Why not the piano as a reference for bass


I see a lot of commentary/reviews on a systems bass response that all seem to hinge on the 41 hz double bass and such range.  At 27.5 the A0 note on a piano seems a better point to judge.  Lots of piano in normal music vs say an organ note.  I know when I feel that deep chord played it is one of things I enjoy about listening the most!  Was listening to Wish you were here live and the piano was sublime.

So is it more of how much musical energy is perceived in the 40 hz range or what that makes this more of a reproduction benchmark?

I welcome your input!

New Joe Bonamassa out BTW!

guscreek

Thanks i will try to get it...

 

@mahgister 

   It is a collection of various Japanese musicians, essentially a small orchestra.

Only reference I could find is someone named K. Hata.

 

@toddalin 

A synthesizer can play basically any waveform all the way down to subharmonic.  A subharmonic square wave with an instantaneous rise time is harder on the speakers that have to make the transition more quickly

An infrasonic square wave, and in fact any square wave, theoretically contains every higher harmonic right up to infinity.  As such every driver in a conventional dynamic speaker will contribute, and the tweeter in principle will be fed infinite power.  Fortunately, the slew rate of any real-world amplifier is not infinitely fast.

My favourite digital format, Direct Stream Digital, cannot even represent a square wave, any more than a vinyl groove can.  I cannot think of any natural phenomenon that produces a true square wave.

@timstella

Even Yamaha only claims that their Clavinovas approach the sound quality of the best concert grand pianos.

let me know when you get to see a Clavinova at any one of the best concert halls in the world?? I will confidently say NOT IN MY LIFETIME!!

On the other hand, they have all the benefits of digital including being affordable enough and small enough for home use

A Clavinova is a clavinova and Yamaha does not market it as a concert instrument.  It's a wonderful home oriented piece of technology.

It's not limited to square waves.  A sawtooth wave also has an instantaneous rise or fall time, as the case may be.

In the real world of music, a square wave would most sound like a clarinet, a sawtooth wave like a string, with bow spikes, a sine wave like a flute, and a triangular wave "flute-like" though none of these instruments are "pure of wave".