How important is it for you to attain a holographic image?


I’m wondering how many A’goners consider a holographic image a must for them to enjoy their systems?  Also, how many achieve this effect on a majority of recordings?
Is good soundstaging enough, or must a three dimensional image be attained in all cases.  Indeed, is it possible to always achieve it?

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No electrical environment is the same, and my speakers are good (Mission Cyrus 781) but one is battered and more feeble with is tweeter(50 bucks paid) I dont doubt that the focal are probably better... I make already my own room treatment with cheap materials with success but I am in nearfield listening...The more difficult to gain is not imaging but holographic cellular atmospheric soundstage around the speakers not only between and naturalness of musical timbre of instrument...Never mind what you already own and your very good sound, it is better to clean the electrical grid and the audio grid this is the road for your gear to gain  their ultimate potential ...
Whoever feel holographic image is critical in listening enjoyment, would you please tell us where should we sit when we attend a live performance in a concert hall?

Thank you.
I dont think that listening a real concert and listening a files or a cd are the same thing at all... Even if a correlation in terms of sound space is possible, the 2 experiences are too much different to reduce one to the other....

And where to sit in a concert ? There are no rooms,or no live concert halls  that are identical et possess the sames acoustics, and we are all different individuals with different goals, then I had no ideas how to answer that...For me listening my audio system and a real concert had no relation at all,other than an acoustic methaphorical one,because there is many interpreters in the audible chain of events between the musician in the room or in the studio, the sound engineer  the mixer, etc and the listener...All these people had a different experiences...
bsimpson77 posts03-07-2019 2:27amWhoever feel holographic image is critical in listening enjoyment, would you please tell us where should we sit when we attend a live performance in a concert hall?

Thank you

>>>>>No, thank you! Thanks for highlighting an obvious advantage of home systems over a concert hall, I.e., a consistent and better holographic soundstage. Plus you don’t have to put up with all the coughing and snoring. 

@bsimpson Good call!

Plus some of us out here are trying to recreate what the artist(s) intended when they were in the studio mixing the album. 

Hendrix can only be fully appreciated in a system that produces holographic imaging. And I am not exaggerating.