One of the sights of Moscow, striking with its beautiful architecture from the outside, rich decoration inside and the emotional impact of excellent acoustics is the oldest concert hall, which has the Moscow Conservatory - Rachmaninoff Hall. It will be discussed further.
Moscow Conservatory: Rachmaninov Hall - history of construction
The building, of which the Rachmaninoff Hall is a part, was built in 1890 to house the Synodal Singing School.
In 1968, the Moscow Conservatory included the Rachmaninov Hall, reconstruction was carried out for a long time, and only in 1983 the incredible beauty of the hall opened with a concert of the famous Svyatoslav Richter. After 3 years, he was named after Sergei Rachmaninov, a brilliant composer, pianist, and graduate of the same conservatory.
Many concerts of chamber, symphony orchestras, choirs took place here, often the music of bygone centuries and modern music sounded.
Physics of the beautiful
In 2006, experts investigated the acoustic characteristics of the room, determined by its size, features of the form of architecture, decoration, filling and coating. The Rachmaninov Hall accommodates 252 spectators, has a balcony and a stall. Its area is 300 square meters. m, height - 8.25 m.
The basic parameters for evaluating the sound of concert structures are as follows:
- reverberation;
- volume;
- clarity;
- timbre;
- spatiality.
In concert halls, where the classics are performed, due to the features of decoration, columns and balconies, the duration of the reverb and the diffusion of the sound field are increased.
Analysis of various concert halls showed that the optimal amount of space per spectator varies between 10 and 12 cubic meters. m for a symphony orchestra and 7 cubic meters. m for chamber. The volume of the Rachmaninoff Hall is 10 cubic meters. m per viewer.
The length of an ideal room should be less than 45 m for a symphony and 20 m for a chamber orchestra. The Moscow Conservatory, whose Rachmaninov Hall is 24 meters long, can be proud of its compliance with the recommendations.
The best reverberation time for small rooms is 1.3 s for chamber and 2 s for symphonic performance at a sound frequency of 512 Hz. The test room showed 2.1 s in the empty and 1.8 s in the filled state. For comparison: the measurement of this parameter in the Boston Symphony Hall gave 1.8 s, in the Vienna Grosser-Music-Fereyn Saale - 2.05 s, the New York Carnegie Hall - 1.8 s, and in the standard of concert halls, Leipzig Gewandhaus - 2.4 sec.
Sound standard
The clarity or degree of clear separation of sounds is evaluated by C80, equal to the ratio of sound energy up to 80 ms of sound and after. The sound distribution in space is characterized by the LF80 index. Sound attenuation away from the scene is estimated by the duration of the early attenuation.
The characteristics of the room turned out to be the best for the performance of classical music. And its distinctive feature is the uniform distribution of sound throughout the hall, as evidenced by the constancy of indicators for the stalls and the balcony. No areas with interfering reflections or focus points were detected.
The external soundproofing of the room was also excellent. For example, sound insulation of load-bearing walls is 50 dB, which indicates good protection against noise.
Analysis of the measurement results allows us to say with confidence that from the point of view of acoustics, the Rachmaninov Hall is unique and meets the highest international standards for the high-quality performance of musical works. Therefore, every true connoisseur of classical music should visit the Rachmaninov Hall of the Conservatory, whose address is Bolshaya Nikitskaya St., 13/6.