Standing waves....MHO.
You can change the EQ, but ultimately not how the room responds to certain frequencies. As noted, 'damping' the room's surfaces will help but not change the fundamentals and the resonances they create.
If possible, run some test sweeps with a generator, running a calibrated mic on an RTA. Find out where those peaks are, and adjust eq to trim response 'down' slightly at those fundamentals.
The cheaper alternative is to 'do the math' based on the room dimensions and experiment with the results.
It'll beat doing drugs or alcohol in the long run...one tends to forget what and why you're there, and where did I leave that.... :)
You can change the EQ, but ultimately not how the room responds to certain frequencies. As noted, 'damping' the room's surfaces will help but not change the fundamentals and the resonances they create.
If possible, run some test sweeps with a generator, running a calibrated mic on an RTA. Find out where those peaks are, and adjust eq to trim response 'down' slightly at those fundamentals.
The cheaper alternative is to 'do the math' based on the room dimensions and experiment with the results.
It'll beat doing drugs or alcohol in the long run...one tends to forget what and why you're there, and where did I leave that.... :)