RE: Why is the Pentatonic Scale *Everywhere*?
You are viewing a single comment's thread:
Your best best for indoor listening is to get yourself good open backs - typically, the Sennheiser HD's - which gives the best balance, then learn the tricks of the trade to boost and cut what you need to really flesh it out the way it was meant to be!
But in some cases it really is just the original production, not much you can do about that.
There was a period around maybe the late 90's to 2000's, where music was just mega-compressed to the point that these days I find it hard to listen to. Cradle of Filth, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Muse... listening to their albums around this date is insufferable now - which is a shame because I find the music itself so great.
(If you don't know, compression makes the quiet parts loud and the loud parts quiet, overall maximizing total volume. The peak of the 'loudness wars', and it was a curse upon music everywhere)
I can hear that compression on most of KoRN's work from the 90s even without a discrete ear. Other stuff sounds like sludge - but it... works, such as Pearl Jam's album Ten.
I have these (Audio Technica AD-700X) I used to have the 200 (or 500) but after 15 years of service, the purple meshed beast failed - with the voice coil on one channel dying.
I want a 2nd set of headphones that are closed (knowing the sound stage would be smaller) one day to ensure sound doesn't leak from my cans into my mic when I'm streaming. It's a minor problem to have, but a problem all the same.
Oh yeah open backs are a nightmare in any other context than just sitting in a silent room alone/production lol.
I just have Sony MX3000 or whatever for those other contexts, cause they have good noise cancelling. I sacrifice all quality for that alone for my daily work life
But yeah sounds like you know exactly what you're doing!