Of course another use of EQ is to compensate for low fidelity speakers.
The tiny speakers in my MacBook don't sound as good as the full size
JBLs at home and the EQ can try to compensate some. Of course with
headphones EQ also is generally not needed. I picked up some Sennheiser
HD250 linear II headphones a few years back which sound great and are
very comfy to wear for long periods.
CB
Lewis Brock wrote:
not wishing to put water on a bonfire here lol god that gets me lol
to really listen to music dont use the equalizer. listening to music
in its purest quality as intended is better than sticking in an EQ
rack. EQ is really only used in recording and mastering where certain
frequences need to be eliminated or added. as iTunes uses a graphic
band equalizer for adding and subtracting frequencies it can
sometimes foul the quality of the finished product. the only time I
would use EQ in iTunes is on podcasts which have not been mastered
properly.
sorry lol just a rant from a nusician and sound engineer lol shoot lme
lol
oh.
has anyone ever heard of a PC giving birth to a laptop? hehehehehehehe
got ya lol
On 14 Feb 2008, at 14:10, David Poehlman wrote:
Like Garageband, ITunes has a ton of shortcut keys listed in its help
file
and in its menus. One thing that can happen is that the equalizer
can foul.
In that case, you may need to set it right. There's a shortcut key
to open
it that I don't remember off hand and cannot get at right now.
Thanks esther for some great info!
Lewis Brock
Blind Musician and Composer of 21st century synth music
Phone: +44 07857 352828
E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
MSN / Adium: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
SKYPE: lewisjbrock