I believe the situation is a bit more nuanced. Most Atmos mixes contain sounds in a 7.1 bed plus sounds that are in objects described in metadata. When you playback an Atmos track on a non-atmos capable receiver or processor (which does not process the metadata), the bed based sounds are accurately placed in their expected 7.1/5.1 locations, but the object based sounds are less precisely "folded down" to an approximate 7.1/5.1 position. The fact is, this fold down positioning of object based sounds is inherently less accurate on non-atmos capable systems than metadata processing would be and it may not yield the same result as a dedicated 5.1/7.1 mix would. Since this fold down process is automatic and probably not part of an atmos mixing engineers normal workflow, it probably is a bit hit or miss in terms of resulting accuracy. An Atmos mix that primarily used bed based sounds with little to no panning or 3-d movement and few, if any, object based sounds, should sound pretty good on a non-Atmos system.
Once again. There is no fold down of the objects. The object information is already in the 7.1 floor channels. The metadata identifies it and moves it to where it is intended to be reproduced. On a non Atmos system, it just stays in the floor channels with no further action taken. .
Is it hit or miss? Yes. So much depends on the material and the mixing decisions. All I can say for sure is that I've heard plenty of Atmos tracks, from both disc and streaming, that sound outstanding on a 5.1 system. I'm sure there are outliers.
What sounds poor to my ears is the auto generated 5.1 Dolby Digital stream that is also included on most if not all Atmos discs. That truly sounds like shit compared to the 7.1 lossless.
An Atmos mix that primarily used bed based sounds with little to no panning or 3-d movement and few, if any, object based sounds, should sound pretty good on a non-Atmos system.
A lot of Atmos mixes are exactly like that. Especially some of the early ones.
However, if you play an Atmos mix on an Atmos capable receiver/processor that is only equipped with a 5.1 or 7.1 speaker setup, the situation is vastly different. In that case, the metadata is fully processed for object sounds which allows the Atmos renderer to place the sounds as accurately as possible within the available speaker setup.
I have heard others say this as well, but I have not heard it first hand. I have also heard that a 7.1 setup will activate Atmos processing, but 5.1 setup will not. Again I have no firsthand experience.
Our system is exactly like 5.1 was designed. Atmos on a 5.1 ( 5.3 here) non atmos system truly sounds like shit. I am not going to dress this up any other way.
BOTH of us obviously hear differently...most do, but we still hear the difference, and it's more than obvious to us.
designed by who exactly? Dolby? $$ Funny. A smooth move against DTS. Nothing else but. And a way to get streaming shoved down folks throats. Watching physical media dwindle gets em' giddy. Music rentals. Fed up with the obvious BS. Who exactly is doing all of these wonderful atmos mixes via streaming.. cracks me up.
Maybe Steven Wilson types need to get busier ... (we love that dude)
I will not ignore that it sound like shit on NON atmos equip and speaker 'recommended requirements'. Folks do have ears ..right?
I'm not arguing about what you hear. You hear what you hear. I'm just trying to figure out why others perceive it so differently from you and others like you.
As far as physical media dwindling, I can't agree. I've bought more surround discs in the last 2 years than I did in the previous 5. It's definitely not dwindling according to my wallet. What is dwindling are true 5.1 releases. You can still count on them from Steven Wilson so far, but who knows for how long.
As for streaming, there are plenty of crappy surround mixes out there. But there are some very good ones as well. This new Elton John release is a prime example. It's an excellent mix. Tom Petty greatest hits, Traffic's Low Spark, McCartney's Band on the Run. All superior surround mixes and all of them streaming only right now. I hope they eventually get a disc release.
It's obvious you dislike the current trends with surround music. But Atmos is just the evolution of surround, and that evolution will likely continue.