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    Back From Axpona Update - Audirvana on Linux, Immersive Audio In Munich, and More

     

     

        

        Audio: Listen to this article.

     

     

     

    What a week, and I’m far from complaining. After spending three days upgrading my immersive audio system, I headed to Chicago for Axpona on Thursday. Full articles about each experience are coming soon.

     

    images.jpgToday is the first day I’ve had a chance to sit down at my keyboard and collect my thoughts about what’s going on and what I’ve been dying to post about for days. The first one that is killing me, is the Audirvana on Linux announcement. I don’t think most people understand how big this release is, mainly because of how Damien and team elected to implement it. What I mean by that is this, Audirvana on Lunix isn’t just another app that can run on Linux (we have a few of those), but it’s offered as a headless application. This is what takes the announcement from “neat” to “huge” in my opinion.

     

    There’s a big difference between running a full Linux desktop, requiring keyboard, mouse, and monitor and running headless. Sure, headless isn’t for everyone because as it currently stands with Audirvana it will require a bit of tech savvy. But, for those with the interest and a little time to get it running, a headless server is absolutely ideal.

     

    I also love what this signals to the audiophile community. The team at Audirvana isn’t resting on its success with desktop apps, but rather it’s looking to push further and offer many of us an option we greatly appreciate. The entire time I was at Axpona, I was thinking about the different ways I’m going to run Audirvana on Linux and how best to use it as a solution to existing audio needs.

     

    I can’t wait to start digging into Audirvana on Linux!

     

     

    Immersive Audio in Munich

     

    Last week we also received news of a fantastic series of events taking place at the Munich High End show in May. Check out this press release. If you’ve been paying attention to immersive audio, even a little bit, you’ll realize how special this is.

     

     

    Acclaimed musician and producer Steven Wilson will be presenting his most recent album "The Harmony Codex" in immersive audio reproduction at the HIGH END 2024, taking place from May 9 to 12 at the MOC Event Center in Munich. In cooperation with the organiser of the international audio show and the company PMC, which has exhibited at the HIGH END for many years, Wilson will be holding a series of seminars on all four days of the event, sharing his vast knowledge and experience of mixing in spatial audio with his guests.

     

    At the presentations, visitors will have the unique opportunity to become familiar with the creative use of reference level audio, guided by the Grammy-nominated spatial audio mix engineer and one of the world's leading songwriters and producers. Wilson, no stranger to the HIGH END, having been brand ambassador in 2019, will give a series of talks about the use of immersive audio in the creation of his music and share his experience as a sought-after remixer of classic works by other artists. During each presentation, he will be demonstrating his immersive mixes, with a special focus on his latest album, "The Harmony Codex", and some of the other artists mixes he has produced, including works from Tears for Fears, Ultravox and Roxy Music.

     

    The system, provided by PMC, includes loudspeakers from the manufacturer that are found in the best recording and mixing facilities in the world, e.g. at the BBC, Metropolis, LP:ME Dubai and numerous other studios. PMC has established itself worldwide as a specialist for Atmos music mixing. The programme that Steven Wilson is presenting at the HIGH END 2024 consists of two different presentations:

     

    “Intro to spatial audio + examples + Q&A”
    “The Harmony Codex full album spatial audio playback + Q&A”

     

     

    One of the premiere immersive engineers in the business, Steven Wilson, will be at Munich High End and is offering two different events, and into with examples and a Q&A, and playback of his latest album in its entirety with Q&A. For me, it’s seriously worth traveling to Munich solely because of this, but I planned on being there for the entire show already.

     

    HE24 NL_StevenWilson.png

     

     

     

    And More…

     

    AlanisMorissette_Jagged_BluRay-min.pngI returned home from Axpona to see three Blu-ray Discs with TrueHD Dolby Atmos, waiting to be unwrapped. The mailman delivered Alan’s Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill, Hootie and the Blowfish Cracked Rear View, and Mark Knopfler’s latest One Deep River. A little tidbit of information about Cracked rear View: It was named after the line “There was a life that I was living, In some cracked rearview, Where no future was given, To a heart untrue” in John Hiatt’s wonderful track Learning How To Love You (Tidal).

     

    blu-ray_packshot_600_bg.jpgA good friend asked me about the progress of immersive content. Of course I told him that nearly every new popular release offers an Atmos mix, but it would’ve been nice to say that I had three TrueHD albums waiting for me at home. In addition, two more Blu-ray releases from Rhino are on the way, Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours and The Best of the Doors. In fact, I have so many Blu-ray Discs and pre-ordered TrueHD downloads coming that I literally can’t remember all of them. I have to search my emails often, to make sure I ordered specific albums. It’s a great time to be an audiophile, whether one is into mono, stereo, multichannel or immersive audio.

     

    OK, one last post before I shut up and start listening on my upgraded system to new albums. I know it can get old buying the same albums over and over on new formats, but the immersive releases are something far different from a remaster of the previous remastered remaster. These are all new mixes for immersive listening, that have never existed before today. We are buying something new, to hear some great music in an entirely new way. The price is currently $24.95 directly from Rhino. Think about that. There’s isn’t anything in this world that can be had for less than $25, that we can enjoy for decades, as many times as we want, when we want, with family/friends or without, rain or shine, etc… For that, I’m happy to pay whatever it costs.

     

     

     

    About the author - https://audiophile.style/about
    Author's Complete Audio System Details with Measurements - https://audiophile.style/system

     

     

     

     




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    42 minutes ago, botrytis said:

     

    I know what you mean. I am trying to simplify because my wife, got out of listening because it was TOO COMPLICATED and took out the enjoyment. I think I am starting to get there, I think....

    Same situation here - way to complicated for my wife to just listen to music, 

    Something to be said for a simple system and to just play FM, Vinyl or CD - just like the old days.

    Give me a simple integrated remote for volume and I'm happy.  (I won't give up my Auralic Aires streamer for Tidal and Bluetooth though, but that's enouch phone/network interface)

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    1 hour ago, mr_bill said:

    I wonder how many older audiophiles (I'm older) are getting to the point where they:

    A.  don't want so many boxes

    B. don't want to have to deal with a computer when running your system

    C.  useing your phone to operate your system -  I do have an Auralic Aries 1.1 streamer but I will put up with that but don't want to have to usee my phone all the time to operate my system other than the streamer.

    D.  are getting sick of integrateds or pre/power amp that have room correction, digital complicated displays

     

    btw - I am ok with a remote control for source and volume!

    it is strange that if my internet service is down, there is no music to listen to (at least in the main system).  Of course, ISPs only survive if the outages are very short.  On the other hand, having access to "more than 240,00 albums in Hi-Res audio quality" in Qobuz is a joy.  

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    1 minute ago, mr_bill said:

    Same situation here - way to complicated for my wife to just listen to music, 

    Something to be said for a simple system and to just play FM, Vinyl or CD - just like the old days.

    Give me a simple integrated remote for volume and I'm happy.  (I won't give up my Auralic Aires streamer for Tidal and Bluetooth though, but that's enouch phone/network interface)

     

    Hence why our main system has a Hegel H-190 and using JRiver (Android pad control - all music on server). SOmetimes my wife will just play music through a google speaker in her office - just background.

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    1 minute ago, PYP said:

    it is strange that if my internet service is down, there is no music to listen to (at least in the main system).  Of course, ISPs only survive if the outages are very short.  On the other hand, having access to "more than 240,00 albums in Hi-Res audio quality" in Qobuz is a joy.  

     

    I OWN so much music as it is, my wife said streaming is just radio for a price (you know what she means - she is just not interested). I know that it is more, but she is a blunt IT person 😇

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    1 minute ago, botrytis said:

     

    Hence why our main system has a Hegel H-190 and using JRiver (Android pad control - all music on server). SOmetimes my wife will just play music through a google speaker in her office - just background.

    Simple systems are great.  It is unfortunate that Logitech no longer supports the Squeezebox Touch, which was the ideal interface.  My wife loved it.  But, fortunately, Roon has gotten easier to use and she continues to enjoy listening to music.  Once she got used to the search function (which thankfully has been improved) she can find songs and albums she likes.  

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    4 minutes ago, PYP said:

    Simple systems are great.  It is unfortunate that Logitech no longer supports the Squeezebox Touch, which was the ideal interface.  My wife loved it.  But, fortunately, Roon has gotten easier to use and she continues to enjoy listening to music.  Once she got used to the search function (which thankfully has been improved) she can find songs and albums she likes.  

     

    My wife has tried Roon and she hates it with a passion. She has designed interface screens for computers that use specific software (LIMS software). She feels most audio software is not user friendly - I am trying. 

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    13 minutes ago, PYP said:

    It is unfortunate that Logitech no longer supports the Squeezebox Touch

    Just install Logitech Media Server on a pc/nas and configure your Squeezebox Touch to use it instead of MySqueezebox and it will work as before

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    5 minutes ago, stefano_mbp said:

    Just install Logitech Media Server on a pc/nas and configure your Squeezebox Touch to use it instead of MySqueezebox and it will work as before

     

    Does LMS still have nightly updates?

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    2 minutes ago, botrytis said:

     

    Does LMS still have nightly updates?

    Yes it does, look here

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    9 minutes ago, stefano_mbp said:

    Just install Logitech Media Server on a pc/nas and configure your Squeezebox Touch to use it instead of MySqueezebox and it will work as before

    Thanks.  She mostly used it with internet radio channels.  I'm assuming the LMS solution only provides access to our library.  Is that correct?  

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    1 minute ago, PYP said:

     I'm assuming the LMS solution only provides access to our library.  Is that correct?

    It works for internet radios too

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    25 minutes ago, botrytis said:

     

    My wife has tried Roon and she hates it with a passion. She has designed interface screens for computers that use specific software (LIMS software). She feels most audio software is not user friendly - I am trying. 

    it isn't surprising that an IT professional who has designed interface screens will see it very differently from those of us who are users only.  

     

    And some IT folks prefer the absolute minimum on the screen.  One fellow I worked with (brilliant coder) used a font that was so small I asked him if there were fonts smaller than 8 point or if he custom-programmed it.  He would always shrug and laugh.  Then I would specify the size and placement.  When you are used to writing very efficient code, why muck up the interface with a lot of unnecessary stuff? 🙃

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    13 minutes ago, PYP said:

    it isn't surprising that an IT professional who has designed interface screens will see it very differently from those of us who are users only.  

     

    And some IT folks prefer the absolute minimum on the screen.  One fellow I worked with (brilliant coder) used a font that was so small I asked him if there were fonts smaller than 8 point or if he custom-programmed it.  He would always shrug and laugh.  Then I would specify the size and placement.  When you are used to writing very efficient code, why muck up the interface with a lot of unnecessary stuff? 🙃

     

    Well, when these systems store and are the databases for all the data science companies store on their products, including R&D and QA/QC - they also have to be auditable by the FDA and other gov't entities. When some data sets get into the TB range, such as large drug testing, etc. it needs to be understandable and easy to use. Sometimes, the scientist working from home, of course on VPNs have to pull down 20 TB's of one data set - that gets crazy.

     

    In my Ph.D. work, I had one graph, in my Ph.D. research that had 34,000 data points - work done in triplicate, etc. and that was in the 1990's.

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    1 hour ago, PYP said:

    it is strange that if my internet service is down, there is no music to listen to (at least in the main system).

    Funny you mention this. The Axpona hotel had major internet issues for about a day and a half. Nobody could stream for several hours.

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    14 minutes ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    Funny you mention this. The Axpona hotel had major internet issues for about a day and a half. Nobody could stream for several hours.

     

    The only ones playing music where the physical disc people. I couldn't believe how many TT's there were at AXPONA.

     

    The rooms should have known. It always happens at AXPONA. At least we didn't have a fire alarm this year.

     

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    3 hours ago, botrytis said:

    I OWN so much music as it is, my wife said streaming is just radio for a price (you know what she means - she is just not interested). I know that it is more, but she is a blunt IT person 😇

     

    3 hours ago, botrytis said:

    My wife has tried Roon and she hates it with a passion. She has designed interface screens for computers that use specific software (LIMS software). She feels most audio software is not user friendly - I am trying. 

     

    I agree with your wife on both counts! 9_9

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    1 hour ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    Funny you mention this. The Axpona hotel had major internet issues for about a day and a half. Nobody could stream for several hours.

    wow.   dealers post about the high fees they pay for these events in addition to the prep time, transportation costs and lost time selling gear in their usual way.  They couldn't be very happy about a day and a half without internet service (or interruptions during that time).  Especially if this is one of only a very few events they use to publicize their gear.  

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    5 minutes ago, PYP said:

    wow.   dealers post about the high fees they pay for these events in addition to the prep time, transportation costs and lost time selling gear in their usual way.  They couldn't be very happy about a day and a half without internet service (or interruptions during that time).  Especially if this is one of only a very few events they use to publicize their gear.  

    Well, honestly, people attending, sales, streaming, and hotel business all use the wireless connection. As my wife said, 'Who knew if you overload an internet connection, it would slow down and crash. Very sarcastic."

     

    Hence why many rooms had TT.s and a few had CD players.

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    7 hours ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    Funny you mention this. The Axpona hotel had major internet issues for about a day and a half. Nobody could stream for several hours.

    The rooms I set up had no problems during the outage.  I provided local music playback!! 

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    42 minutes ago, bobfa said:

    The rooms I set up had no problems during the outage.  I provided local music playback!! 

     

    When I did AudioKarma Fests, where forum members could rent rooms in a hotel so demo their systems to other forum members. So, I would bring a small wireless router (PW protected) which had an ethernet switch and a mini-PC with Daphile and Music loaded on it. I would use an old android pad for control. Just me.

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