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Recording studio design / Philip Newell.

By: Newell, Philip RichardPublisher: Boston, Mass. : Focal Press, 2003001: 9126ISBN: 0240519175Subject(s): Sound recording and reproduction | Architectural designDDC classification: 621.3893 NEW
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book MAIN LIBRARY Book PRINT 621.3893 NEW (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 080349

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Philip Newell's comprehensive reference work contains pearls of wisdom which anyone involved in sound recording will want to apply to their own studio design. He discusses the fundamentals of good studio acoustics and monitoring in an exhaustive yet accessible manner. Recording Studio Design covers the basic principles, their application in practical circumstances, and the reasons for their importance to the daily success of recording studios. All issues are approached from the premise that most readers will be more interested in how these things affect their daily lives rather than wishing to make an in-depth study of pure acoustics. Therefore frequent reference is made to examples of actual studios, their various design problems and solutions. Because of the importance of good acoustics to the success of most studios, and because of the financial burden which failure may impose, getting things right first time is essential. The advice contained in Recording Studio Design offers workable ways to improve the success rate of any studio, large or small.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • General requirements and common errors
  • Sound, decibels and hearing
  • Sound isolation
  • Room acoustics and means of control
  • Designing neutral rooms
  • Rooms with characteristic acoustics
  • Variable acoustics
  • Room combinations and operational considerations
  • The studio environment
  • Limitations to design predictions
  • Loudspeakers in rooms
  • Flattening the room response
  • Control rooms
  • The behaviour of multiple loudspeakers in rooms
  • Studio monitoring: the principal objectives
  • The non-environment control room
  • The live-end, dead-end approach
  • Response disturbances due to mixing consoles and studio furniture
  • Objective measurement and subjective evaluations
  • Studio monitoring systems
  • Surround sound and control rooms
  • Human factors
  • A mobile control room
  • Appendices
  • Glossary of terms

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