From the course: Music Studio Setup and Acoustics
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The room's reverb time
From the course: Music Studio Setup and Acoustics
The room's reverb time
You might think that if we could just get rid of that natural room ambiance altogether, it would make our recording lives easier. But that's not the way our ears like to hear things. The ideal listening room needs a touch of reverb to help increase the perceived loudness of the monitors, and to prevent the room from sounding unnaturally dead. Most everyone finds it uncomfortable to work in a dead room. Since it isn't anything like the sound of the real world. The correct reverb time of a room is very important, but what is considered acceptable does vary from application to application. Usually, a reverb time below point five seconds is required if detail and intelligibility is important. Control rooms usually have a reverb time between 0.3 and 0.5 seconds. While a typical tracking room might be anywhere from 0.5 to 0.8 seconds. As a point of reference, the typical living room is around 0.5 seconds. A classroom is around 1 second. A concert hall is about 1.8 seconds. And a church with…
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Room dimensions, standing waves, and modes6m 40s
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The curse of low ceilings1m 7s
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The room's reverb time1m 43s
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A look at absorption2m 22s
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The reflection-free zone58s
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The idea behind acoustic panels57s
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Bass trap overview2m 34s
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Diffuser overview58s
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