Pale Rider
Legendary Member
Hmmm, you may be onto something here. Our rooms are broadly the same size, but his has carpet and lots of soft-furnishings and ours has a wooden floor, a lot more glass and is generally more minimalist.
Sounds (ho-ho) as if it may be a bit harsh acoustically.
Nickyboy was being sarcastic about egg boxes. but some acoustic damping boards are designed like a honeycomb.
They can be stuck to a wall, then plaster boarded over, skimmed and finished in the ordinary way.
Unlikely you will want to do all that, but a thick carpet would probably make a noticeable difference.
High ceilings generally don't work well with high-end domestic hi-fi.
None of this matters if like most of us you are content to listen to cds or mp3s on a midi system.
It is something you will need to think about if you want to get the best from expensive equipment.
One of the most impressive sounds I ever heard was in the monitoring room of a basement recording studio in a former abattoir in Clerkenwell in London - Smithfield meat market is nearby.
The room was no bigger than a large domestic lounge, had a low ceiling and every surface was rock solid making it acoustically 'dead'.
The recording engineer who fitted it out reckoned the room contributed as much to the sound quality as the professional kit.
He demonstrated this by playing a couple of CDs on a budget CD deck he'd bought from Richer Sounds.