Color and beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but on the other hand, that's more intensity than I would use, unless the fixtures are over 5 years old. LED's do slowly lose intensity with age. I would reduce all channels by half. The color you like will be retained while intensity is reduced to curtail algae growth for a while.
As I recall, this is a fairly new tank. In new tanks algae is more prone to get out of balance and turn into a bloom. It's usually because there are insufficient herbivores for the algae growth fueled by an excess of nutrients.
Remember, testing becomes misleading in showing low nutrient/pollution levels, simply because the algae is eating the nutrients as fast as they become available. Because the bacterial population is not yet fully grown/fully mature in a newer tank (<1 year), initially algae makes up the bulk of the biofiltration.
Remember, the intensity of light from LED's does not register to our eyes (and camera lenses) as bright as it truly is. Unfortunately, this makes videos and still photos less than definitive.
Also, since algae cannot grow when light is absent, don't be afraid to leave the lights off to curtail algae growth. This gives the herbivores a chance to catch up on their job/dinner. Snails, Snails and more Snails is always my motto for algae control. A tropical storm sometimes makes the ocean quite dark for a week or more. It's okay. 
We've had some recent threads about brown algae, Cyanobacteria/Dinoflagellate blooms. Have you seen those threads?
Aloha,
Mark 
Edited by Mark Peterson - March 28 2016 at 5:34pm