This is great, as long as you sit as still as that measurement mic. What changes when sitting and mixing, is not the vertical field, but the horisontal will. You want your bloody monitors stranding up..
i love you hahaha thanks a lot there is a lot of videos trying to do this but this is clearly amazing i have a home studio and there are some slopes and frequencies i'm gonna start to do this and see if i can get a much more even response i also have a subwoofer i checked out your other videos can you please do one on how to find the right place thanks
I still don't understand why it is better to have the monitors on their sides. If they are on their sides, then I understand that moving up and down won't cause any phase issues between the T & W, but surely people are more likely to move left or right and up or down? Is it for engineers who like standing up now and then, so that as long as you are in the mix position, then it doesn't matter what you are doing whilst you are there?
Hi Keith, very interesting video. Thanks for sharing :). So if we go into a studio situation, moving the head back about 1" bring a dip in the response of the speaker? and also can this angling technique be used in a live situation to get the splayed angles right of the speakers? If so where would the mic be situated?
Hi thank you sincerely for the extremely interesting video. I really did not imagine that small shifts in the mic position could give such impressive variations in the freq response. I have a weird question. Would it be of some help to use ear microphones to check the freq response from the head position of the recording engineer ? in this way i would be sure about what reaches the ears. Another question. Can coaxial speakers for their nature make this issue of dips in the freq response less critical ? Again very impressive test and very telling. Thanks again, gino P.S. i think i have the same monitors ... Behringer 2031a ? what is your opinion about them ? should i keep it or look for something better ?
@@ClintMoody Thank you very much indeed for the very valuable advice. I love Tannoy speakers concept for instance. I have been listening to them for a long time and they are not perfect (which is perfect ?) but i like them a lot overall. Regards, gino
Hello Keith! Looks like you are using the Josephson Engineering C550H? Do you like it? How would you compare it to the iSemcom EMX-7150? Which of the two do you prefer? Thank you!
What is the point of this WRT to studio monitors... The listening position is occupied by a human, with binaural hearing, not a small diaphragm omni RTA mic. If you're going to be making EQ or positional adjustments, averaging measurements recorded throughout the listening position are required, not a single point that the human ear can never be fixed to.
went here in 2007-2008. such an amazing school and i had you as a teacher!!! awesome!!!
This is great, as long as you sit as still as that measurement mic.
What changes when sitting and mixing, is not the vertical field, but the horisontal will. You want your bloody monitors stranding up..
Very good information sir,Thanks ❤️
i love you hahaha thanks a lot there is a lot of videos trying to do this but this is clearly amazing i have a home studio and there are some slopes and frequencies i'm gonna start to do this and see if i can get a much more even response i also have a subwoofer i checked out your other videos can you please do one on how to find the right place thanks
I still don't understand why it is better to have the monitors on their sides. If they are on their sides, then I understand that moving up and down won't cause any phase issues between the T & W, but surely people are more likely to move left or right and up or down? Is it for engineers who like standing up now and then, so that as long as you are in the mix position, then it doesn't matter what you are doing whilst you are there?
Can I use these configurations for straight monitors?
dont forget it is about sharing
Hi Keith, very interesting video. Thanks for sharing :). So if we go into a studio situation, moving the head back about 1" bring a dip in the response of the speaker? and also can this angling technique be used in a live situation to get the splayed angles right of the speakers? If so where would the mic be situated?
what software is this ?
Hey what the point of moving the mic if u cant move the speakers ??
vERY gOOOOOD!
Thank you very much Guy!
The Best regards
Hi thank you sincerely for the extremely interesting video. I really did not imagine that small shifts in the mic position could give such impressive variations in the freq response. I have a weird question. Would it be of some help to use ear microphones to check the freq response from the head position of the recording engineer ? in this way i would be sure about what reaches the ears. Another question. Can coaxial speakers for their nature make this issue of dips in the freq response less critical ? Again very impressive test and very telling. Thanks again, gino
P.S. i think i have the same monitors ... Behringer 2031a ? what is your opinion about them ? should i keep it or look for something better ?
Yes, to my understanding, this (the first mentions of vertical vs horizontal) wouldn't be significant in coaxial monitors. #coaxialmasterrace
@@ClintMoody Thank you very much indeed for the very valuable advice. I love Tannoy speakers concept for instance. I have been listening to them for a long time and they are not perfect (which is perfect ?) but i like them a lot overall. Regards, gino
Hello Keith! Looks like you are using the Josephson Engineering C550H? Do you like it? How would you compare it to the iSemcom EMX-7150? Which of the two do you prefer? Thank you!
Is this on the next season of Jersey Shore?
This is excellent. What school is this, and where do I find registration info?
The Conservatory of Recroding Arts and Sciences out of Temp/Gilbert AZ.
❤sir
What is the point of this WRT to studio monitors... The listening position is occupied by a human, with binaural hearing, not a small diaphragm omni RTA mic. If you're going to be making EQ or positional adjustments, averaging measurements recorded throughout the listening position are required, not a single point that the human ear can never be fixed to.
What the soft?