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Studio Monitors and Mastering recommendations?

Posted: Tue Aug 18, 2009 4:44 pm
by anoteoftruth
Hey guys,

After seeing a few posts about monitoring headphones and things, I was curious, what studio monitors do you use or recommend, and what mastering software/equipment do you use if you master your own stuff?

I'm looking to get some decent best for my buck affordable studio monitors, and am also just beginning to start mastering my own stuff more diligently (pretty overwhelming at first) so I'm curious to see what kind of things you guys use or recommend?

Re: Studio Monitors and Mastering recommendations?

Posted: Tue Aug 18, 2009 5:13 pm
by CTRLSHFT
anoteoftruth wrote:Hey guys,

After seeing a few posts about monitoring headphones and things, I was curious, what studio monitors do you use or recommend, and what mastering software/equipment do you use if you master your own stuff?

I'm looking to get some decent best for my buck affordable studio monitors, and am also just beginning to start mastering my own stuff more diligently (pretty overwhelming at first) so I'm curious to see what kind of things you guys use or recommend?
I use Mackie HR824 MKIIs for monitoring, awesome flat response curves, nice spatial setting options, gets low as hell. :)

As far as mastering goes, I suggest using universal audio plug-ins, although they are pretty expensive. The waves L3 is a great limiter too. T-Racks does some cool stuff. There is alot of free stuff out there as well, but the quality tends to be pretty varied in the VST world.

edit: i should mention that mastering via hardware sounds a lot better, albeit it is astronomically more expensive. :)

Posted: Tue Aug 18, 2009 6:22 pm
by Brian G
I’ve been using the Event APS 8 for the past five or six years and used the Event 20/20bas before that. The Mackies are very popular and many achieve excellent results with them. Before I bought each set of Events I listened to the Mackes and for me each time the I preferred the Events.

I do all of my Mastering in WaveLab. It is important to work on the “sound” of the room using various sound treatment materials. Work on the distance from the monitors to your listening position, the tweeters should be ear level in height.


There are many good monitors in the under $1,200 range. The key is to learn how they sound :)

Posted: Tue Aug 18, 2009 10:48 pm
by sixsinisters
All of my heart voted for krk's, that yellow cones of love!

You can get a pair for 150 used easy. Great flat response without any hype on any freq yet kicking and loud monitors with decent price, could become overkill with some mixer tweaks.
Just mho :)


Good luck!

Posted: Wed Aug 19, 2009 1:30 am
by robknugg
i use mackie hr824 monitors, they do the job.
as far as mastering i used a manley vari--mu running into a tc finalizer then rerecorded into a neve model on a focusrite liquid pre.
i was blown away by this combo.
you can check it out at
www.theincredibleheatmachine.com , might not be moog on every track but it is in there on several of them.

Posted: Wed Aug 19, 2009 3:20 am
by Voltor07
I use a Kinetic Audio 12" speaker in a Peavey KB/A 60 most times for monitoring, and other times I use a pair of Knight Audio speakers, both with 12" bass drivers. Otherwise I use a pair of Sony bookshelf speakers. I recommend the 6 1/2 inch drivers, as they have a wider frequency range than the 8". These speakers go through a six ohm, 15 watt Aiwa bookshelf stereo.

I know it's not practical, but it works for me, and the sound is phenomenal. :wink:

Posted: Wed Aug 19, 2009 9:24 am
by DeFrag
I have both Mackie MR5s & Adam A7s & they're very good.

The most impressive I heard for the money would be the JBL LSR4326P Pak... WOW.

Posted: Wed Aug 19, 2009 1:54 pm
by T7
I love my Genelec 8030As and 7050B sub. H8000FW and KSP8 for mastering.

Posted: Wed Aug 19, 2009 3:31 pm
by anoteoftruth
Awesome, I'm loving all the suggestions/info.. I'm trying to check all of the setups out on my free time here at work... So far for my own monitors I'm leaning towards those KRK rokit 8 g2's almost soley because it's the only one I'm looking at thats actually within my budget haha.

I've been checking out a lot of your mastering suggestions too and I'm still up in the air with whats right for me.. I liked the look of wavelab, but I only have Mac's at home so that wont work... I did try a demo of Izotopes Ozone 4 and it seems to have improved some of my mixes a bit but I still want to shop around for some other solutions just so I can see what else is out there.

Thanks for all the responses. Has anyone here used Izotope 4 on mac? I'm interested in how some of the mastering hardware rivals some of the software too.

Posted: Wed Aug 19, 2009 4:01 pm
by T7
anoteoftruth wrote:I've been checking out a lot of your mastering suggestions too and I'm still up in the air with whats right for me.. I liked the look of wavelab, but I only have Mac's at home so that wont work...
Check out DSP Quattro http://www.i3net.it/dspquattro/asp/homepage.asp

Posted: Wed Aug 19, 2009 4:32 pm
by anoteoftruth
Wow, DSP Quattro looks great. Can't wait to try the demo when I get home.

Posted: Wed Aug 19, 2009 9:33 pm
by earsmack
I use an old pair of Alesis M1 Actives.

Like headphones - it's even more important to not only learn the sound of your monitors but also the room they are in. It took me a fair amount of time to really know the sound (and extra bass) they put out. So, I need to tone down the bass a bit when I'm mixing with them so it sounds right on other (normal) systems. Part of the reason I don't want to get rid of them - I don't want to re-learn that :-)

Posted: Thu Aug 20, 2009 8:30 am
by Brian G
Got to thinking, Alesis still makes the M1 MarkII Active Monitors. I have not heard the MRKII but did have a chance to do a listening test on the original M1 back in the late 90's. For the price point hey are worth looking at :)

http://mixonline.com/mag/audio_alesis_active_reference/

Posted: Thu Aug 27, 2009 11:34 pm
by anoteoftruth
Thanks for all the suggestions! I got the KRK rokit g2 6's... and am quite amazed with them right now :D

btw, props to T7 for showing me Quattro.. such a wicked editor.

Posted: Thu Aug 27, 2009 11:45 pm
by darkartois
Waves L2 and C4 Multiband compressor is all you really need for mastering as long as you've got a solid mixdown :D