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  • A Ridiculous Way To Listen To Music, Here’s How To Do It

     

     

        

        Audio: Listen to this article.

     

     

     


    I can’t believe I’m writing this article. In fact, my audiophile card may be revoked shortly after publication. Only kidding. The vast majority of audiophiles I know are interested in new ways of listening to their favorite albums, especially if it costs nothing and is simple to do. Plus, I can always blame @bobfa for getting me involved in this craziness. When he first told me about it, I asked myself, “why would anyone even try this in the first place?”

     

    It all started with Bob imploring that I try it. I resisted for a while. Then I was laying on the couch one night, exhausted after a long day. I didn’t feel like turning on my main audio system or wearing headphones, but I wanted to listen to music. That’s when I went to the dark side. No, not spinning vinyl. I selected a Dolby Atmos album to play through my iPhone 15 Pro Max using its built-in speakers, set the phone on my chest, and rested my head on a pillow. I couldn’t believe what I heard. Several muttered expletives later, I messaged Bob in disbelief. The sound coming from the iPhone’s speakers was ridiculously spacious. 

     

    The sound quality is far from high fidelity, but it’s much more about soundstage and a really neat experience that requires zero added hardware. For me, it’s all about laying down once in a while without extra DACs, headphone wires, IEMs in my ears, or anything that requires forethought, and just taking in a sonic experience. 

     

     

    How To

     

    Here’s how members of the Audiophile Style community can do this right now, or once they arrive at the cabin for the Independence Day holiday here in the US. 

     

    1. Forget your audiophile tendencies to pick apart every aspect of sound quality. 
    2. Open your mind to a new sonic experience.
    3. Make sure your iPhone is set to play Atmos all the time. (Settings > Music > Dolby Atmos > Always On)
    4. Find a favorite album mixed in Dolby Atmos in Apple Music. (Search here at Ben Dodson’s site here)
    5. Lay down, set your iPhone flat on your chest, with the screen facing up and the charging port facing to the left, and make sure your ears are higher than the phone, else the right speaker. Or, hold the phone in front of your face as if you’re watching a movie. 
    6. Experiment with final positioning of the phone, closer of further away from your head, raise or lower your head, but not lower than the up-firing right channel speaker, just like you would with speaker toe-in. 
    7. Enjoy.


    Note: I briefly tested with Tidal and Amazon Music, but I don’t believe the performance is close to what Apple is doing. I’m happy to be proven wrong though. Apple uses its own Atmos renderer. That, plus total control of the software and hardware can really help. I have no idea if the apps on Android offer the same experience. 

     

     

    Examples

     

    Here are some examples incase listeners need a jump start. Don’t worry, your “investment” in boatloads of audio gear isn’t about to be worthless. You can do it :~)

     

    Pink Floyd - The Dark Side of the Moon
    This is everything you’d hope for and everything you’d expect. Yes, the ultra high fidelity isn’t there because the sound is coming from phone speakers, but get over it for this experiment. The soundstage is 180 degrees. 

     

    Talking Heads - Burning Down the House
    This one surprised me at how good sounded. BY “good” I mean soundstage and elements / instruments spread out in their own space. I can even hear a backing vocal that I’ve never heard before, just hanging in the air. 

     

    Lynyrd Skynyrd - I Ain’t the One
    Sounds really cool with very wide soundstage and guitars wide left and right. 

     

    Elton John - Candle In the wind
    The reverb on Elton’s vocal sounds like you’re in the room with him and is easily heard. Backing vocals wide left and right are really nice.

     

    Pearl Jam - Brain of J.
    Opening guitar is right by left ear, while guitar that comes in after then intro is wide right. Bass and drums are locked in the center, just like other Pearl Jam mixes. 

     

    Loma - Pink Sky
    Take a chance on this one because it’s not only good music but the mix is ridiculous in the best way possible. On my 12 channel Wilson system this is really special. On a phone you can get a taste of it and hear instrument placement left, right, and even differences in height. Hearing something up and to the left, in its own space, from a horizontal phone is crazy. 

     


    Wrap Up

     

    I’m sure everyone is worried that my audiophile credentials have been pulled, however if I change my job title from Founder to Food and Beverage Chairman, my audiophile application goes to the bottom of the pile. I know guys who’ve been doing this for 30 years without audiophile credentials. If you get the aforementioned reference, you’re my kind of individual. It’s from my all-time favorite movie, that I just might watch over the Independence Day holiday this week. 

     

    I’d love to hear what people think of this ridiculous sonic experiment. What do you like, love, hate or whatever and what albums did you try?

     

    I have many more albums for those interested :~)

     

     

    P.S. I have the WADAX Studio Player coming very soon. I can't wait to hear it in my own listening room.

     

     

     

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

     

     

     

     




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    Thanks for letting us all do this experiment, Chris.

    What I can safely say is that holding the iPhone as if I watched a video sounds much better than laying the iPhone flat on my chest.

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    37 minutes ago, Raimund Heubel said:

    Thanks for letting us all do this experiment, Chris.

    What I can safely say is that holding the iPhone as if I watched a video sounds much better than laying the iPhone flat on my chest.

     

    Happy to read you found a way to make it work. Just like speaker toe-in, some prefer it, while others don't :~)

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    What would happen if you tried same on latest iPad?

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    3 hours ago, sdolezalek said:

    What would happen if you tried same on latest iPad?

    My guess is it would be the same. 

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    I don't use an iphone so can't contribute in the experiment but I really liked the open minded idea and the simplicity of it. With the changing landscape, habits and outlook; staying open to new ideas and trying things out with a fresh perspective is of significance to anyone. Thank you for promoting ideas that push outside of one's comfort zone. The technological adaptation is interesting!

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    In a widely circulated audience (of one) it has been unanimously decided anonymously that the computer audiophile will continue to hold the audiophile card firmly in hand. 

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    The spaciousness and stereo solidity has been my experience, too, with both iPhone 15 Pro and MacBook Air M1 using Apple Music.  Whatever tomfoolery Apple is doing with the small speakers and preprocessing is actually pretty amazing.  The MacBook Air creates a sound field extending far beyond the physical speakers with depth and perspective.  Timbre is very good, as are dynamics.  The music speaks with an authentic voice.

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    I always thought that a top Wilson setup is not really much better than an iPhone. No wonder you can enjoy listening on a phone  🤣🤣😜😜

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    Follow on to this point:

     

    When I'm out and about or doing various things, I'm not able to be tethered to my listening position nor headphone cable and I can't bring my heavy equipment with me on trips!

     

    Increasingly we need software to try to recreate environments using whatever is available e.g. an iPhone or airpods etc that's to say the hardware becomes almost lowest common denominator and the software can almost overcome that. Witness the iPhone as a camera, yeah I have my Sony and I used to use my Leica -- but convenience is convenience and as they say: you miss the shots you don't take and you miss the opportunity to listen to something new if you don't listen

     

    So I mean DSP...

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    I always thought that the trick was to place your 'phone in a beer glass or similar. (preferably a clean glass, or as a minimum after after consuming the beer)

     

    As to what this does to Atmos content, I have no idea. Time for an experiment.

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    8 hours ago, Confused said:

    I always thought that the trick was to place your 'phone in a beer glass or similar. (preferably a clean glass, or as a minimum after after consuming the beer)

     

    As to what this does to Atmos content, I have no idea. Time for an experiment.

     

    Results depend on the quantity of beer consumed and its ABV...  ;-)

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    @The Computer Audiophile you may not be out of the woods just yet, I'm told the Audiophile Police's Special Investigations Unit have not closed their inquiry, they might still pull your card depending on how you handle some additional questions they have.

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    On 7/8/2024 at 9:32 PM, AudioDoctor said:

     

    Results depend on the quantity of beer consumed and its ABV...  ;-)

    I would say that this is analogous with the entire world of audio. Beer quantity and ABV can be measured with extremely high accuracy. The subjective results however will vary significantly, and be very much dependant on the individual.

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    On 7/9/2024 at 3:07 AM, MikeyFresh said:

    @The Computer Audiophile you may not be out of the woods just yet, I'm told the Audiophile Police's Special Investigations Unit have not closed their inquiry, they might still pull your card depending on how you handle some additional questions they have.

    Here they are, a menacing bunch for sure....

    image.png.f5074be2d9ddaefa1515f7e6ed662349.png

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    Here is another "crazy" way to listen:

    Buy two Sonos Roam, set them up in stereo mode! Then buy an Adirondack chair, or chair with similar ability to place a drink and a bowl of peanuts, left and right, in front of you! Replace the drink and peanuts with the pair of loudspeakers!

    This gave me the most terrific reproduction of music I ever heard!

     It was like floating inside a sphere of musical bliss!!!

    Strongly recommended!

     

    ....and way cheaper than my other gear!

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    Tried that way to listen to Apple Music Atmos. Experience was so good! I thought I was listening to uBACCH DSP’d contents…

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    Hey man, with this kind of shrewdness you could even pull off running a "Casino" 😉

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