that studio'ish sound


what sort of rig would give me that studio type tone....
where you sit there and can picture the musicians in the studio room...hear the room tones...
looking @ the 'hi budget' scale $$$$$(eg mistral or densen money)new or used
room is 16ft by 14ft...so i would need moniters...
i like anything w/ a electric guitar realy as far as music is concerned....
ive heard a naim rig and that is awsome but dosnt have that studio feel neither does linn or arcam(nice and paced but no room vibe).also heard an audiolab rig w/ b&w p6's and that wasnt it either(loved the toe tapping and warmth but no room vibe again)
any steer in direction would be appretiated.
thankyou
touchon
Onhwy covered it mostly. Recording engineers are looking for detail--not the ambience that most audiophiles are. In a typical listening room 50% of the total sound field can come from indirect or reverberant sound. In a studio, it's less than 10%. Near field and much shorter reverberation times. To me the studio sounds very dry and analytical--but that makes sense as it is a tool for a recording engineer to do a job. Whereas when I sit and listen I want to relax and be entertained.

So to answer your question--I highly treated room--not just absorption, that will affect the high frequencies much more so than the midband. It must be balanced. Also, control rooms are generally small with smaller speakers that tend to not produce too much bass energy and have room modes creating acoustical problems. Many studies have large Helmhotz resonators built into them to account for this. Lastly, speaker placement should be nearfield so that the direct sound makes up almost all of the total sound of the listening experience.
Definitely give the PMC's a listening as you seem to be describing the type of sound they offer. They can handle any type of music and are most importantly used in many studios around the world. Perhaps the IB2's?
Gotta concurr with Dr Joe here. Tannoy studio monitors will do it all,especially with tube amplification.
If you're really looking for that "studio sound," a pair of studio monitors in the nearfield will get you close. FYI though - you're only going to hear one aspect of the recording. Studio monitors are not the only transducers used to listen to the feed or mix. And, you're not really going to "hear what the engineer heard" no matter what you do or what gear you use, because:

The studio is not the final link in the recording chain. Most studio recordings need work - lots of work - before they are ready for release. That's where the mastering houses come in. Most of the serious mastering houses use "audiophile" speakers for listening.