Musician's Help and Opinions Needed
Posted: Mon Jul 23, 2007 12:07 pm
This is kind of a tech question, but the Cafe seemed like a better place to put it for some reason.
Anyway, here's the deal.
I've been experimenting with a sort of personal in-ear monitor setup, but since I don't need mobility and am not willing to pay the price of decent wireless gear, I've been wired so far.
I've got 2 different setups that I need to work with. In both cases, I'm using a Yamaha Clavinova CVP (keyboard). The unit has built-in speakers that sound fairly decent, but aim back toward the player, so aren't always useful in a performance. For solo work, I use the built-in mike jack which is great because I can get good balance and control mike effects directly.
Even just with the clav itself, the position of the speakers makes it difficult for me to hear my own vocals well enough to be happy. I'm OK with my own vocal ability, and I have a very good ear for pitch, etc. As I've gotten older, though, I really need to be able to hear the vocal. When I can, I can do great, and when I can't, I'm all over the map pitchwise.
So far, I have a very nice headphone amp with a passthru that does pretty much what I need it for. Even just using the clav itself, I run an aux out line from the clav to the headphone amp, and then into phones. I can also run out from the HA directly to a bigger system for solo work. Or, when playing in a larger group, I can just grab a line from the snake and run it from one of the AUX outputs on the mixer back to the HA to pick up everything.
The problem is that I'm not willing to play with headphones.
On Saturday, I went to pick up a pair of Shure E2C in-ears, but the guy I talked to convinced me to get a pair of M-Audio IE-10's instead. I got them home, and tried them out, and was NOT pleased. The nicely shaped and balanced sound I was hearing from decent headphones was instead extremely flat, almost NO bass, boosted midrange and highs. So, I then tried them on my kid's i-pod. Compared with the $20 apple buds these sounded like a transistor radio.
When I took them back, the guy I had dealt with listened to them and agreed they were \"toast\". Then, a different guy listened and said they were performing exactly like they were supposed to. His explanation was that a \"studio\" monitor SHOULD flatten the sound out. He let me try a pair of IE-30's, a higher priced M-Audio model, and they sounded almost just the same, with just a touch of bass added. He also said that the Shure E2C's would sound the same. This seems completely stupid to me since they're being sold as monitors. If you don't hear what your audience is hearing, what's the point? If you have to adjust your instrument output, or separately EQ a line just for the buds, that's just plain stupid.
Does anyone have any experience with any kind of similar in-ear stuff? I'd like to think that the guy was just full of it, and the Shure's would be the way to go, but he wouldn't break into a sealed package to let me try them, and again claimed that they wouldn't sound significantly different than the IE-10's. I think what I need is just some good ear-buds with some isolation. I figured getting something sold \"AS MONITORS!\" would be the best bet for durability, but maybe just a better set of stereo buds would be better. Any suggestions? Anyone have or have used Shure E2Cs?
Anyway, here's the deal.
I've been experimenting with a sort of personal in-ear monitor setup, but since I don't need mobility and am not willing to pay the price of decent wireless gear, I've been wired so far.
I've got 2 different setups that I need to work with. In both cases, I'm using a Yamaha Clavinova CVP (keyboard). The unit has built-in speakers that sound fairly decent, but aim back toward the player, so aren't always useful in a performance. For solo work, I use the built-in mike jack which is great because I can get good balance and control mike effects directly.
Even just with the clav itself, the position of the speakers makes it difficult for me to hear my own vocals well enough to be happy. I'm OK with my own vocal ability, and I have a very good ear for pitch, etc. As I've gotten older, though, I really need to be able to hear the vocal. When I can, I can do great, and when I can't, I'm all over the map pitchwise.
So far, I have a very nice headphone amp with a passthru that does pretty much what I need it for. Even just using the clav itself, I run an aux out line from the clav to the headphone amp, and then into phones. I can also run out from the HA directly to a bigger system for solo work. Or, when playing in a larger group, I can just grab a line from the snake and run it from one of the AUX outputs on the mixer back to the HA to pick up everything.
The problem is that I'm not willing to play with headphones.
On Saturday, I went to pick up a pair of Shure E2C in-ears, but the guy I talked to convinced me to get a pair of M-Audio IE-10's instead. I got them home, and tried them out, and was NOT pleased. The nicely shaped and balanced sound I was hearing from decent headphones was instead extremely flat, almost NO bass, boosted midrange and highs. So, I then tried them on my kid's i-pod. Compared with the $20 apple buds these sounded like a transistor radio.
When I took them back, the guy I had dealt with listened to them and agreed they were \"toast\". Then, a different guy listened and said they were performing exactly like they were supposed to. His explanation was that a \"studio\" monitor SHOULD flatten the sound out. He let me try a pair of IE-30's, a higher priced M-Audio model, and they sounded almost just the same, with just a touch of bass added. He also said that the Shure E2C's would sound the same. This seems completely stupid to me since they're being sold as monitors. If you don't hear what your audience is hearing, what's the point? If you have to adjust your instrument output, or separately EQ a line just for the buds, that's just plain stupid.
Does anyone have any experience with any kind of similar in-ear stuff? I'd like to think that the guy was just full of it, and the Shure's would be the way to go, but he wouldn't break into a sealed package to let me try them, and again claimed that they wouldn't sound significantly different than the IE-10's. I think what I need is just some good ear-buds with some isolation. I figured getting something sold \"AS MONITORS!\" would be the best bet for durability, but maybe just a better set of stereo buds would be better. Any suggestions? Anyone have or have used Shure E2Cs?