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To record music and enjoy good sound ends up in your house studio, it is important to take a look at the acoustic of your studio room.
If you build your studio, step one to think about is to select a room that’s a great distance away from the street and noise sources, for example TV room, rest room, kitchen, or cellar.
In this piece, I love to share you some guidelines how to improve room acoustics to prevent sound from going out for better music recording.
Non-parallel Walls
A room with parallel facing walls drawbacks your recording. This occurs as the sound quantity creates standing waves and these standing waves end in unwelcome noises.
To get round this problem, you might change one of the parallel walls. Create an uneven, round or absorptive wall. You could make pyramid and lattice shapes, but I might never use concave curves. This kind of surface reflects and diffuses sound you need to hear. Diffused sound prohibits standing waves and eradicates “dead spots”. You should also cover flat surfaces with hang diffusers like absorptive thick weaving material curtains.
Placement of Speakers
Wrong placements of the speakers would encounter phase interference between the reflected sound and the direct sound. If the quantity of reflected sounds that travels in your room is stronger than the quantity of direct sound, you get too much reverberation. Therefore , you need to place the speakers so that the reflected distant between the walls, ceilings, and your equipments are short. If the wall or ceiling isn’t really enough absorptive, avoid to put the speakers in the corner.
Moderately assimilation
Over the top assimilation would create dead sound in the room. Choose only materials that absorb complete range of sound like good hardwood floor, heavy weaving material curtains, or thick gypsum board.
These tips hopefully would improve the effectiveness of your music production in your home studio and ensure you finish up with perfect recording in your studio as well as outside of the studio.
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