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In The Studio: Improving Your Listening Environment

Most of us don't have the ability to build a custom studio, but we can make the best of what we have.

Putting It All Together

Studio design is a large and tricky subject as there are many different ways of looking at how one can be designed.

As mentioned, the aim of this mastering tutorial is not to show you how to build a state of the art audio mastering studio, but how to achieve a professional sound using mostly what you already have.

Assuming you only have access to a rectangular room, as most people reading this mastering tutorial will, here’s a simple way you can achieve a professional listening environment without breaking the bank.

This method is loosely based on a concept by Don Davis of Synergetic Audio Concepts where you have a ‘dead end’ to the room and a ‘live end’ to the room.

This first diagram gives a rough idea of how to arrange the furniture/treatment within your room:

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Notice the arrangement of the speakers and the space behind the listening position:

Using this arrangement of furniture/treatment will help neutralize the sound of the room, thus allowing you to have more trust in what your monitors are telling you:

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