This is the kind of thread that gets me frustrated and has me pulling out my hair (and I have precious little left). Why? Because nowhere in it does anyone address the most essential and fundamental factor in being able to properly tune/EQ a sound system for the most accurate playback of music, and the basic assumption made is that the ability to mechanically manipulate the sound is all that is needed.
The EQ resource posted by Bluenote is a good resource. However, I find this guide to be an even more helpful resource:
http://recordingwebsite.com/articles/eqprimer.php. And, here is another I have found quite useful:
http://www.reverse-engineering.info/Audio/bwl_eq_info.pdf. However, as SQNut has properly noted, the guidelines given (in the resource provided by Bluenote and the ones I have provided) relate to EQing during the recording session. I also agree with SQNut, for the reasons he has noted, that you cannot necessarily translate the boosting and cutting suggestions offered in these EQ primers into what you will be able to realize upon playback. I must also add that the results on playback will also vary greatly because during the recording session the sound engineer is able to exercise much greater control over how each instrument or voice is recorded, and thus how it sounds (or is supposed to sound) on playback. Whereas, on playback (unless you are listening to a recording of a solo voice or instrument), any adjustment you, the listener, makes at a particular frequency will affect everything already recorded at that frequency and its harmonics. Thus, it is a recipe for disaster, in my view, to treat these guidelines as guarantees for perfect sound in the music listening environment.
You cannot simply cut and boost certain frequencies and expect results that approach accurate reproduction of music without properly RTA’ing your car to determine what kind of frequency response you are actually getting prior to EQing and, in my view, more importantly, without having at least some understanding of the sound characteristics of various musical instruments and your favorite vocal artists and the music frequencies they cover. Thus, another necessary resource is one of the many 1/3 octave frequency charts available that show which instruments cover the audible frequency range in music playback. Here is an excellent chart:
Interactive Frequency Chart - Independent Recording Network. After looking at a chart such as this you might be shocked to see how much fundamental and harmonic frequency overlap there is among a variety of instruments.
Mr. Moto asked “What music do you listen to to balance the system? What music has the best recording?” SQNut responed with a “tuning” tutorial and suggests listening to a “good 2 ch or a good comp grade car,” and S3T offers additional “tuning” advice. Rather than quibble with or debate the tuning methods and thought processes they suggest, I will point out that ANY tuning advice is useless unless you have first listened extensively to live (preferably unamplified) music and have as a reference the sound of real instruments and voices. In my opinion, one cannot profess to be able to “tune” a system or know what “good sound” is, or whether a particular vehicle’s playback system can serve as a reference, without first knowing the differences in sound between a cornet, a trumpet or a flugelhorn, or a bassoon and an oboe, or a cello and a double bass played with a bow, for example. Can one profess to be able to properly “tune” a system without knowing what distinguishes the sound Miles Davis creates from his trumpet compared to say Freddie Hubbard or Chet Baker, or what Diana Krall, Elvis Costello or any other popular singer sounds like in person? I say no because the objective of this hobby of ours is to recreate as best as possible in your listening environment the live music experience, and having the aural capability of identifying the tonal qualities of a particular instrument or voice is, to me, absolutely critical to successfully accomplishing this task.
And then there are the recordings on which we rely to tune our systems. The live music experience I discuss above is necessary if you are going to be able to determine whether a particular recording is true to what that particular musician or singer sounds like. Sure, based on my experience as a musician, the number of live performances I have attended, and being a critical listener of recorded music, I can point you to recordings that I believe successfully capture the essence of a particular musician’s technique and style, and the sound of his/her voice or instrument. I think the recordings Pierre Sprey has made for Mapleshade Records are as good as any I have ever heard in the Jazz and Blues genre. But, consider how much better off you would be if your personal experience, rather than someone else’s, was the reference.
I am always amazed, and left dumbfounded, by the number of people who listen to (and sometimes “judge”) sound systems and throw out all sorts of flowery adjectives to describe what they hear, but could not tell you if that instrument playing in the back, stage left, is a piccolo or a flute, or a soprano sax or a clarinet, or whether the trumpet player is using a mute, and if so what kind, or whether the drummer is holding his high hat while he taps it. I can go on and on about thus, but will summarize my thoughts by simply saying that if you want to be able to properly tune/EQ a playback system, go listen to live music, especially unamplified, of all genres, and do so often. And, become a student of recording techniques and listen to recordings by those sound engineers and performers who place fidelity of sound above all other commercial objectives. Only then will the other tools be able to be used to achieve the best possible music playback results.