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DJMiakoda
Senior tranceaddict

Registered: Aug 2005
Location: Chicago
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Mar-24-2007 21:32
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Subtle
Subreme tranceaddict

Registered: Nov 2002
Location: Urban Shakedown
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Mar-24-2007 22:33
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echosystm
super wow maker

Registered: Jul 2004
Location:
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Mar-25-2007 00:31
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Derivative
Bipolar Bear
Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Dublin
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| quote: | Originally posted by echosystm
listening to reviews is a sure fire way to be dissapointed in what you buy. example: krk rp5/6/8s get good reviews, but if I bought them I would probably come home and cry when I realise how shit house they are. |
I don't know why KRK Rokits get good reviews. I know I hated the RP-8 when I gave it a listen. But then, of the monitors I auditioned -they all sounded different. Dramatically so. Even monitors in the same price bracket.
I mean the ADAM P11as sound totally different to Dynaudio BM5as and you know what? I honestly don't know which is supposed to be more 'true' or which is better. They just sound different. I ended up buying Dynaudio BM5as but sometimes I kind of wish I bought the P11as instead. And vice versa.
Terms like 'flat frequency response' are bullshit, as it will never be flat in the room you are going to monitor in - which is probably going to have less than ideal acoustics and is more than likely your bedroom. It also depends on listening position. My BM5as sound totally different if I move my head a couple of inches to the left or right whilst monitoring for gawds sake.
The only advice you should heed is this:
1) It doesn't matter what speakers you get. The point is you pick a pair, and listen to them very very closely. After several months you will gradually become used to how they sound, in what frequency ranges they are deficient. You will get used to certain finnicky things like keeping your head still when you monitor. And the more professionally produced tracks you listen to and reference from, the more you will learn about what you can and can't get away with on your monitors.
Because of my ongoing problems with my BM5as I have spent several months monitoring on the free headphones you get with the guild wars special edition. These headphones suck. But there are things you can hear on them that my BM5as can't reproduce. And vice versa. So I constantly switch between the two as I'm working and somewhere in between the 2 different sounds, is the one I want. Have as many sound systems around you as possible and make it easy to switch between them because its the only way you will ever get a 'true' picture of the mixes you are making.
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Mar-26-2007 12:30
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Derivative
Bipolar Bear
Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Dublin
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Monitoring on shit sound systems really works. I was quite surprised. Obviously if you only monitor on a shit soundsystem then its going to be a problem but if you keep monitoring on loads of different setups you get a really good idea of what your mixes sound like in comparison to professionally mastered tunes.
I think I'm beginning to get why NS10s were so popular. Even though they were totally rubbish.
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Mar-26-2007 16:31
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tranceinjection
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Apr 2006
Location:
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The NS10's where just used as a refernce for home/ everyday speakers.
If the music sounded good on the Ns10s then it would sound good on all types of speakers.
The NS10's where the home hi fi speakers the cheap nasty little speakers that everyone had, they needed a set of monitors that would translate well to other speakers, hence the NS10s.
Play the music on the NS10's and if it sounded good they knew it would sound good on your speakers
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Apr-01-2007 23:32
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