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Meyer Sound’s New Bluehorn System a Critical Tool for Composer John Powell
Posted on Monday, September 18, 2017

Loudspeakers with absolute phase accuracy from 25 Hz to 20 kHz reveal musical reality with unprecedented and “unflattering” detail

  Bear’s Lab at Meyer Sound in Berkeley, CA Film composer John Powell at work

Measurement traces reveal Bluehorn System’s flat frequency response and unprecedented phase linearity across the audible bandwidth.Product Shot of the Bluehorn System

Left to right: Helen Meyer, Executive VP of Meyer Sound; John Powell; John Meyer, CEO of Meyer Sound.

Meyer Sound has announced availability of the Bluehorn System, a technology breakthrough that for the first time achieves flat amplitude and phase response from 25 Hz to 20 kHz in a large-format loudspeaker. The product of more than six years of intensive research, Bluehorn applies advanced proprietary algorithms to cancel out the non-linearities inherent in all mechanical transducers and loudspeaker cabinets, resulting in breathtakingly transparent aural neutrality.

Among the first cinema professionals to take delivery of a Bluehorn System was noted film composer John Powell, whose 60-plus feature film scoring credits include animated family classics from Chicken Run through Happy FeetRio and How to Train Your Dragon(and their sequels) plus all the Jason Bourne films. Powell has installed an LCR Bluehorn System in his private recording and mixing facility (dubbed “5 Cat Studio”) in Pacific Palisades, California.

“We initially brought the Bluehorns in on a temporary basis for a specific project, but we wouldn’t let them leave the building,” says Powell. “With the Bluehorns it was blatantly obvious when something was wrong in the mix, and that is the most useful quality I can imagine from monitor loudspeakers.”

Powell emphasizes the importance of working with monitoring that reveals the input signal with unflinching accuracy, without masking any detail or introducing coloration that may misleadingly enhance the subjective quality of the music.

“For the work that I do, I need monitor loudspeakers that do not flatter the music at all,” he says. “I need to hear exactly what is going on in an unbiased way. I have no time when working to enjoy what we did right; I need to hear when things are wrong so we can fix them, and I can hear those problems better with the Bluehorns. I need to be confident that everything is in its proper place, because then the music translates smoothly as we move through to the final mix.”

Complete Bluehorn Systems are available in either stereo or LCR configurations, with each channel comprising a two-way mid-high loudspeaker, a separate low frequency element, and dedicated digital processing.

Bluehorn is designed for high-resolution monitoring applications in mid-sized rooms for music recording, cinema post-production, music mastering or other applications requiring the highest accuracy in sound reproduction. Externally, Bluehorn shares the same cabinet footprint, driver dimensions and waveguide configuration as Meyer Sound’s Acheron Designer loudspeaker. On the inside, however, Bluehorn utilizes an upgraded HF driver and new amplifiers with ultra-low noise and distortion.

Absolutely unique to Bluehorn is the dedicated processor that sits in front of both the mid-high loudspeaker and the companion low-frequency cabinet. The system-specific correction algorithms hosted by the processor were developed by meticulously analyzing all physical and electrical non-linearities throughout the entire system, from 25 Hz to 20 kHz, in order to bring acoustic output – at any level – into absolute phase and frequency alignment with the input signal. Essentially, the processing nullifies the non-linearities of drivers and enclosures, resulting in a phase-coherent response previously achieved only by open-air electrostatic headphones with their extremely low mass diaphragms.

“This is a loudspeaker that is ideal for people doing music for film because it behaves in the room like a cinema loudspeaker,” Powell continues. “It gives us projection like we would hear on the dub stage, yet it also has that extra layer of audiophile quality. Bluehorn lets us hear deeper into the music and resolve problems right away, knowing that even the dub stage might not offer that level of accuracy. It’s the best of both worlds, really.”

In his cinema work, Powell first used the Bluehorn Systems for mixing music for Jason Bourne, the latest in the Bourne series of spy thrillers, and is currently working on music for yet another animated family feature, Ferdinand. Other film composers and mixers have used the Bluehorn System for their own projects, while Powell has relied on it for tracking and mixing his own classical music recordings – the Prussian Requiem oratorio and The Prize Is Still Mine with orchestra and gospel chorus – as well as for mixing composer Eric Whitacre’s score for a forthcoming IMAX presentation.

“That extra level of clarity in Bluehorn makes it easier to analyze your mix, but these are not necessarily loudspeakers you want to listen on to flatter yourself,” he admits. “You hear what is right with your music, but you also hear what is wrong so you can fix it. And that’s really the point of monitoring, isn’t it?”

Bluehorn is named for the high frequency waveguides, painted blue during prototype testing to quickly distinguish the new Systems from Acheron Designer loudspeakers used in the same room for comparisons.

Sound professionals who wish to audition the Bluehorn System in the Bear’s Lab mixing room at Meyer Sound in Berkeley should contact Tim Boot.

Bluehorn System in the <em>Newman Scoring Stage</em> at 20th Century Fox Studios

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