Dyonight
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Reference monitors help... again!!
Hi!! Yeah... another monitor thread on the internet! I'm checking some monitor for my setup and I have $500 to throw at it. I'm tired of searching through forums and discussions where nobody agree togheter but that's the only way I can get some feedback cause the music store here only have a Blue Sky Exo 1 and two JBL LSR2325P. So no way to actually test anything else there. So 3 hours and a headache later I decided to post here and interact with people instead. Actually I'm testing the Blue Sky Exo and I must say that I'm really enjoying it so far. Maybe a little hard on the high-end but my room is not treated for now so I cannot tell. Obviously million miles away from my actual Altec Lansing for $99 at Future Shop!! What I don't like about them and why I'll probably return them is because the sub is huge (the Exo 2 sub is smaller though, but the store here is no more a Blue Sky dealer) and I don't want the control hub, since I already control the volume from the Vs700 surface and I don't have any room to fit it on my desk. I have yet to try the JBL. I expect them to have a lesser low-end response but more details from the satellites and that's what I want. I want my next purchase to be surgically accurate (for the price paid obviously) as smooth as possible on the high-end to avoid listening fatigue and without any external hub or anything. I'll get a sub later this year if necessary. So, my goals are as usual: 1. Smooth high-end 2. No hub 3. No sub (all money spent on satellite quality) 4. Enough power/headroom (100watts or so) 5. Convincing bass 6. $500 max 6. And obviously, as accurate as possible So far my choices are: 1. JBL LSR2325P 2. KRK Rokit RP5 G2 3. Alesis M1 MkII active 4. Mackie MR5 5. Yamaha HS50M 6. Behringer Truth B3030a... which I'm VERY currious about... My problem is I can't test any of those so I have to do a blind act of faith, for now I'm balancing between the JBL, which I can have almost right now, or the intriguing Behringer B3030a... Thanks for any help!!!
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David
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/20 09:32:44
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Dyonight, I hope this is not harsh but for the $500 you will have to compromise on you expectations. You will need 8" speakers if you want bass response without a sub along with equally important room treatment. You really have 2 options, Buy now and upgrade later , most of us have done this :) Get some good headphones and save up for monitors in the $1-2 k range You obviously are serious about recording if you have the Vs 700 :) The short answer is the Behringers are most likely your best bet.
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Guitarhacker
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/20 12:05:56
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I have the MR5 pair... and they are pretty decent. The small 5" drivers will need some help from a sub. I added a Polk audio sub and am very happy with the result. I run the entire rig at about 50% power.... The entire set up, the MR5's and the sub were right at $500 +/- In this price range you will get some decent stuff but it will not be top of the line audiophile gear. But you knew that already.
My website & music: www.herbhartley.com MC4/5/6/X1e.c, on a Custom DAW Focusrite Firewire Saffire Interface BMI/NSAI "Just as the blade chooses the warrior, so too, the song chooses the writer "
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Dyonight
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/20 12:24:24
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Alright thanks David! I already have a pair of Sennheiser HD518 to save my butt on my mixing tasks, since I can't rely on the Altec other than for "playing loud" things. These headphones probably aren't the flatest around but do translate very well after some adjustments. What I want is make some money recording peoples here and I need a not so bad monitor set. Then after saving a little I'll get a pair of Event Opal but I have to convince client that I'm serious about what I do. So 1st a decent pair of monitor and then some room treatment. Anyway the Altec have to go! Fast!!! So thanks a lot for your advice I'll get the Behringer B3031a until the Opals are within reach!
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codamedia
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/20 12:49:14
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In this price range you will get some decent stuff but it will not be top of the line audiophile gear. Very true, and a lot of times decent is all you really need. Many people tend to forget (or not know) that some very good recordings are mixed on less than ideal monitors. The Yamaha NS-10s are arguably terrible - but their success track record cannot be argued at all. Jean-Marie Horvat does a lot of his mixing on Auratones - and swears by them. $500 should get you a decent set of monitors. Next you need to devote a lot of time to listening to those monitors, learn what they can and cannot produce, then start to trust them. That takes time, and a lot of it. I don't have experience with the monitors in your list, so I can't comment on those. FWIW (this is a comment, not a recommendation) I've used the same monitors for about 5 years now, and the best thing I've ever done was stop switching out monitors. Over the years my mixes have gotten better, take less time, and translate over other systems better than ever. My monitors are not great (Passive, Canadian made Yorkville YSM-1i - http://www.yorkville.com/products.asp?id=119&cat=20&type=33), but I know exactly what they sound like and how they will translate (well, maybe not exactly - that's why each mix seems to get better) Just my 2 cents on the subject.
Don't fix it in the mix ... Fix it in the take! Desktop: Win 7 Pro 64 Bit , ASUS MB w/Intel Chipset, INTEL Q9300 Quad Core, 2.5 GHz, 8 GB RAM, ATI 5450 Video Laptop: Windows 7 Pro, i5, 8 Gig Ram Hardware: Presonus FP10 (Firepod), FaderPort, M-Audio Axiom 49, Mackie 1202 VLZ, POD X3 Live, Variax 600, etc... etc...
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AT
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/20 14:27:48
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If it was my money I'd get the MPs5 from yamaha. That won't give you much bass, but you will find them in pro studios as near fields and to check home compatibility. They are flat (with what they give, anyway), and will work while you save up for bigger speakers. They will work well as secondary speakers even after you upgrade, esp. if you go with ADAMs or a smoother big speaker. If you don't plan on getting a set of big speakers latter, I'd go with something else, tho. SOS had a review of Rubycon or something like that - smooth ribbon monitors for less than $400. Get something with more bass, tho it won't be as flat. You'll have to lean on your headphones for clairity. Use the money to get something nice - the AT 50s are great for $150. @
https://soundcloud.com/a-pleasure-dome http://www.bnoir-film.com/ there came forth little children out of the city, and mocked him, and said unto him, Go up, thou bald head; go up, thou bald head. 24 And he turned back, and looked on them, and cursed them in the name of the Lord. And there came forth two she bears out of the wood, and tare forty and two children of them.
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Dyonight
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/20 15:30:23
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Thanks to all you're all very kind to help me! What I retain so far is whatever speaker I'll get I will have to get used to them first. While listening to one of my mixes through the Exo system, I was immediately able to tell what was missing that I could not hear at all in my current setup. That's what I don't want to happen again. Tomorrow I'll bring the 5" JBL here for a test drive and I see no reasons right now why they wouldn't do the job properly. If I'm able to fix my previous mixes with what I will hear through them then I'll keep them. I've done a lot of my work so far on not so good gear but I've learned to work with them and their limitations instead of wanting them to do the job for me. So I'm pretty shure the JBL LSR2325P will serve me well for the next chapter of my recording legacy! I'll post tomorrow after I've hooked them and see what will happen then. Thanks again!
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Guitarhacker
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/20 18:34:28
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codamedia In this price range you will get some decent stuff but it will not be top of the line audiophile gear. Very true, and a lot of times decent is all you really need. Many people tend to forget (or not know) that some very good recordings are mixed on less than ideal monitors. exactly right, and I'll add to that, In less than ideal rooms (acoustically speaking). It is very possible to use the midrange priced gear and produce broadcast quality recordings.
My website & music: www.herbhartley.com MC4/5/6/X1e.c, on a Custom DAW Focusrite Firewire Saffire Interface BMI/NSAI "Just as the blade chooses the warrior, so too, the song chooses the writer "
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Rbh
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/20 22:02:10
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If you are not listening at loud monitor levels.... 5" speakers with a small efficient sub will get you a long way. I agree with the Yamaha recommendation. The nice thing about 5" monitors is that they are usually damped pretty well for what low end they do put out...so there's usually little excessive ringing at the 60 - 125 hz range. A 10" sub rounds out the bottom end and you can still monitor at decent levels if you want to.
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Eotm
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/20 22:46:51
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Many people tend to forget (or not know) that some very good recordings are mixed on less than ideal monitors. The Yamaha NS-10s are arguably terrible - but their success track record cannot be argued at all. Jean-Marie Horvat does a lot of his mixing on Auratones - and swears by them. But then the mixes get sent to the mastering studio where they can fix everything that's wrong with the NS10 or Auratone mixes.
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codamedia
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/21 07:51:28
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Eotm Many people tend to forget (or not know) that some very good recordings are mixed on less than ideal monitors. The Yamaha NS-10s are arguably terrible - but their success track record cannot be argued at all. Jean-Marie Horvat does a lot of his mixing on Auratones - and swears by them. But then the mixes get sent to the mastering studio where they can fix everything that's wrong with the NS10 or Auratone mixes. You actually think a mastering engineer is 'fixing' a Jean-Marie Horvat mix (from Auratones)? I doubt that very much - they are just enhancing it as they would ANY mix that is coming to them. When a pro mixing engineer knows what they are working on, they get it right and provide the mastering engineer exactly what is needed. It all comes down to experience. If you know what you are working on, have a good set of ears and the gear is decent, you'll get good results. You don't need $5K speakers to make good great mixes! (although all the power to you if you can afford them, I will admit they would be great to have)
post edited by codamedia - 2011/03/21 18:36:40
Don't fix it in the mix ... Fix it in the take! Desktop: Win 7 Pro 64 Bit , ASUS MB w/Intel Chipset, INTEL Q9300 Quad Core, 2.5 GHz, 8 GB RAM, ATI 5450 Video Laptop: Windows 7 Pro, i5, 8 Gig Ram Hardware: Presonus FP10 (Firepod), FaderPort, M-Audio Axiom 49, Mackie 1202 VLZ, POD X3 Live, Variax 600, etc... etc...
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Om@S
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/21 10:06:36
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I think you could find Mackie's MR8 first generation with your budget.
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Dyonight
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/21 18:39:03
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These are all great suggestion thanks a lot everyone! The JBL LSR2325P are wired right now and I'm listening several things through them. So far I really feel that I could work with them. I fixed some of my older mix and I really like the clarity they offer. Of course sub-bass is harder, even impossible to process but I found my Sennheiser HD518 not bad at all for this. Anyway whatever 5 inchs monitor I'll get will need a sud eventually. I agree the Mackies look really nice and will provide better low end response without a sub and are in my budget, and so are the 8" Behringer... I need to think a little more...
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Dyonight
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/21 19:00:07
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Definately my better option considering cost/quality/shipping fees etc are the JBL so far... Anybody have some words regarding those speakers and why other should be best suited to mix accurately?
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tarsier
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/22 10:16:11
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The JBLs are fine speakers, and I think they hit the exact price/performance spot. You can spend a lot more and get better, and you can spend less and get much worse, but for sheer value I think the JBLs are the ones, especially when you set up a proper subwoofer system. My main studio monitors are Genelecs, but for my home studio purchase the JBLs are on the short list.
post edited by tarsier - 2011/03/22 10:17:25
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Dyonight
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/22 13:05:31
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I'm really enjoying the JBLs more and more.... The stereo imaging is really nice and the definition is far beyond what I experienced so far. The only thing I was missing is the 3dimentional feel the subwoofer can provide, but getting those first and then adding the matching sub will get me there later this year. Another fact is those 5 inch speaker don't take too much space on my desktop but 8 inch speaker would really make my setup cluttered. So far I have a winner!
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Guitarhacker
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/03/22 13:34:59
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Drop in a 10" 100w sub and feel the music.
My website & music: www.herbhartley.com MC4/5/6/X1e.c, on a Custom DAW Focusrite Firewire Saffire Interface BMI/NSAI "Just as the blade chooses the warrior, so too, the song chooses the writer "
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mainterpet
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Re:Reference monitors help... again!!
2011/04/13 16:36:08
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Studio monitors or reference monitors, loudspeakers, especially designed for transcoding audio applications such as radio, television, film, recording Studio. Studio monitors depositors solves the audio mixing and mastering tasks.
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