Well - the first characteristic is that it should be sonically balanced. There's no such thing as a flat monitor, but you certainly don't want a monitor to impart excessive or inadequate highs, mids, or lows. Put it this way, whatever frequency range is over-emphasized by the monitors, will be under-emphasized in your productions. This means that if your monitors are excessively bright-sounding, your projects will sound unusually dark and muddy as you will under-compensate the high-frequency range during production.
Second - shop at a dealer that will let you take the monitors home to test/audition
(or buy them but be allowed to exchange them). Why?
Because the dealer showroom has virtually no similarity to where YOU will be
using them, so testing them in the showroom is about as useful as putting a
blanket over them.
And finally - your ears have to be able to work with them... and everyone's
ears are unique. So don't buy monitors because you heard that every studio in
the world uses them - buy them because YOUR EARS like
what they hear and you feel you can work with them. There are many
monitor options available now, at all kinds of different price points, so there
really is something for everyone.
"I found the monitors that suit me, so what's next?"
Now the fun begins - you LISTEN! Really listen.... to everything....
voice, music, dogs barking.... you need to really get a sense of what the monitors
are telling you in your sonic space. There will undoubtedly be some sonic deviations
in the response, and it's very important that you learn your monitors characteristics
(in your room) so that you can compensate with the variations and properly balance
your projects during productions so that they translate well across all sound
systems. This can take weeks - and there are no shortcuts - you just listen
as much as you can.
Also keep in mind your listening levels - the human ear has a frequency response that varies with sound pressure level (loudness in the room), and so it turns out that 83-85dB is the average at which the ear's response is most balanced. You definitely don't want to be listening at levels louder than that for extended periods of time. After all, if you go deaf, there goes your livelihood!
Until next month... Happy Recording!
--
Bruce Valeriani
Blue Bear Sound Recording Studios
tel: 613.822.0726 • fax: 613.822.2336
web: info@bluebearsound.com•
http://www.bluebearsound.com