On Sat, Feb 05, 2005 at 09:55:50PM -0800, Florin Andrei wrote: > Whenever possible, listening should be performed on good-quality > loudspeakers. "Studio monitors" is the term used to describe > professional-grade speaker systems, which are highly recommended for any > serious music studio work. They're typically expensive and fussy > (especially the near-field ones, which must be used in a certain strict > way w.r.t. their relative positioning, the positioning of the pair > w.r.t. the room, and the positioning of the listener's head to the whole > thing), but well worth the trouble. Would studio monitors be preferable to speakers designed for public performance. In other words if a band or artist has a sound system for public performances with high quality amplifiers and speakers, is it acceptable to use the same speakers in the studio if they do their own recording, or would they be better off buying studio monitors for this purpose? This is assuming their sound system isn't some gargantuan system that would be unwieldy to use in the studio, but instead is a small, but high quality system and speakers that a small band or solo artist would use. Chuck