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The pricing is up!
We are hearing similar comments from a top recording engineer here in Nashville that has been mixing in the control room we treated at Streeterville Music. He is the engineer for the Nashville Symphony recordings and numerous other projects. He says the same sort of things as you, but adds that he can mix comfortably for a much longer period and the the mixes hold up when he plays them at other places. The studio musicians also like to be in this control room.
I am really liking the sound of my room right now. Now I understand what it means to have more air -- each note has more definition and coherence but lingers just a little more to give that phatness to the music. The whole reverberant harmonics (that you can only hear when interfering standing waves get chopped down) make music come alive like it's real.
> ... diffusion and trapping ... makes a huge difference in your ability to tolerate long sessions without listener fatigue and more importantly the ability to focus and evaluate over long periods of time. <That's a great point, and it's absolutely true. When you can hear clearly you don't need to crank the volume. And when you do crank the volume, it's much less fatiguing than without acoustic treatment.--Ethan
Would a crib make a nice diffusor?
I had to make a comment on this...I just put a set of diffusors in the rear of my listening room (had a few 2'x2' squares lying around, so I stacked three of them on the wall about 6' directly behind my listening chair), replacing a GIK 246 panel I had there before. Am REALLY impressed as to how much improvement this made to the sound I'm getting from my system. This was in addition to the full complement of Eighth Nerve Adapt products I've got in my room.Can't believe I didn't do this long ago...