
noisedude
New member
You're crazy. Nice of you to join in, though.
noisedude said:Buwahahaha!! You're hilarious!!!
Yeah, you're right. I'm probably just using crap headphones, that would explain it.
What are you talking about, "speaker-like"? What is "speaker-like" about having a pair of speakers clamped over your ears, with no reflections, stereo merging or sense of space?
And where's your damn proof that you're right?
noisedude said:You're crazy. Nice of you to join in, though.
Yep, and they look awfully like a pair of speakers clamped around the head ... we in the 'biz' like to call them 'headphones'.TheDewd said:Have you ever heard of the AKG K1000 headphones? Do a little reasearch and come back to tell me it isn't "speaker like" LOL!
Yes, and as I point out in my article, they take the room out of the equation and stick two SMALL rooms around each of your ears.......... the whole issue with headphone mixing has NOTHING to do with the quality of the cans as you seem to believe, and everything to do with the way the ear responds to "speakers" directly coupled to them...............TheDewd said:Not crazy, just trying to bust that myth. FACT is that headphones can be much flatter than monitors, especially when you factor in the equation that headphones don't care about the room acoustics.
TheDewd said:Not crazy, just trying to bust that myth. FACT is that headphones can be much flatter than monitors, especially when you factor in the equation that headphones don't care about the room acoustics.
Tell me how does the ear responds differently with headphones than with speakers. I understand ear canals and ear shape influence the sound we hear, but with headphones, you still use the same ear canal, right ? This point is only bogus to me, because there is SO MUCH MORE going on with speakers (room, not as accurate response, phase shifts, driver tolerances, etc) that detracts from accuracy.Blue Bear Sound said:Yes, and as I point out in my article, they take the room out of the equation and stick two SMALL rooms around each of your ears.......... the whole issue with headphone mixing has NOTHING to do with the quality of the cans as you seem to believe, and everything to do with the way the ear responds to "speakers" directly coupled to them...............
bigwillz24 said:Anything around your ear flaps is gonna change the way you perceive things.
Don't believe me?
Heres a test for ya!... Cup your hands behind your ears hear the difference?
You changed the frequency response of your ears.
News Flash! Guess what your doing when you put those headphones on?
noisedude said:Err ... FACT is that people are hearing what you're saying and you're still missing the point. Cream rises, people aren't stupid, and if mixing on headphones produced better results than with monitors, you wouldn't be looking so silly right now.
TheDewd said:Tell me how does the ear responds differently with headphones than with speakers. I understand ear canals and ear shape influence the sound we hear, but with headphones, you still use the same ear canal, right ? This point is only bogus to me, because there is SO MUCH MORE going on with speakers (room, not as accurate response, phase shifts, driver tolerances, etc) that detracts from accuracy.
Blue Bear Sound's Article said:2) Same headphones, different people - not only is response and imaging skewed using headphones, but to make matters worse, each person hears differently from every other person when listening on cans. The reason for this is that the response of each person's cilia (the parts of the ear responsible for detecting different frequency vibrations) is unique to each individual. This is critical because it means that the same song, through the same phones, will sound different to each person that listens to it! And you thought translating mixes using monitors is tough!!! With headphones it's almost impossible because a well-balanced sound is a moving target from person to person!
"But wait.... so what if the response is different for each person, why is that any different from monitors?"
Good question - there is a huge difference.... the "personalized-response" effect is much more pronounced with headphones due to the proximity of the cones to a person's ears. With monitors, the room acts as a frequency-response leveller, giving a more uniform repsonse to each person hearing them, but with headphones, it's virtually direct contact between ears and the cones, there's no room effect to "level-out" the response.
And this is just completely dead wrong, as I've already explained.......TheDewd said:Think of your argument this way...these two little rooms around your ears are much smaller and provide much better tolerance and much less resonance and frequency cut effect than having a big room. Sure, soundstaging is not quite exactly the same as with speakers, but great headphones make up for this nicely.
TheDewd said:I understand ear canals and ear shape influence the sound we hear, but with headphones, you still use the same ear canal, right ?
TheDewd said:The only difference between a great flat pair of studio monitors and some flat headphones is the soundstaging.
TheDewd said:Once you get used to it, mixing on headphones is as easy as mixing on monitors.
I re-read your article and have three comments:Blue Bear Sound said:If you would have read my article, you would have seen my explanation........
Blue Bear Sound said:You don't have to believe anything I say, and of course, you can do what you like, but if you're going to refute something, then at least back it up with facts and not conjecture and misplaced rhetoric....
This IS the problem here...you guys are all mixing on monitors and are so closed-minded that you don't even WANT to consider using headphones, because all you used are cheapo headphones. I learned to mix on headphones (even though everyone was telling me the opposite) and I do as nice as a job as when I mix with monitors.bigwillz24 said:Which brings me back to proove it is just as easy or easier to get a good sounding mix on headphones as it is to get on monitors.
If it actually "emulates an anechoic chamber", then it does not have "perfect acoustics" - an anechoic chamber is totally dead, i.e. NO acoustics.TheDewd said:I re-read your article and have three comments:
1) The driver proximity argument is not valid, since headphone designers take this into account when designing their headphones (assuming it's excellent headphones). Have you ever heard of diffuse-field equalizing in headphones? It emulates an anechoic chamber with perfect acoustics. When a manufacturer designs a good headphone, they take that into account and the sound is not that different than listening to monitors.
I give up, skippy... do whatever the hell you like!TheDewd said:This IS the problem here...you guys are all mixing on monitors and are so closed-minded that you don't even WANT to consider using headphones, because all you used are cheapo headphones. I learned to mix on headphones (even though everyone was telling me the opposite) and I do as nice as a job as when I mix with monitors.
When you KNOW your gear, you can mix. That's the bottom line. Whether it's headphones or monitors.
BUT!!! Saying headphones are not suitable for mixing is just PLAIN wrong, since nothing proves this, except old sayings and tradition. HELLO EVERYONE !?! We are in 2005! We can now use headphones to mix! LOL! You guys act like you just don't want to advance technologically and stick to the "old methods" cause that's all you ever knew.
Monkey Allen said:What do cd's/ albums sound like on decent monitor speakers? Can you hear the imperfections better? Can you really hear what's there?