Underestimating the influence of studio monitors?


Every recording gets its final sonic signature from a recording engineer who listens to the recording through a pair (or more in case of mutli-channel) of studio monitors. In the face of that reality, the recordings we listen to at home are shaped by those very studio monitor speakers.

So, if the monitors used are inherently bright, the result in our home systems will sound slightly dull assuming that the engineer is adjusting the mix to sound "real" based on the sound coming from the monitors. If the monitor's bass doesn't extend to the lowest octave, then the result at home is likely to sound overblown in the bottom octave for this same reason. Likewise, if the monitor has a bass hump, then the final result may sound a bit bass-shy. Therefore, unless the studio monitor is completely neutral in tonal balance and covers the entire audible spectrum from low to high, the final recording will have some inappropriate signature based on its defficiencies.

I suppose the skill and experience of the recording mixing engineer can come into play if they know the defficiencies of the monitors themselves and compernsate accordingly in the mixdown but can we really count on this? What do you think?
krisjan
Sthomas - Yes, I get that. But you are missing my essential point (I think). You say you like weight and slight warmth in the sound. But what we hear in the home may not be what you want us to hear if your studio monitors are flawed in some way. If the monitors you use are already weighty and warm in nature then what we get will not be as warm and weighty as you foresaw. If your monitors happen to be a bit lean, them what we hear at home will be tilted too much towards weighty and warm. This means that the studio monitors must be as neutral and full frequency as possible for you particluar sound standard to be realized in our homes. Thanks for your comments.
Everything in the whole process from the time the sound leaves the instrument/vocalist's voice to the reflections in your room after the music leaves the speaker can color the sound.

I try to focus on the things I can control - room, equipment, system synergy and then try to enjoy recordings by companies I can count on to make good music.
No piece of studio equipment is perfect. Skilled engineers understand the flaws of the equipment they are using and compensate. It's a translation process. Engineers and producers also make assumptions about how the music will be heard. If they think it will primarily be heard on a portable music player using low cost headphones in a compressed audio format, they engineer it to sound the best under those conditions. Very few records are engineered under the assumption that it will be heard on systems comparable to those displayed on Audiogon.
The basic point is this, in most cases the mastering engineer never heard the music being recorded. Therefore his frame of reference is what sounds best TO HIM. Many prefer monitors that are by most standards somewhat bright, in order to be able to pick up everything on the tape. I myself prefer broadcast monitors, in that in most cases they can be easily compared to the performance they are monitoring. In my experience they often sound softer in the top end than the ones used for mastering. I am basing this on my experience with BBC monitors and also with Nelson Reed, which was designed for movie playback and was [ and may still be ] Kavi Alexander's monitor speakers. It would be interesting to compare recording engineer's monitors with mastering studio's monitors. Tony Falkner uses Quad 57s for playback, I doubt if any mastering studio does.
It would be interesting to compare recording engineer's monitors with mastering studio's monitors.

Stan,

You make an excellent point. I know of only one speaker manufacturer that is popular and has consistent products BOTH in recording AND in mastering BOTH as near-field as well as far-field main monitors: ATC. They are not "bright" in the treble sense but they are certainly more forward in the midrange than what most consumers seem comfortable with (as you correctly point out - not comfortable enough for broadcast work). Definitely a tool to hear every microphone placement issue and mixing level details in the recording but still enjoyable enough for compression and final EQ touches in mastering to create a product that translates well to target market.

Until ATC came along, speakers typically used to sound completely different from the small monitors to the big bad main monitors used to impress clients and run bass checks - EVEN if they were from the same manufacturer!!!