voice. And about quarter a mil to pay for it all. This amazing software does a job just as good - if not better - in only in a few minutes. Its beyond me how this is even possible. Magic, I guess. Other CDs I tried to convert are simply flat. These CDs I would have thought would be perfect candidates for SPEC because of their multi dimensional music structure, even though they are recorded in Stereo. For example, Photek's "Form and Function" (a minimalistic D&B or IDM) is such a candidate. However, after conversion, most of the CD sounds almost stereo. The fronts are fine, but rears sound like somebody simply played Stereo source but placed two microphones in the back of the concert hall to record what people back in the audience hear. There are no occasional instruments there, like in Michael Franks conversion. Only in track #9 "Rings Around Saturn" I can hear rain specifically in the rear channels, that is it. The quality of both CDs is fine. So, from this I assume that some CDs are not candidates for SPEC. This is by no means a drawback of the software, but of the sources, no doubt. But which ones? How do you tell?
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