Monitors - Genelec Or Mackie ? |
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Fri 16 Dec 2005, 07:19
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 1
Joined: 16-Dec 05
From: Auckland - NZ
Member No.: 73,970
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Some tips when looking for monitor speakers...
Make sure when you go to listen to the speakers that you take some tracks that have some very specific things. You need on that isn't heavily compressed, so that you can hear the detailing, and dynamic accuracy (orchestral music is often very good for this). You need some that have low bass, so that you can hear the depth that the speakers are accurate to. (A real plus is if you can find a track that has two layers of bass, perhaps a bass guitar and synth playing similar bass lines - this allows you to hear if they are clear at the bottom end - William Orbit and P!nk's track Feel Good Time is a good example of this). It is very good to get tracks with accoustic guitar and piano playing in a similar range, as this often helps you see the accuracy of the crossover (often the cheaper speakers get muddy near the crossover point). If you can find a track that is poorly mixed, and doesn't really sound that 'produced' (like Dinosaur Jr. or some of the Red Hot Chilli Peppers tracks) this shows how uesful the speakers would be for mixing - these tracks are normally deliberately un-'produced' but you want to be able to avoid this.
Remember that you are not looking for the speakers that sound the best, but rather the ones that are the most accurate. These are tools, not toys. If you want a cd to sound really nice, then buy hi-fi, if you want the music you are working on to sound good, then go accurate.
A good option in your price range, mentioned above is the Phonic P8A - very accurate crossover, reasonably deep accurate bass (according to the specs accurate to 45 hz, but they sound reasonable down to about 25hz)
Another pair worth considering (and I'll probably get laughed at for suggesting these, but have a listen) is the Yamaha MSP5A's. I was astounded that speakers this small could have such strong accurate bass. If desk space is an issue for you, have a listen to these, they certainly surprised me.
I would personally avoid going for a seperate sub. Unless you are very good at setting up a crossover, then there is the potential that your mixes will either have too much bass, or not enough.
Hope this helps...
mykuhl
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Posts in this topic
jimmynitcher Monitors - Genelec Or Mackie ? Wed 25 May 2005, 13:22 Jsegura Dynaudio Wed 25 May 2005, 14:08 jimmynitcher Ha Ha OK, why and which model?
J Wed 25 May 2005, 16:47 Jsegura BM6A are fantastic. BM15A are for me, the best ne... Wed 25 May 2005, 17:37 jimmynitcher Thanks a lot for that,
Actually the BM15A are £629... Wed 25 May 2005, 18:23 Jsegura If you have budget for the BM15A i not would doubt... Wed 25 May 2005, 22:59 lepetitmartien The 8030 really need a sub to get some depth, 8040... Thu 26 May 2005, 03:02 jimmynitcher Doh! I got all the prices wrong - they were fo... Thu 26 May 2005, 10:12 dixiechicken I would go for the Mackie monitors. They have gott... Thu 26 May 2005, 12:52 Jsegura OK, the Mackie HR-624 is more trustworthy than Gen... Thu 26 May 2005, 13:00 lepetitmartien QUOTE (jimmynitcher @ May 26 2005, 11:12)Doh... Thu 26 May 2005, 13:39 Jsegura And I also... Thu 26 May 2005, 14:21 Kapten Stofil As the Genelecs and Mackies suddenly soared out of... Thu 26 May 2005, 14:46 vank Genelec No Doubt!!
I rock a pair of 1037... Thu 26 May 2005, 22:47 kaboombahchuck I'm sorry, but I really do not see the reason ... Fri 27 May 2005, 14:44 Jsegura The audio monitors are fundamental in a studio. It... Fri 27 May 2005, 16:08 powerbookstudio Of the two choices in the original post it's G... Wed 30 May 2007, 06:45 salman22 This is a TEST Comment
Salman Khan
Salman Khan
htt... Tue 26 Aug 2008, 15:35
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