"Breathing" of the air


Hi folks, I would like to ask you the following. With some audiophile set ups I'm able to hear what I call "breathing" of the air, as if the air surrounding voices and instruments is a living entity, as if one is capable of hearing individual air molecules, if you know what I mean. Are you familiar with this phenomenon? Is this quality inherent to some amplifiers or speakers? Can you mention set ups that have these characteristics?

Chris
dazzdax
I read this discussion with much interest. It appears that most agree that "Air" is some sort of phenomena that happens when playing back music and listeners are able to discern distinct traits in the audible queue such as echo, reverb, delay in transients and of course the emotional impact that such one realizes from all of this happening.

I have to agree to some in part about the medium playing a big part in this impression of air. For instance, listening to Poco, Legend (MFSL), I was more aware of the ambience and spatial queue of the instruments and was deeply impressed by the fact that I clearly and distinctly hear the back up vocalists convey their backup portions with subtle but delineated air among the separate mics they were singing into. In other words, the entire vocal section had air and space for me to pick out each individual providing me a sense of more air. On lesser recordings these subtle queue, lips opening and closing, breathing etc, may not be able to convey these fine ques. On a higher resolving system, it is easier to depict and discern the differences of these subtle ques.

Of course, this leads to the other parts of the equation, system and room synergy. We all know what that will do to listening to music if the whole chain is not in synergy.
Funny stuff fender.

I thought high schools were in session yesterday.

Oh well, I guess that's one way to kill time while you work at Wal Mart.
So typical. Always comes down to money with mean spirited types...aka Cavemen....
Mean spirited?

Allow me to point out your pro hot air generator remark which precipitated this exchange.

Perhaps you forgot about it during all the excitement in study hall.

Teacher's pet are you?
My perception ... air on its own we cannot hear, but can be heard once a sound excites air in a space and it reveals the characteristics of the acoustic environment that the sound was made in. I believe this to be the sound of air. I also think not just the high frequencies but all frequencies high-mid-& low are telling of the sound of air.

best,

Tom