BD, a friend of mine owns MCE Records (which is now defunct, he opened Hully Gully which is in operation) has those same JBL monitors sitting on either side of the big analog console he still uses so Paul's comment has merit. They have more up to date digital equipment in the new studio but Mark loves his analog rig for personal mixing. No where in either studio is suspended monitors that I noticed. You don't need huge volume levels when mixing/monitoring so that is a moot point in reference to them not being near field. The last thing recording engineers want is deafening sound levels. Even then, headphones are the choice of most recording engineers. Their ears are their income so why chance damaging your hearing when it's your bread and butter? They use different speakers to guage how a mix will sound through car or home type speakers and that's where they put the gas to them. For monitors, they only want flat response, not ear shattering dbs. In the old studio, there is huge in wall JBL speaker system that was left just "to impress the clients" and are not used at all. It would have been a hassle to get them out and redo the walls. There is no law that I know of that says you have to fly ANY monitors, it was just a space saving consideration in cramped studios. The reflections off the corners and ceiling would to me "color" the sound. That works for Bose 901's but not for flat response, non-direct reflecting monitors
JBL and Altec were the monitors of choice but were quickly supplanted when Yamaha released the NS-10s
Interesting discussion!
Mark's digital system is a compact self-contained remote recording setup based on the Alesis ADAT digital multitrack recorder with Alesis mixer used for live on location recording in nightclubs. Mixdown is done to DAT or CD masters at the studio
Personally, I hate how studio monitors sound in a home stereo application. I did have the NS-1000's which are highly regarded but found them severely lacking in lowend response so they were moved on. I want thundering lowend, I want crystal clear highs. Flat response is cool if your into it, I find it stale personally