Choosing Studio Monitors: Near-Field vs Far-Field
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 มิ.ย. 2024
- What are the differences between near-field, mid-field, and far-field monitors? Find out in this video...
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00:00 Intro
00:53 Sonarworks SoundID Reference Demonstration
01:35 Maximum Sound Pressure Level
03:51 Frequency Response
06:51 Room Acoustics 08:31 Reverb: Near Field, Mid Field, Far Field
10:09 NEXT VIDEO - The Biggest Problem With Mixing In A Small Room =======================================
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I volunteer to run sound at my church. I appreciate when you go into detail describing the differences you hear. I often can hear the difference at a high level but don't understand what I hear or how to effectively mix/manipulate/change it into something better.
This is one reason why it’s so important to have a community around you. Glad to have you here!
I love learning about hearing music. Yesterday I listened to an interview about AI. But that will not stop me from making music. When music changed in the 80s with artist using drum machines that did not stop well known drummers.
Agreed!
The Rick Beato Interview?
Seeing RME TotalMix in the background made me say giggidty. I will never use another audio interface brand ever.
I own the ADAM T7V. These are nearfield monitors capable of sound pressure levels more than 110 dB (SPL). They’re loud, very loud when sitting 3 feet from them. Great 👍 video, Kyle.
Another amazing video! Helps a lot to find monitors which is on the list and still missing in my studio🤘🤘🤘
Happy to help!
I think what i'm planning for my room is having a little movie surround sound setup (i already have it laying around). While its not the most technically impressive thing, its fun! As far as my music rooms aesthetic idk yet though, i figure at the end of the day i'll just have to make music with what i have even if it may not sound good everywhere. Afterall musics not really so complicated if you don't want it to be, either it sounds good or it doesn't i think.
Thanks for very detailed video and explain topic
Thanks for watching!
Thats the exact question I was looking for :) I never understood where were the specifications which determines what was a nearfield or farfield centric speaker. I know a Genelec 8020 wouldnt be suitable for farfield as a KEF LS60 for example, but never understood where to look on a spec sheet
Great video!
Glad to help!
Most main far field monitors in major studios sound terrible. Ive worked at multiple Red Bull studios, sound scoring stages and big name studios in London and Berlin. Mains are for clients to impress them, the near field is what everybody works on for actual work in 90% of studios.
Agreed - If you want accuracy, near-field is best. When you want to cover a wider area and turn it up, far-field is the tool for the job.
@@AudioUniversity Totally. I should add if you want loud, smeary, ambient, smiley EQ representation of the program material that accentuates all the flaws of whatever room you are working in, far-field is the tool for the job.
Sadly you are correct regarding studio main speakers, my home big rig is much better in sound Quality than most studios. 95 % of people listening are either in cars or some low Quality Bluetooth speaker or a really crappy stereo.
GIK Acoustics are awesome im also very happy
these correctibe EQs and room simulations like sound id or VSX are great but device simmulation like phones, boomboxes, cars,...is not even close to what these actualy sound irl so for these things imo is still better to listen on actual devices than just go through simulated presets
The more systems you can test on, the better. The virtual monitoring stuff definitely speeds up that process.
Nice video. Question . Adam Audio A7V .what is that crazy dip at 1k . 10db , no way 😮
I have a Yamaha hs8 and I feel they give inaccurate results when mixing. What is the best upgrade in a small 3m x 3m studio room ? 2 way or 3 way ? Which model ?
I see you use totamix software in the background and on the Sonarworks it’s universal audio thunderbolt , do you use both interfaces together ? If so , how ?
Would really appreciate your advise
Now I understand why my ps8 gave me the perfect sound in my bedroom studio. 👍
Is it okay to use free air speakers in home rather than car. And one more thing a full range speaker, will it work properly without enclosure (box) ?
It’s important for a loudspeaker to have an enclosure. This will prevent the front and rear side from interfering with each other.
@@AudioUniversityOkay thank you for the response. I also think the same but car speakers doesn't comes with an enclosure, that is the problem and car speakers can help in saving some bucks😁😁. So as per you knowledge what kind of speaker and subwoofer is okay for home? Which can covers the house with quality audio.
My room is small,it has only 13 ft length,11ft breadth and 7ft height, so what is your suggestion sir? Which one is better for me?
I’d recommend near-field monitors! If you want to simulate far-field monitors, that’s where a tool like SoundID Virtual Monitoring comes in.
Ok, thank you so much for your advice
Thank you so much for your advice and your every videos , I'm so lucky that i found your channel, the best channel for sound engineers.👍
First set I heard more rhythms a brighter sound. That is the higher tones from the drums. 2nd set I heard deeper sounds.
Thanks for sharing!
Need far fields damn
Can you share what brought you to that conclusion?
@@AudioUniversitywider soundstage with more depth. Near sound almost like headphones, like they're in my head.
And yeah, once I got to that part of the video - they just sound bigger and brassier.
❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥
Thanks for helping make the demos in this video!
First!
😈👻
Who cares, people say music will be made by AI and mixing/mastering by AI too so why bother?
I think the answer is different for everyone. For me, the reason to bother making music and mixing music is because I think it’s fun and challenging. Also, understanding how music I love was produced enhances my appreciation for it.
@@AudioUniversity And who's gonna buy 10k speakers if they don't make money out of it? 98% of people who buy studio monitors are working on audio.
Also, if AI mixing exists why do I receive requests for 1k plus per song? Why are they so stupid to pay mixing engineers instead of using 40$ AI? Couldn't it be that although AI can make music and mix from previous inputs it can't think and analyze future trends, where the issues are, what a song needs, and which artistic direction to lead towards?
The impact of AI is definitely something to be aware of, although I’m still uncertain about how it will all play out. You make some good points here.
@@AudioUniversity Splice will run out of business, AI will be the new splice, but for that it needs to be able to create high-quality unique samples, not copy some existing one.
@@BLACKLABEL405 You've been misled by the ai bubble. There is not going to be ANY "ai" that can mix or master a song, in a sense that is currently meant. AI is deprived of meaning and a marketing term for mathematical algorithm. Modeling the real world is so complex that it need a computing power of the entire world. It will NEVER work, at least in its current form, so nobody with the right knowledge is even thinking about leaving audio bcs of ai. I see you also writing comments about ai creativity --for that i strongly recommend you check out Emily Bender. This software that is called ai is not something that can be creative at all. It lacks the ability to realisticly extrapolate anything really. Its just interpolating existing data.
Cheers.