T
TheDewd
New member
Why do you even care about what everyone hears? I can't get your point. When I mix, I am the one in control. I don't give a damn what others think, it's my own thing. I am the judge, no one else can tell me how to do my thing. Mixing is an art, not science. Monitors are tools, like the paint for the painter or the guitar for the guitarist.Blue Bear Sound said:No - it's NOT the same... the room acts as a buffer to the differences.... with headphones, you're wearing to INDIVIDUALIZED tiny rooms on your ears... with speakers, what everyone hears is NOT as iindividualized.......
Also, if you learn those "indivual tiny rooms", don't you think you can mix with headphones? You don't seem to get that speakers, headphones or any kind of monitoring device has a learning curve. once you learn the headphones, you are okay to mix. How come don't you get this for headphones while you understand this principle when applied to speakers?
I'm not pooing anyone's experience, just trying to make some BASIC principles clear for everyone:Blue Bear Sound said:You do what you like, Dewd, but poo-poo'ing the experiences of professionals is doing a disservice to novices -- when they don't get the results you say they can (which WILL happen if they follow your er, "advice"), then you'll have helped them waste their money..........
1) You can mix with any monitor you want, as long as you learn it properly
2 Mixing is MUCH easier with accurate and flat monitors though
3) Mixing is thus about getting the most accurate sound for your $$$
4) The most accurate sound for the $$$ comes with headphones, not monitors.
Tell me if you disagree with those principles. Those are basic facts of audio engineering. Beginner or not, everyone needs to know those. If you can come up with a speaker system that has better sound characteristics than my $500 headphone setup for the same price, I will bow. Since such thing doesn't exist at present, I think headphones are the way to go.