Hi,
I understand the sense of checking your mix in mono, but I am curious to know whether there is any discernible difference or any advantage/disadvantage to either summing the mix to mono (in my case using the mono button on my Mackie Big Knob) and listening to it on my regular left and right nearfields, or whether I should be sending it to a single speaker for best results (I have an old M-Audio SP5B lying around).
In time I'd like to add a pair of (or a single) Avantone MixCubes. Same question applies in that situation - one in the middle, or one either side?
Thanks for any enlightenment.
I understand the sense of checking your mix in mono, but I am curious to know whether there is any discernible difference or any advantage/disadvantage to either summing the mix to mono (in my case using the mono button on my Mackie Big Knob) and listening to it on my regular left and right nearfields, or whether I should be sending it to a single speaker for best results (I have an old M-Audio SP5B lying around).
In time I'd like to add a pair of (or a single) Avantone MixCubes. Same question applies in that situation - one in the middle, or one either side?
Thanks for any enlightenment.