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Project studio speakers/converters

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Submitted by rhydian on

Hi

I believe my weak links in the chain are my monitors and my converters.

my chain of equipment is as follows:



TLM 103 Neumann cardiod mike, SE Electronics Z3300a omni/cardiod/figure of 8; RODE NT2.



Great River ME1NV preamp



Alesis speakers (the weak link!)



motherboard, ASUS P4P800 deluxe motherboard

processor and chipset, Intel P4 3.0GHz/800HT Northwood 512k

sound card/audio interface Pro Tools digi 002

video card, ATi Radeon 9200SE 128MB dual head 8x AGP

amount and type of RAM, 512 MB DDR RAM PC3200 400 MHz x2

host application, Windows operating system, Pro Tools LE 6.7 (soon to upgrade to 7)

type and size of hard drive(s), 2x 120GB serial ATA hard drive 8MB cache

peripherals; PCI Gigabit ethernet adapter by Netgear (GA311), USB optical remote rechargeable mouse by Belkin, Firewire TC Electronic Powercore.

I also have a WavesAPA 44 device connected via the ethernet adapter.





I reckon I'll invest in

high quality converters like LavryBlue, Benchmark or Apogee (probably Lavry), and better project studio speakers like Mackie 824s or Adam P11As (probably the Adams).



Opinions guys/gals?

Comments

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rhydian

Apologies if you felt the computer specs were over the top detail-wise. Thought is might be helpful to let you know. Didn't mention the specific Alesis model (MkII actives) as I know they do not posses the characteristics I require. Apologies for the omission.



The "problem" I'm having is two-fold:

one of a veiled mix, with an inability to resolve detail especially in the mids. I wonder whether better A/D/A conversion coupled with a higher standard of monitoring would improve the standard of soundscape that I'm working with. I work with a wide range of music, from studio recorded heavy rock, to folk voice and guitar, and some on location recording of choir/string quartets. It's not simply a microphone/preamp issue as I have DI tracks from various amp-modelling units that I would like to hear in greater detail to mix better.



Second is wanting to hear the bottom end of the mix more tightly. This is probably largely a monitor issue. (I can hear these freqeuncies more clearly on other monitoring systems with the same mix).



As you can see, I have already decided what I feel is best. I'm just testing out this hypothesis on the expert forum to make sure I'm not being daft.

Sat, 03/25/2006 - 10:38 Permalink
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JoeH

I don't think the problem you're having is your mics, your pre's or even your converters.



Before you buy anything yet, why not take a representative mix of your best stuff somewhere else, with better speakers and an environment you trust. If it becomes clear your speakers are the weak link in your chain, then it's time to go beyond the Alesis. I don't know those speakers in particular, but I doubt they're going to give you the really professional results you're seeking. I don't know first hand; they may be good speakers for getting everyday/journeyman results, but they're certainly not the last word in mixing and mastering. It sounds like you may be hitting the wall with what they're giving you.



You may want to also look into a subwoofer. I'm not an advocate of huge booming bass or exaggerated low end, but I do want to hear everything, especially when I'm mastering and mixing things. (Not to mention its proper place in 5.1 mixes.)

Sat, 03/25/2006 - 16:28 Permalink