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What's it all about?

This is about monitoring as reference system in a home studio. And it is indeed one of the most important parts of a good functioning homestudio. An accurate sound Reference system which you are familiar with is a must for a reliable mixing result (and mastering for that matter). It's not about a lot of moneyspending, but rather about buying dedicated monitores for homerecording that is suitable for your room, and a well thought out monitor placement and environment design. And then it involves a bit of knowledge about sound, acoustics and technical matters.

The monitors are Your best friend in: 

And if you want Your recordings, mixing and mastering to be :

It will depend on a well thouht out:

Selection

There is 3 main types of setups when it comes to choosing monitors:

NB:

You should never buy monitors without test-listening. Listen to several at the dealers shop, Select a setup, and take them home to listen to them in the environment they will be used in. Never pay before testing. Any serious shop will let you have it tested at home before paying.

Testing means tio listen for:

Bass       - Tight & controlled, or uneven & Muddy?
Stereofield       - Wide & good Separation?
High end       - Smoth & Crisp, or Harsh & tirering?
Details       - Do I hear all he details that the mix is containing?
SubWoofer       - Is the LowEnd- (Sub-)frequencies coming through and giving the mix a distinct weight? 

 

All these questions can only be answered in the environment where it is going to be used, as the environment will influence on what you will hear. The monitors placement in the room will influence the audible result.

Placement

There’s a lot of things to consider when you shall find the best possible place and position for your monitors.

Use the "Acoustic Space Control" on the monitors if they have any. (internal EQ control related to placement. Especially important in small homestudio environments.

Finally you should test your monitor placement by listening to a quality commercial CD, and try to move the speakers around to find the widest sweet spot with balanced sound.  And adjust the speaker volume equally. Watch out for differences between the speakers that can occure from differences in the mixer output.

Subwoofer placement 

  1. Allways on the floor.
  2. Preferably in the middle between the left and right speaker.

Testing placements 

  1. This yields for both speakers and subwoofer.
  2. Using a pink noise signal through the speakers
  3. Meassuring with a SPL meter

Room Acoustics

Standing waves and phase canselations

Sound follows the physical laws of reflection when it hits a surface, and the more flat, smooth and hard the surfaces are the more problematic the reflections will be to get an accurate monitoring. Parallel walls are a special situation, because the waves are reflected back into the same path that it was coming from, and that are resulting in the so called "standing waves". This is a no-no in room acoutics when it comes to studio monitoring for mixing music. Any such surfaces, be it walls, ceilings, floors, doors and windows, can cause problematic reflections. These standing waves can cause phase canselations and makes it impossible to monitor accurately. Anything that is making the surfaces softer, less flat or less smooth will reducing this problem. Curtains and shelves are such; we could call them Diffusers.

Diffusers – are used to prevent standing waves by reflecting waves in various directions or angels. The more complex the reflections in the room are according to directions and angels the more evenly reverberant character the room will have throughout its space. Through this you’ll have a more controllable monitoring situation.

Bass frequencies

Bass frequencies (below 150 - 200 Hz) will always need special attention when it comes to monitoring and room acoustics. Due to their very long wavelength and high energy, the bass frequencies behaves quite differently from mid- and high-frequencies. They are:  

Bass Traps – are used to absorb unwanted resonating low frequencies causing either bass rumble or booming bass. Most often placed in the corners of the room. Anything that’s filling the corners will be an improvement in this matter. It’s worth to have in mind that lowering the speaker-level output will reduce the bass frequency troubles substantially.

Final Testing

Remember to test your monitoring system once more after you’ve taken all this considerations into account. As stated earlier in the article:

Testing means to listen for: 

Summary 

Links

Monitors

Genelec

M-Audio

Tannoy 

Techsites

Genelec Learning Center

Speakers Construction

Difference between Hi-Fi and HD

ProSoundWeb

The loudness war

Pro Audio Reference

JonBuer©2016

Category: Artikler-musikk
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