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Post by JojoD818 on Mar 14, 2005 14:10:03 GMT 7
garbage and highway robbery, i like that! ;D ;D ;D ;D
so to answer the original question... EQs are now more relevant during the "recording" process and is less-relevant in the playback. i like the idea, less gear to maintain. ;D
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Post by avphile on Apr 7, 2005 12:10:26 GMT 7
The ideal, ofcourse, is to have none of these. But there's still a place for EQs in playback. I could think of two situations.
One is to use EQs to tame room modes and reverbs that may come from inadeqaute accoustic treaments or bass traps. If you can identify the frequencies that peak at your listening position, you can set the EQ to notch them out for a flatter response at your sweet spot.
There's a breed of audiophiles who believes not all recordings are perfect. And certainly not all recording engineers are golden eared. So they prefer tone shaping controls and devices so as not to be at the mercy of tone deaf recording engineers and imperfect recordings.
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