I agree, I've been using mine for the past year and my mixes almost always translate well. Maybe a few things here and there but it's always very subtle changes
Thats cuz when you listen music on the same headphones for a long time, your ears is getting used to the sound, and thats why is your mix and master are good.
Thanks for sharing! Totally agree with your point that you have to learn how the mix translates; there'll always be a learning curve, regardless of monitors or cans. 🤘
Nice job on sharing some insights into using the headphones. BTW, I liked your eye reflection on the screen, kind of trippy but it went with the tune in a nice way.
The choice to mix/master with headphones isn't necessarily based on budget or monitoring environment. Many producers choose to mix/master on headphones because more often than not people are listening to music on headphones or earbuds these days.
This was interesting, very close sounding Masters. Good job. I will say though if you're not used to those headphones you can't just adjust to that mid frequency pile up on the fly. I changed the ear pads in mine and they're a lot more flat and even . I like them for mixing. I like my Sony MDR 7506s for mixing . But for production I'll use something like the audio-technica's there's also a pair of headphones called one-odio pro -10s or pro-30 i think... those are pretty good for production I've even mixed in them they're not quite as accurate as the other two, but they only cost like $30 and they sound great. Thank me later
You can mix and expecially master on them, very revealing on the highs without tearing your ears a new one like the Beyerdynamic phones do. Just have to make sure to constantly a/b with what your doing vs good outside reference material. Even with mastering with just the Lurssen Mastering console as long as your mix is really good. Cnn get top notch "hey where did you get your track mastered bro?" type results.
Choose your answer: YES: With Sonarworks / SoundID response correction. NO: Not trustworthy enough on their own. Mix/Master with Open Back headphones. Audio-Technica Ath-R70-X are the right ones for mixing/mastering
Absolutely! In fact that's how most producers/engineers will work. I just wanted to see how things translated from the M50x without any form of external bias.
is it also good for all arounder? i mean could i use it also for my cellphone,laptop/desktop even with no DAC/Headphone Amp? (i'm gonna use it with mixing and mastering vocals though)
Hard to say. IEMs are generally not recommended for mixing and mastering work but I’ve heard that Moondrop Blessing 2 would be a good place to start. The only problem is that it’s expensive. From my experience the Truthear Hexa sounds up to the task but keep in mind that the order of mixing gear is speakers > headphones > IEMs
@@juliansvidal it's a very bad idea. The only kind of music who continue to evoluate in the good direction are the metal music and all is subgenre but pop music not going in the good direction.
A dozen headphones and the atm50 I rank as the worst sounding. As for chfi iems 20 plus sets and the kz zsx sounds actually worse then the atm50.Stay away from KZ!
ATH M50 X are very accurate in my opinion i am mixing with that and there is no difference from speakers i can assure you
I agree, I've been using mine for the past year and my mixes almost always translate well. Maybe a few things here and there but it's always very subtle changes
Thats cuz when you listen music on the same headphones for a long time, your ears is getting used to the sound, and thats why is your mix and master are good.
Does the m50xbt works the same way just with an additional BT function?
@@jacksonitsme I´ve heard they are slightly worse and more uncomfortable
Thanks for sharing!
Totally agree with your point that you have to learn how the mix translates; there'll always be a learning curve, regardless of monitors or cans. 🤘
Most definitely! Someone also made a great point that using a reference track will also help tremendously.
Nice job on sharing some insights into using the headphones. BTW, I liked your eye reflection on the screen, kind of trippy but it went with the tune in a nice way.
The choice to mix/master with headphones isn't necessarily based on budget or monitoring environment. Many producers choose to mix/master on headphones because more often than not people are listening to music on headphones or earbuds these days.
This was interesting, very close sounding Masters. Good job. I will say though if you're not used to those headphones you can't just adjust to that mid frequency pile up on the fly. I changed the ear pads in mine and they're a lot more flat and even . I like them for mixing. I like my Sony MDR 7506s for mixing . But for production I'll use something like the audio-technica's there's also a pair of headphones called one-odio pro -10s or pro-30 i think... those are pretty good for production I've even mixed in them they're not quite as accurate as the other two, but they only cost like $30 and they sound great. Thank me later
You can mix and expecially master on them, very revealing on the highs without tearing your ears a new one like the Beyerdynamic phones do. Just have to make sure to constantly a/b with what your doing vs good outside reference material. Even with mastering with just the Lurssen Mastering console as long as your mix is really good. Cnn get top notch "hey where did you get your track mastered bro?" type results.
Are these good for tracking?
@@deshawn4077 indeed
Choose your answer:
YES: With Sonarworks / SoundID response correction.
NO: Not trustworthy enough on their own. Mix/Master with Open Back headphones.
Audio-Technica Ath-R70-X are the right ones for mixing/mastering
Have you ever tried using the ATH-M20BT? Is is also good for mixing and mastering?
i'm going to buy a set of the ATH-M50x's but i'll use it with SoundID Reference
You’ll have to tell me how it sounds with SoundID!
isnt it EDM IS " Extreme Death Metal"?
I've never heard that but probably! I've only heard EDM as electronic dance music.
😂😂😂
Shouldn’t use a reference track help?
Absolutely! In fact that's how most producers/engineers will work. I just wanted to see how things translated from the M50x without any form of external bias.
gr8 work fr
Thank you!
is it also good for all arounder? i mean could i use it also for my cellphone,laptop/desktop even with no DAC/Headphone Amp? (i'm gonna use it with mixing and mastering vocals though)
i decide to buy this for mixing but this headphone is not good for mixing?
People hating on them just do it to be different atp, these have been industry standard for like 15 years
Can you mix and master a song with Beyerdynamic DT 770 pro?
hell yes
What would be a good iem for this kind of work?
Hard to say. IEMs are generally not recommended for mixing and mastering work but I’ve heard that Moondrop Blessing 2 would be a good place to start. The only problem is that it’s expensive. From my experience the Truthear Hexa sounds up to the task but keep in mind that the order of mixing gear is speakers > headphones > IEMs
i have a questions, why the music in our days are all the same ,with autotuned robot voice.
It’s a combination of culture and the set of tools we have available nowadays
@@juliansvidal it's a very bad idea. The only kind of music who continue to evoluate in the good direction are the metal music and all is subgenre but pop music not going in the good direction.
Waveform into a sausage 😂😂😂 yep
A dozen headphones and the atm50 I rank as the worst sounding. As for chfi iems 20 plus sets and the kz zsx sounds actually worse then the atm50.Stay away from KZ!
Bhai earphones mein to overpower kar rha bass