Here is a question for you, and I have found a lot of people making this mistake. If you are looking for referenced speakers for recording, you need to pony up the big bucks and get a good flat response Referenced Studio Monitor Speaker. A common mistake is that these speakers sound better than cheaper speakers. A good reference speaker should be a flat response, honestly, some cheap speaker system should & could "sound better" than a referenced speaker. A Studio Monitor, generally thought of as a referenced speaker has no "color" to the speaker... This is a long winded way of saying, if you are just looking for a good speaker to listen to your instrument and aren't recording professionally, then you can get a lot of speaker/amp combo for 2 bills.
In my studio, I have several speakers set up, I have the referenced monitors while recording, and then I have everything from a single 10" speaker, to car stereo setup and then a home theater rig to do final mix down. (I know, extreme, but very helpful to hear what the final mix should be.)
This will slay all the pros with the 1k studio monitors when I tell you this, but you may want to look at some of those higher end computer speakers, some of them are very impressive with a sub and crystal clean highs, with more than acceptable mids, for under two hundred.
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Paul Davis
Generalmusic
Generalmusic.US