
frederic
New member
I mix with my studio headphones.
This provides me (I said me) with optimum results.
Whenever I listen to music (not my own) and want to distinguish between the various instruments, the panning, effects used etc I listen through headphones as this provides the most conclusive results im my opinion.
You are welcome to your opinion. And for some aspects of recording, I will absolutely agree with you. Stereo imaging and pan settings seem to be more obvious with headphones, simply because there is minimal or no acoustic crosstalk between the signals arriving at each ear (assuming any of us have gray matter rather than acoustical limiting material known as "air")

We have done our track laying with monitors as well as headphones - since we generally record everything "flat" and "dry" the most important thing for us at this stage of recording is making sure we are getting the cleanest, highest level possible to the recorder. Headphones are fine for this, as is almost anything.
The final mix, then the mastering process, we use true monitors. We use them because as others have said earlier, they enable you to hear recording flaws that other methods of audio reproduction will hide, or color if you will. Home stereo speakers (and headphones) often cut the midrange a bit so the bass sounds better and the highs sound brighter, in contrast to a flat response.
Trust me though, it is important to listen to the final mix on headphones, switch over to decent home speakers, and even cruddy speakers, as well as pop the CD in boom boxes, the car stereo, and of course, a cheap disc-man clone. This is done based on the assumption that most consumers do not have pro-audio equipment with Polk monitors

Hope I helped in some small way.