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| Tags: headphones, location recording, speaker, technique |
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| | #1 |
| Gear Head Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Geneva, Switzerland
Posts: 73
| monitoring : headphones or speakers ? Hi ! When you are on location, do you always manage to set up speakers monitors ? I personally mostly don't have enough time to, although I don't like to monitor with phones... ![]() |
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| | #2 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Central New Jersey
Posts: 609
| I guess it depends on what you are doing in a live setting. If you are just tracking and set up by the stage or at FOH then use a good set of headphones. If you are mixing straight to 2-track or doing a live broadcast then you need to be isolated with a decent pair of monitors. |
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| | #3 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 2,304
| I've been monitoring on headphones for years and gotten great recordings. I prefer speakers and find life easier with them, but if you know how to listen to your particular set of headphones, you should be able to get a very good mix. Heck, all but the first example on my website were mixed on headphones (similar on my demo that I send out). For years, I only mixed to stereo- direct with no multitrack. That was fine, but now I record multitrack. This is for several reasons- 1 it prevents me from making mistakes in the moment (especially with mutes of microphones), 2 it allows me to leave the console at home, and lastly 3- I can do things in post to a multitrack mix than a stereo mix- especially where reverb is involved. In the end, I'm still usually monitoring on headphones and the final mix/master reflects very few changes to the original recording. --Ben |
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| | #4 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Oct 2002 Location: St Leonards on Sea, England
Posts: 1,382
| The problem with headphones is that they offer a "false balance", in that balance issues you can hear immediately on even not great speakers are difficult to hear on phones. Obviously "experienced" engineers compensate for this by rule of thumb style working, knowing gain structures on their desks etc, and as Ben put it, if you multitrack projects there is a lot more margin for post production fixes these days, invariably done back at base where reliable monitoring is (hopefully) known. Regards Roland |
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| | #5 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: New York Friggin' City
Posts: 2,294
| Have done entire live mixes on cans but prefer good nearfield monitors. Sometimes you can't get good isolation/space/setup/etc, and then you need an excellent closed cup can. |
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| | #6 |
| Gear maniac Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Posts: 221
| What would be some good recommendations for this? (I just got back from doing a live wind ensemble recording, in a high school auditorium with no isolation, and I felt that I was getting too much live bleed into my humble AKG [forget model number] cans.) |
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| | #7 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 2,304
| Quote:
In all seriousness, closed cans have a lot of issues with their reproduction of sound. Unfortunately, in the live world they are a necessary evil. I'm currently using Sennheiser 280 headphones, but it was a close call between those and the ultrasones. In the end, the price and isolation abilities won out and I liked the sound of the Sennheisers a touch more. I've also used the standard Sony 7506's which are ok (a bit bright) and the Sony V700 DJ cans (poor construction and a huge low end, but seems to translate relatively well). I really prefer the sound of open-ear headphones, but I've been in numerous isolated situation where there was some noise issue that kept me from being able to use them. In the end- for all the issues using open ear headphones, I can't justify the price of a great set. May as well just bring the speakers and deal with the same issues without a cord attached to your head. --Ben | |
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| | #8 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: New York Friggin' City
Posts: 2,294
| Quote:
I hope this helps. | |
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