Determining speakers sound coloration

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What is the simplest way to find out how much non-monitor speakers deviate the sound from "neutral" in different frequencies? Surgical precision not necessary, just the general feel.

Secondary question: I ask because I've heard that mixing can be done on non-high quality speakers and I'm thinking about skipping buying proper monitors for a year or something in favor of a MIDI keyboard - I'm 31 so I guess it's about time to learn to play on something! Can $80 speakers really suffice for learning mixing basics? How much more work it requires if it's true and how tedious that work gets?

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Start with listening to a sine sweep at MODEST volume. If it gets softer or louder on certain frequencies, it could be the speaker itself or it could be you hear interference of room / surface reflections. Change listening position (move your head around) to check that.

My monitors are a set of passive Alesis MonitorOne MK-II. They costed around €160 for the pair many years ago. I chose them because to me they sound exactly like the HiFi speakers I have in my living room! So next to no "getting accustomed to" required. I instantly know if it sounds good there then it sounds good anywhere. That's what good monitors are all about.
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