| Is room treatment a must for bedroom producers? [message #99445] |
Thu, 28 May 2026 00:46  |
Clint
Messages: 29 Registered: December 2025
|
Chancellor |
|
|
I am trying to know if room treatment should be a major criterion to mix beats in the bedroom. I've done a couple in my bedroom using headphones and a part of monitors, and I always feel satisfied once I am done.
However, I don't get the same result if I take the same mixed sound to my car, for example, and I am kinda trying to know if treating the room can have a major impact.
I want to know if it does so that I can get some acoustic panels, or is it better I focus on saving up to upgrade the music gears that I use for my bedroom production?
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Re: Is room treatment a must for bedroom producers? [message #99459 is a reply to message #99445] |
Mon, 01 June 2026 13:20  |
Kurt
Messages: 20 Registered: December 2025
|
Chancellor |
|
|
I've been in a similar situation where I got deceived by my bedroom in terms of sound production.
I mean the sound being cool while in the bedroom and sounding a different way while outside.
That's why I would say room treatment matters a lot when it comes to getting a good sound quality. It does not mean that you have to spend a lot to achieve that.
You can get a couple of acoustic panels that are quite affordable, fixed in some corners, and behind the monitors.
That's not comparable to getting new gears, but it can improve the sound quality.
I can only say you go for upgrades on the music equipment if you've not got a good monitor or decent headphones. However, if you've got them, then I think doing a simple room treatment is the first step for me.
|
|
|
|