Post
by deutero » Sat Jul 09, 2011 1:11 pm
evon wrote:3dot... wrote:my advice...
get a home-stereo amp with a pair of good speakers
(ones that let you enjoy listening to music)..
I personally prefer old amps and cabinets..they're mostly on the cheap side TOO..
(..and you'd have some $ left for decent studio-headphones..
which will give you the neutrality and precision you seek..
my recommendation : AudioTechnica ATH-M50...great value cans that you can also take to gigs)
and when you're ready to put the cash down..
or feel it's necessary...
then get precision monitors...
in the meantime .. enjoy making music !

+1
+1
I know you've already decided, but for what it's worth (from my far less than pro self), the mixes I did quickly, when I really had no idea what I was doing, using an inexpensive dedicated amp and speakers still sound much better on a variety of systems than mixes I did later with much more time and know-how on a quality pair of headphones.
Whatever you use, get really familiar with how music you love sounds on your mixing setup--that'll go a long way to getting good results from your mixes.
And while it's good to check the sound on crApple earbuds (and car stereos, internal computer speakers, and every other good and bad system people are likely to subject your music to) AFTER mixing, I can't imagine it's ever a good idea to use them DURING mixing.
Live 8 w/ EIC, XP Pro SP3, 1.8GHz Core Duo, 3GB RAM, PreSonus Firebox, Evolution MK-425c, Korg nanoKONTROL, Akai LPK25, Akai LPD8, bigger than average brain (large hats)