I find that the most natural and comfortable to listen to speakers are the ones that employ some subtle version of "The BBC Dip".
Highly revealing, spacious, well done lower slope crossovers, fast, tuneful, all of it, with a slight BBC Dip. Clean and warm, as the mix demands. A properly done BBC Dip, in my design experience....has the lowest part of the dip centered around 3.5khz and then goes back up again, and is about 2db deep, overall, as a best potential compromise.
And then it’s good all around and it can play all day, at any volume. From soft to break the windows levels...
Everything else that might be off.....is generally just bad equipment choices. (It is a multistage learning curve and individually committed to as an act --same goal, and very probably a different path for each person)
This graph has it as being slightly exaggerated but warming up to being ideal.
Highly revealing, spacious, well done lower slope crossovers, fast, tuneful, all of it, with a slight BBC Dip. Clean and warm, as the mix demands. A properly done BBC Dip, in my design experience....has the lowest part of the dip centered around 3.5khz and then goes back up again, and is about 2db deep, overall, as a best potential compromise.
And then it’s good all around and it can play all day, at any volume. From soft to break the windows levels...
Everything else that might be off.....is generally just bad equipment choices. (It is a multistage learning curve and individually committed to as an act --same goal, and very probably a different path for each person)
This graph has it as being slightly exaggerated but warming up to being ideal.