Soundstage - Too much?


Is there such a thing as too much soundstage? Should the width of the stage extend to the side walls in your listening room? How would you compare the soundstage in your system to live music?
jtinn
Yet again I'm reading beyond the side walls-really how can this be possible outwith aural illusion?
I believe it has to be aural illusion. All we are hearing is the reproduction of the sound in the studio or hall. We hear what the microphones hear, right? That's why on the Copland disk my music room sounds 100' wide. I'm reproducion the sound of the room in relationship to the microphones. The sound isn't really in my fireplace or next door in your flat. That's my non-scientific explaination, and I might stick with it.
Ben. The sidewalls are what reflects the sound back to create a image beyond the wall. The image created will be as far past the wall as the speaker is as far from the wall. Ex. If your speaker is two feet from the wall then the image will be two feet past the wall.
perfectimage, perhaps i'm mistaken, but it's been my experience that sidewalls in close proximity to the speakers is what kills imaging, unless absorbent treatment is properly used, especially at the sounds' 1st-reflection point. i have found that most speakers image best when well-away from walls.
I agree Sedond, I have experienced stable images 6 feet outside the speakers when I placed my speakers on the long wall giving me side walls that were 9 feet away from the speakers.