I use Cubase SE for my home recording on a G4 iBook, and do not have any good reference system beyond a set of headphones. My question is whether I can use a spectral analyzer to produce a spectral profiile visually representing "good" sound without actually having a good reference system. I understand there would be limitations with this approach, but I wonder what the graph of such a spectrum would look like?
Comments
That's like asking "I am blind. Can I drive a car using only my
That's like asking "I am blind. Can I drive a car using only my ears?" Of course you can't ..
The very first thing you need in order to do good audio is a good refernce monitor system in a good listening enviornment .. there is no substitute.
What Kurt said is very true... the analyzer does not tell the wh
What Kurt said is very true... the analyzer does not tell the whole story. You can have two mixes with spectra that look identical, but they will likely sound very different.
I agree with the responses so far, but they don't help you much.
I agree with the responses so far, but they don't help you much.
Try this:
http://www.har-bal.com/
I believe they are working on a Mac version now
try this good studio monitors and a RTA and some knowledge of m
try this
good studio monitors and a RTA and some knowledge of music and you see what will work 4 u