Abstract

Current discussions on the objective attributes contributing to concert hall quality started formally in 1962 with the publication of Leo Beranek’s book “Music, Acoustics, and Architecture”. From his consulting work in the late 1950s, Beranek determined that in narrow halls, the short early delay times were an important factor in quality. Needing a measurable acoustical factor, rather than a dimensional one, he chose to define the initial time delay gap (ITDG) for a specific location near the middle of the hall’s main floor. Many acousticians failed to understand the simplicity of this proposal. Beranek had learned that long first delays sounded “arena-like” and “remote”, and, thus, not “intimate”. This bolstered his belief that ITDG was an important objective factor he decided to call “intimacy”. Most acoustical parameters can be directly measured and sensed by the listener, such as reverberation decay, sound strength, clarity. “Intimacy” however is a feeling, and over the past two decades, it has become apparent that it is a multisensory attribute influenced by visual input and perhaps other factors. [J.R. Hyde, Proc. IOA, London, July 2002, Volume 24, Pt. 4, “Acoustical Intimacy in Concert Halls: Does Visual Input affect the Aural Experience”?] Beranek’s paper “Comments on “intimacy” and ITDG concepts in musical performing spaces”, [JASA 115, 2403 (2004)] finally acknowledged the multisensory aspects of “intimacy” and stated this choice of the word “may have been unfortunate”. He further separated the term “intimacy” from ITDG. Documentation of this pronouncement will be provided in the paper.

Highlights

  • This paper discusses the controversial 55-year journey of initial time delay gap (ITDG) in the realm of understanding the descriptors of concert hall quality

  • As terminology along with technology developed over time, important subjective factors which have been determined relevant to the perception of music in concert halls include reverberance, loudness, clarity, spatial impression, warmth, and intimacy (Table 1)

  • Reverberance and loudness are somewhat singular in their experience, intimacy appears to be multidimensional in character in that it is more of a feeling, comprised of a combination of concepts relating what we hear to the perception of the space surrounding the performance and to the observation of the space and the performance itself

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Summary

Introduction

This paper discusses the controversial 55-year journey of initial time delay gap (ITDG) in the realm of understanding the descriptors of concert hall quality. Another simpler title of this paper could be “Is ITDG a measure of Acoustical Intimacy”?. The book started the first modern-day discussion on concert hall design and related acoustical quality. This comprehensive work must be understood in the context of the technology which existed at that time.

Acoustical Intimacy as a Concept
Subjective Acoustical Factors and Common Experience
Acoustical Intimacy Defined
Relating ITDG to Intimacy
ITDG Proclaimed as a Major Factor in Concert Hall Quality
Beranek’s 1962 Hall Quality Rating Scale
Multisensory Integration—Auditory and Visual Input
Findings
Perceptual Aspects of the Concert Hall Experience
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