A slight clarification to my previous post:
In referring to ambience, my intent was to refer to the totality of hall effects, rather than to the sense of "air" with which that term is commonly associated, "air" primarily involving high frequency effects (as was stated earlier by others).
In fact I should probably have used the term "hall effects" instead of "ambience." I'm referring to the totality of the complex interplay that occurs in a hall between directly heard sound, and reflected sound that has been both frequency contoured and delayed by multiple increments of time. All of that, as I have perceived it in my concert-going experience, is a key factor in perceived sonic "richness," which I (and others earlier in this thread) correlate with "warmth."
Best regards,
-- Al
In referring to ambience, my intent was to refer to the totality of hall effects, rather than to the sense of "air" with which that term is commonly associated, "air" primarily involving high frequency effects (as was stated earlier by others).
In fact I should probably have used the term "hall effects" instead of "ambience." I'm referring to the totality of the complex interplay that occurs in a hall between directly heard sound, and reflected sound that has been both frequency contoured and delayed by multiple increments of time. All of that, as I have perceived it in my concert-going experience, is a key factor in perceived sonic "richness," which I (and others earlier in this thread) correlate with "warmth."
Best regards,
-- Al