
Son of Mixerman
Mix Junior
The biggest problem with monitors isn't the monitors it's the people 
I've ranted before on this and often ignored, but ears are as individual as fingerprints with bumps and dips occuring in different places along the spectrum. Thats why there is alot of subjectivity in recording. When was the last time someone went and had their hearing tested and then compared those curves to microphone response? If your a little sensitive at 800hz then a speaker or mic with a bump in that region may be a little grinding or if you have a dip at 450hz you may tend to boost that freq while mixing causing the mix to muddy up. The room definitely throws both your ears and the monitors into a tizzy. On the other hand monitors that tend to sound too good are often not accurate giving you a false impression that wont translate. In any case learn to work with what you have by listening to alot of good CD's or music. Bob Katz has a list available of good mastering jobs that would be nice start for getting use to new monitors.
SoMm

I've ranted before on this and often ignored, but ears are as individual as fingerprints with bumps and dips occuring in different places along the spectrum. Thats why there is alot of subjectivity in recording. When was the last time someone went and had their hearing tested and then compared those curves to microphone response? If your a little sensitive at 800hz then a speaker or mic with a bump in that region may be a little grinding or if you have a dip at 450hz you may tend to boost that freq while mixing causing the mix to muddy up. The room definitely throws both your ears and the monitors into a tizzy. On the other hand monitors that tend to sound too good are often not accurate giving you a false impression that wont translate. In any case learn to work with what you have by listening to alot of good CD's or music. Bob Katz has a list available of good mastering jobs that would be nice start for getting use to new monitors.
SoMm