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szakee t1_iv042wv wrote

you like whatever you want.

7

royhusaini t1_iv047yw wrote

There are times when i was like you, then at the end of the day i just fuck it my gears my ears. Whatever or however i wanna listen i just enjoy the piece however i wanted.

So yeah, sometimes eq some other times just straight factory sound.

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gr8john6 t1_iv04unj wrote

It's most likely a trained behavior thing. If most of your experience of music is from your HD560 unaltered, you are obviously going to think things should sound that way. Which is really fine, as long as you like it. BUT what all those targets are trying to simulate is how a perfect planar speakers would sound in their version of human head with ear canals would sound like if it were placed in the middle of acoustically neutral(?) room. Also, don't take those AutoEq as some sort of end all be all type thing. For one there are many different targets, and at least two very well stocked repository of AutoEqs. One thing that bothers me is some of them AutoEqs have frequency orders all jumbled up. First thing I would do with those is download the parametric Eq file and read it in to EqAPO. Then open them up in a separate tab and reorder them in either ascending or descending order. Then start looking at what each one is trying to fix. You may find some not so useful or some that make no sense at all. Once I find a target AutoEq I like, what I do is do aforementioned steps and then leave what I think is good. At this point you are 80 percent done coz you found the target feels natural to you from upper Bass to Lower Treble. At this point, I start listening to a set of tracks I listen to a lot, so I know what to listen for. Youtube mix track works well, as long as you have a plugin, that sets all the loudness to equal level in your browsers. Then I decide how much bass low-shelf I need to apply at around 120Hz. Do I need more or less??? Then I listen to high treble range and do the same but with high-shelf at around 8-10kHz, sometimes even up to 12kHz. Depending on the headgear. Assuming you have pre-amped all your eqs down to 0dB max and you are on PC, you actually have about 3dB headroom. And the very last thing I do is actually apply high-pass at 10~30ish Hz to prevent my VU meter from going nuts and make it easier to drive my headgear. Also, depending on headgear spec, I also apply low-pass at around 22~24kHz coz we don't have animal hearings. :D

2

sorbuss t1_iv05ga6 wrote

Use it if you like it or don't.

2

Skystalker512 t1_iv06s0x wrote

Jesus how many times are we going to get this question

2

Puzzled-Background-5 t1_iv06tt9 wrote

"As the artist intended" and "hear the original tune" are myths propagated by those who have little knowledge of what it takes to produce a studio recording.

Unlike broadcast television and commercial cinema, there are no standards for recording music commercially. Tonality and dynamic range can vary wildly even within the same album release.

There's no way to hear exactly what the artists intended or the original tune (actually it's the mixing and mastering engineers as often the artists have little to no input into those processes) unless you've got the exact same equipment and acoustics they had.

At the mixing and mastering level, it's not about original intent, but about what will sound good on the vast majority of a wide variety of equipment that consumers own.

So, by all means use EQ to correct errors in frequency response or even for one's own personal preferences.

2

Gr33hn t1_iv07g09 wrote

"Use it if you want, no one cares" Sums it up. Personally I wouldn't go out and buy expensive headphones I don't like the sound of though so I have no reason to use EQ.

1

Randolph_Carter_666 t1_iv07g4v wrote

I've never understood the "original formatting" thing when it comes to music. Unless you were in the studio listening to the final mix/master, you have no clue how it sounded. I can pretty much guarantee that they didn't mix it to sound like it sounds with your setup... They had their own setup.

Adjust things as you see fit, or don't adjust at all. It's really up to you.

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Lulu-the-cat t1_iv0846n wrote

I can't listen to my Sundara with the Oratory PEQ I've tweaked. It's via a Sony phone and Amazon music

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