stereo speakers

MKHR824MK2 213x300 The Difference Between Hi Fi Stereo Speakers and Studio MonitorsYour studio depends on your ears to hear correctly. Your studio also need a good pair of studio monitors to assist your ears to hear what they should. Reference monitors, studio speakers, close-field, near-field, or field monitors all share commonality. You need them in your studio environment!!! Period.

Your monitors should speak truths to you and if not the whole truth, then pretty close to it. Many will argue your best monitoring will fall in a higher price range.  As there are tons of home studios these days; most want the best monitors at the best price to handle the job well.

While there are many types of studio monitors; each set fits specific situations. Smaller rooms depending on how they are built, require certain monitors and proper placement to perform at best… and the same goes for larger rooms. Most home studios house close-field or near-field monitors, as the big studios have different sources of monitoring, and depend on them all.

You want to stay away from monitoring with speakers with color, and I don’t mean the speaker casing. I’m talking about speaker enhancement. The kind that’s on your hi-fi stereo speaker system. It makes your music sound good because that’s what it is designed to do. This is excellent for playback and listening pleasure while you’re lounging, but definitely not the route you want to take for monitoring your priceless studio recordings.

The difference is… if you are recording and mixing through an enhanced speaker, then how do you know what your mix really sounds like? And when you go to playback… you hear different results between sources. Your ears will even seem as if they are deceiving you… when in fact you’re deceiving your mixes. Note that when you mix through flat studio monitors, your mix should sound similar on various sources… and that’s what you want! No surprises, right?!

home system 300x157 The Difference Between Hi Fi Stereo Speakers and Studio MonitorsEnhanced sound is added to any sound device created for your leisure such as your iPod, computer, stereo system, mobile phone, car system, and television.

For the kicker: Several studio monitors have subtle color or added enhancement. I clearly remember a pair of Alesis RA-100′s I once owned for a very short while. The highs were super crispy and annoying. I had a friend who had a pair and I heard the same thing.

Whatever monitoring system you choose, the key is getting to know your speakers. Understand why they behave the way they do, and work with them accordingly.

Stop in at your local professional studio audio gear dealer and listen and compare based on your budget. You’ll be amazed at what you hear.

Best Reference Monitors