A
adamki
New member
I have been looking for another set of monitors to buy for a while. I Have read a lot of good things about the NS-10s. Does anybody use these? What do you think about them?
I have been looking for another set of monitors to buy for a while. I Have read a lot of good things about the NS-10s. Does anybody use these? What do you think about them?
Instead of looking, you should be listening. Get down to your local showrooms and start listening to what works for you. If you find the Yamaha HSM-80 - which is not the same as the NS-10, but it's similar in class and response style - seems to fit your bill, then maybe the NS-10 (one that isn't old and tired, BTW) is the kind of loudspeaker you're looking for. If not, then go with what does work for you and forget about anything any of us have to say about it.adamki said:I have been looking for another set of monitors to buy
You bet it will.
EVERY quality engineer I know can work with NS-10's, mainly because they have been an "industry standard" for so many years.
They have no low end, so indeed, you will be guessing at the low end with NS-10's. But, coupled with a suitable sub-woofer, you can work with them. I know of many good quality studios and engineers in them still using "nasty 10's" as their main reference monitor, and they do great work with them.
Just like ANY monitor, you will have to get used to them. I have done work on Meyers, Genelics, top of the line JBL's, KRK's, etc....They ALL require that you "figure them out".
What is the advantage of NS-10's over every other monitor I have worked with? The midrange clarity! If you cannot hear everything DISTINCTLY on NS-10's, you know the components in your mix are not separated well enough yet. No other monitor that I have used is that good of a reference!
Coincidentally, I don't personally own a pair, and probably won't unless I go back into the recording business, which I have been out of for a few years now. I prefer my Event 20/20's. But, when I did have my own studio, I had pair of NS-10's that sat right next to the 20/20's, and both got equal use!
Thanks everybody for the response.
The main reason I even asked is because one of my friends got them and wants to sale them already. They are in perfect shape and he wants $600
for them......
So I was at the Guitar Center and the dude said that the new KRKs was the way to go. So I might do that.
I use the Tapco S-8 and nothing sounds good in them. I can never Get the low end mixed right. I have to bring my sessions to a friends studio to mix. They use the mackie monitors. which is out of my price range.
Thanks
They are not accurate. It became hip to use them because one very successful producer/engineer mentioned that he used them. It's possible to get good mixes with them but you need to learn how to 2nd guess them so the mixes translate well on other systems. They are better used as the "check to see how this sounds on typical home gear stuff" monitors rather than the main/really accurate ones. YMMV.
IMHO, you are just about right on target.Am I too cynical?
eh...i'm gonna call bullshit here
while i can see some people adopting them because such-and-such engineer states he uses them, the fact is that THOUSANDS of the best engineers worldwide have used them for years now, and have mixed some of the greatest records ever made on them. if they really were THAT crap, the majority of those individuals would've dumped them a long time ago.
granted, a lot of people do hate them, and have no problem saying so...but to throw them under the bus like that and act like they have no place in a studio is just ignorant IMO.
I think this is a key source of confusion in the NS-10 mythology.They are better used as the "check to see how this sounds on typical home gear stuff" monitors rather than the main/really accurate ones. YMMV."[/I]
Geesh...who would'a known...I'll have a pair of those Doorstops myself!!!!With the NS10s, I feel I can hear "deeper" into the mix. Reverbs become more apparent. My bottom is tighter (did I just say that) and the stereo spread is just a smidge wider.
Call me what you want, but Ill give you $200 for your "doorstops" right now. That seems like a MORE than fair price for a Doorstop![]()
I think this is a key source of confusion in the NS-10 mythology.
While I'm sure there are indeed a number of commercial releases that have been mixed on NS-10s, I believe (I have no hard data to back this up, I admit) far more than that they have been used as "check monitors" or "baseline reference" monitors. That doesn't mean that's what they were actually *mixed* on.
The NS-10 became a popular "standard" in much the same way that Pro Tools did; more than anything else they provided a familiar environment for the pro engineer who might be working in Studio X for one project and Studio Y for the next. Each one became a de facto standard not so much because they were the best choice, or necessarily even that great of a choice (at the time), but because they were in the right place at the right time. ProTools was pretty much the first and only serious multitrack NLE at the time, and the NS-10 was really the first and only currently-produced bookshelf speaker that was being being re-marketed as a portable nearfield studio monitor.
A key word there is *portable" Yes, Bob Clearmountain's endorsement DID have a major impact on it's adoption by the community (though that was not the only factor, of course.) The idea was that he could have a set of reference monitors that he *knew* that he could take with him from studio to studio the way many Auratone owners liked to do. This way, no matter what the studio, he had a baseline reference that he could use to check to make sure his mixes actually sounded like what he thought they sounded like, and that his ears were not being tricked by an unfamiliar studio environment and monitor sound.
The studios picked up on this and started replacing their lava lamps with NS-10s () for the convenience of the engineer so that they would not have to drag stuff with him, and so that he knew that he could work in that studio and still be able to check his mixes on a faimilar-sounding monitor. This made the studio more attractive to engineers and helped bring in business in much the same way that having a PT rig attracted engineers who worked in PT and didn't want to have to worry about their projects being transportable to another studio or to have to worry about learning every brand of DAW platform out there.
But none of this means that the engineers actually did most of their *mixing* on the NS-10s. Sure, many of them did. But mostly, they used them to check the mixes that they made on more detailed monitors than the NS-10, or at least bounced between the two sets of monitors while mixing.
None of which really is a shining reference for the use of NS-10s as one's only monitor for mixing. Can it be done? Sure. But the idea that the NS-10 has been a standard in pro studio lineups is not really a supportive argument for it, because that's not the *why* of that pro standard.
G.