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Mix Translation: People Don't Listen In Treated Rooms Either - AcousticsInsider.com

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  • čas přidán 20. 09. 2022
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    Here’s a ballsy statement that I’m sure we’ve all had at one point or other:
    If people don’t listen to music in super well treated rooms with fully optimized speaker setups, then why mix in a treated room in the first place?
    Doesn’t it make more sense to mix in an environment that sounds as close as possible to the target environment with reflections, reverb and all?
    Somehow it seems logical.
    Surely that will lead to mixes that translate much more naturally, right?
    Of course playback environments vary massively, from cars to headphones to living room hifis and big PA systems etc.
    With that in mind, is mix translation even a real world thing?
    I definitely used to wonder about this myself. It always felt like a conundrum somehow.
    But with enough mixes under my belt I realized there’s a fundamental misunderstanding in these assumptions.
    If you really want to get mix translation right you need to make sure you understand what it is you are aiming for.
    And then it totally makes sense why you’d want to treat the acoustics in your studio.
    Related blog post on Acoustics Insider:
    www.acousticsi...
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Komentáře • 20

  • @stevenstembridge4864
    @stevenstembridge4864 Před rokem +1

    Really appreciate the down-to-earth approach to topics on your channel. Truly does remove the "voodoo" and allows us all to remember that production isn't magic, it's just making good decisions based on good research

  • @MixMeMcGee
    @MixMeMcGee Před rokem

    I’ve been building a presentation for co-workers about just this and I’m *very* grateful you have your take

  • @seungwoohan4258
    @seungwoohan4258 Před rokem

    Fantastic video, thank you Jesco from Montreal, Canada!

  • @RudeRecording
    @RudeRecording Před rokem

    If your reference is faulty so will be your results. Flat is not exciting but part of a good mix is having a good tonal and level balance of instruments. If you don't have an accurate reference you are adjusting mixes by guess.

  • @arkh1730
    @arkh1730 Před rokem +1

    Having studios is not for everyone.only people who produce music from the ground up ..if your using samples alot you probly don't need a studio but if your sound designing you need 100%

    • @emiel333
      @emiel333 Před rokem

      I agree. Sound design is important. A couple samples in your track is fine. But not the whole track. Even people who use samples only should treat their studio. Or better: play (micro)deejay instead haha. 😂

  • @markdelange980
    @markdelange980 Před rokem

    People listen in highly treated rooms. Your car, your living room. Highly dempened rooms....

  • @sudd3660
    @sudd3660 Před rokem

    Mix Translation is up to us not the mixer, those who make the music has to make the best possible mix so with the best possible speaker and room it can sound its best.

  • @emiel333
    @emiel333 Před rokem

    Great topic. What we also must take in consideration is that headphones aren’t stereo. They’re binaural.

  • @davidkulmaczewski4911

    The listener's room is a constant for that listener, and applies to everything they hear, so their experience is always relative. A better mix will sound better than a poor mix, regardless of the system. Trying to accommodate the deficiencies of a poor listening system seems like a poor practice. Of course, any mix should sound good in mono....

  • @LasseHuhtala
    @LasseHuhtala Před rokem

    I hear a lot of producers talk about speaker resolution. -"Wow, the tweeters in these Blastor 5000's have such high resolution" Is it just voodoo or is it a real thing, and can it be measured?

    • @BeattunersTV
      @BeattunersTV Před rokem +2

      if you have a “high resolution” speaker and you want to hear all that resolution you need also a “high resolution” room. Its definetly better have “high resolution” room with some good priceles speakers against room with some high pressure peaks and reflection and high end speakers. Room doesnt care about your speakers, sound its just energy. If your frequenci response is like rollercoaster with some 10db peak on lows what you think is going to happen? :)

    • @fredygump5578
      @fredygump5578 Před rokem

      It's more your typical witchcraft and not actual voodoo per se. I would suggest looking up Floyd Toole. The comment about "resolution" may describe the directivity of the speaker, where narrow directivity speakers have a laser beam type clarity, whereas another speaker may be more omni-directional and a more diffused sound. With a nearfield monitor, you may find the "resolution" increases when aimed just so.

    • @sudd3660
      @sudd3660 Před rokem

      why does it has to be measured? have you seen the people interpreting those? and now one talks about the things tings we can not measure or understand. its all about hearing, can trained people hear it or not. that is how you figure out if we are getting progress in the field.

    • @splitradix
      @splitradix Před rokem +2

      @@sudd3660 We measure things because hearing is subjective. Accurate measurements are not subjective and that is one of the basics of how science works.

    • @emiel333
      @emiel333 Před rokem +2

      @@BeattunersTV That’s correct. 10 dB peaks in the low frequencies could be great for a casual listener that likes EDM or hiphop. But as a music producer you don’t want to have this peak. It impacts the low frequencies in your track badly. Measurements and data are statistics and thus facts. Hearing is subjective. And a room is in fact a speaker. It has is own sound. So I’m glad you’re writing “high resolution”. Finally someone who knows what it’s all about.