For many years I have experimented with listening rooms and acoustics.
From HUGE rooms to Closets and even a spare large bathroom I have placed systems and acoustic treatments of various kinds to see what effect it had on the sound.
Now days, I can walk into "ANY" room from a space as big as Staple Center, to a closet, to a bathroom and I am immediately aware of the sonic qualities and differences of the space.
Also over the years I have seen many spend large sums of $$ in attempts to treat their room floors, ceilings and walls to reduce reflective interactions that distort the recorded signal.
With my previous experiences, I took a different path and decided to heavily treat the FRONT wall, but instead of attempting to treat the large spaces of the walls and ceiling of a 20 x 30 room, I created a
LISTENING CHAMBER that either blocked or filtered significant room reflected sound.
Sitting in this chamber is an aural pleasure even when NOTHING is playing. It is so silent and calm, it is difficult
not to fall asleep. I also use it for the occasional Transcendental Meditation to an expedient dive into the "pool of peace".
Now this chamber is only likely a doable if you have a truly
dedicated MAN CAVE where "anything goes", since it may not be the most attractive aesthetically.
It is also
NOT the way to go for HT.
It is High Performance 2 Channel Audio ONLYBut it can cause a true sonic paradigm shift if you want to really hear more closely what has been recorded WITHOUT the additional room distortion that is just impossible to filter out totally.
The frequencies that are affected will depend on the materials used and how they affect those frequencies. I tend to think my
best LISTENING CHAMBERS were composed of
4 QUEEN sized mattresses with a framework that supported them (including one overhead) since they had a broader band interruption and absorption.
I even found a startlingly good result from simply hanging MOVING BLANKET/PADS from the ceiling to surround the listening chair, or hanging them from stands or a homemade framework.
But anyhow, after all the aforementioned chatter, I came across a couple commercial products that can be used to create such a chamber.
They are actually designed to be used for recording studio environments to keep the recording pure. Well you can use them in reverse.
Here is what they look like, and all you do is add any additional materials you might need to hit any additional band of frequencies you want. In the upper version you would take the frontal wall/door and place it across the top.

