How to test studio monitors in the store

  • Thread starter Thread starter dontouch
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dontouch

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Do you just put on a CD and listen on different speakers?

What should I be listening?

Most of the CDs are mastered. So how do you know if the speakers are accurate on the frequencies of the mixes?

This may be pointless but if I bring a CD of the music I made, should I make a copy of all the un-mastered mixes, or should I just use the final mastered version?

The store environment is different than my home studio, how do I know if the speakers will suit my room?

How did YOU pick out the monitors you're using?
 
You just can't test with all accuracy in a store.
It's best to be able to have a 30 day guarantee from the store and bring them home to make sure, but even then who can tell.
You can have a cheap pair or expensive pair of monitors, you kind of grow into them, learning them as you go.
 
You just can't test with all accuracy in a store.
It's best to be able to have a 30 day guarantee from the store and bring them home to make sure, but even then who can tell.
You can have a cheap pair or expensive pair of monitors, you kind of grow into them, learning them as you go.

In that sense I should just stick to my $99 Sony MDR-7560 headphones. I kinda grew into them...
 
I'd bring a collection of music that you're INTIMATELY familiar with -- Great, wonderful, audiophile-quality recordings AND really crappy sounding recordings.

The wonderful recordings should sound wonderful. The crappy ones should SOUND crappy. If they don't, move on to the next set.
 
What Massive said. Then buy your top two contenders (two different models) and bring them home for a final shoot-out. A good store should allow this approach if you explain that you'll be buying one or the other. A sale's a sale. If not, use the same approach online. I've done both and would never eliminate that final step of in-studio A/B. Good luck.
 
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