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THE RESEARCH LAB AT NYU’S NEW RECORDING/TEACHING COMPLEX USES
GENELEC MONITORING IN AN ADVANCED 16.2 ARRAY
— Genelec
8030A monitors and 7050A subwoofers offer NYU’s renowned research
and teaching staff unprecedented configurability to conduct a wide variety
of listening and testing experiments, furthering the knowledge base
of the students and the entire professional audio industry —
— The Genelec
8030As’ small form factor and big sound combine to offer unrivalled
performance for critical listening applications —
— Additionally,
all department faculty members received a Genelec 6010A/5040A setup
for their offices —
NAB
SHOW, LAS VEGAS, NV, April 12, 2010 — Genelec,
the leader in Active Monitoring technology for more than three decades,
was recently chosen to provide monitoring solutions for the Research
Lab in the new Recording/Teaching facility at New
York University’s Department
of Music and Performing Arts Professions. The complex is one of
the most technically advanced audio teaching facilities of its type
in the world. Genelec Active Monitors and Subwoofers, chosen for their
consistency, sound quality and size/performance ratio, will help NYU
provide their students with state-of-the-art listening and evaluation
tools, as a new generation of audio researchers and academics probes
more deeply into the workings of sound.
Created
to provide students with a sophisticated learning environment, the $6.5-million,
7,500-square-foot complex is devoted to contemporary Music Technology:
Theory, Cognition, Informatics, Computer Music, Recording, Production
and Immersive Audio. One of the key components of the Recording/Teaching
facility is its unique Research Lab, dedicated to 3-D Audio experimentation.
The Lab is equipped with an innovative, infinitely configurable grid,
upon which are mounted 16 Genelec 8030A
Bi-Amplified Active Monitors; also, a pair of moveable Genelec 7050A
Active Subwoofers resides on the lab’s floor. Additionally,
all faculty members in the department received a Genelec setup for their
offices, featuring two 6010A
Bi-Amplified Loudspeakers and a 5040A
Active Subwoofer.
The
Research Lab, designed like the rest of the recording facility by John
Storyk of the Walters-Storyk Design Group,
is a very unique space. Its extremely low reverberation time imparts
near-anechoic properties. The room is further connected to the rest
of the facility via tie lines. But its key feature is a ceiling-mounted
pipe grid that offers the 16 Genelec 8030A monitors endless possibilities
for configuration.
“For
psycho-acoustical experiments, we can configure eight speakers mounted
high and eight mounted low, or four speakers high, four low and eight
at ear level, for instance,” explains Tom Beyer, Chief Systems
Engineer at the facility. “All this flexibility in positioning
the speakers brings a greater degree of detail to experiments such as
determining the ear’s ability to localize sound, or how certain
frequencies are better localized than others.”
Dr.
Agnieszka Roginska, Associate Director of Music Technology for the Department
of Music and Performing Arts Professions, says the Lab will greatly
facilitate the measurement of impulse responses and other testing. “The
system is not static, so we can orient the speakers spherically, which
gives us tremendous flexibility,” says Roginska, who adds that
the wide and extremely even frequency response of the Genelec 8030A
speakers allows testing over the widest frequency range available for
its size.
Other
applications for the Research Lab include ongoing testing of the radiation
patterns of musical instruments, which will provide greater insights
into how best to choose and position microphones for recording them.
“Everyone who comes in contact with the Research Lab will gain
knowledge from it,” says Beyer, who cites the Genelec 8030A’s
small form factor for providing a high-performance speaker in a very
compact package. “As a result, we are able to suspend every speaker
from the ceiling at any height, at any angle, and rotate them 360 degrees
on any axis. Genelec monitors have been very reliable for us in a variety
of applications for us in the past, and this new one is no different.
They’re great monitors.”
For
more information, please visit www.genelecusa.com.
...ends
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Photo File: Genelec_NYU.JPG
Photo Caption: The Research Lab in the new Recording/Teaching facility
at New York University’s Department of Music and Performing Arts
Professions, featuring active monitoring solutions from Genelec. Photo
by Cheryl Fleming. (This photo is the property of Cheryl Fleming and
may be used by the press only for the purpose of one-time reproduction.
Unauthorized use, alteration or reproduction of this photograph is strictly
prohibited.)
Genelec, the pioneer in Active Monitoring technology, is celebrating
over 30 years of designing and manufacturing active loudspeakers for
true and accurate sound reproduction. Genelec is credited with promoting
the concept of active transducer technology, which many manufacturers
are just now incorporating into their products. Since its inception
in 1978, Genelec has concentrated its efforts and resources into creating
active monitors with unparalleled sonic integrity. The result is an
active speaker system that has earned global acclaim for its accurate
imaging, extremely high acoustic output from small enclosures, true
high-fidelity with low distortion, and deep, rich bass.
Other
brand and product names may be trademarks of the respective companies
with which they are associated.
—For
more information on the complete range of Genelec Active Monitoring
Systems, contact: Genelec Inc., 7 Tech Circle, Natick, MA 01760. Tel:
(508) 652-0900; Fax: (508) 652-0909;
Web: http://www.genelecusa.com/.
Genelec
is exhibiting at Booth C2239 at the NAB10 Expo in Las Vegas, NV.