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what does midbass have to do with it????
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<blockquote data-quote="lillitnn92" data-source="post: 4171525" data-attributes="member: 579974"><p>wow' date=' i just don't understand this at all. being a recreational home studio musician myself also, this statement floors me. in order to achieve that perfect sound, you should want flat response from your HU to your amps and your speaker set up. you should be hearing the music as it was intended to be heard from the producer of that song/album. you should never have certain parts of the frequency exaggerated....this is of course unless you're a bass head. in the professional audio world [i']flat[/i] is what you want to hear. when everything is perfect from 20hz to 20khz you'll get better spatial imaging and you will hear things in songs you've never heard before. bass, mid, treble and bass boost settings are there so you can compensate for the loss/gain in these areas so your overall experience listening is better, not to make the song something it's not.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="lillitnn92, post: 4171525, member: 579974"] wow' date=' i just don't understand this at all. being a recreational home studio musician myself also, this statement floors me. in order to achieve that perfect sound, you should want flat response from your HU to your amps and your speaker set up. you should be hearing the music as it was intended to be heard from the producer of that song/album. you should never have certain parts of the frequency exaggerated....this is of course unless you're a bass head. in the professional audio world [i']flat[/i] is what you want to hear. when everything is perfect from 20hz to 20khz you'll get better spatial imaging and you will hear things in songs you've never heard before. bass, mid, treble and bass boost settings are there so you can compensate for the loss/gain in these areas so your overall experience listening is better, not to make the song something it's not. [/QUOTE]
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what does midbass have to do with it????
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