Whenever I attend a live musical performance I always find myself wondering what the performance sounds like to the musicians on stage and especially so when there are a lot of musicians on stage. They are often hemmed in by nearby musicians and their instruments, and everybody is straining to hear their own instrument or voice above the sounds arising all around them from multiple directions. Does this sound "live" to them, or are they mostly engaged in trying to figure out or guess what they are sounding like to the audience?
With a symphony orchestra the conductor's experience with creating a certain wall of sound aimed in a particular direction is paramount, but what are the players actually hearing especially in light of their being in front of reflective paper scores on stands?
A friend of mine in my college back in the 1970's had a band that opened for the Mahavishnu Orchestra one night.The venue was the college gym - bad acoustics I know, but heavy vinyl mats spread vastly over the floor helped. Most everyone being college aged there was no concern for the audience having to sit on mats without chairs.
After the show I ran into my friend and asked him how he thought it went. He told me that he had no real idea how they sounded because the amps were positioned out in front of them. They could not really hear their own music in any sort of realistic manner, and what they did hear was so time delayed by the speaker placement that he said they were essentially "flying blind" and having to put their faith in the mixing engineers. He told me that had they been positioned in front of the amps the noise field would have been so loud that their hearing would be threatened.
I guess my question is - do live musicians have to squabble and quibble even more than we so-called audiophiles over the issues of a performance sounding "live" or not?