drum recording
DK_Essence
189 Posts
i was just thinking about buying some microphones for drumset recording and was wondering if some of the drummers around here have any suggestions or knowledge to drop on that issue?my drumset is kinda standard jazz setup (less toms, more cymbals) and i was thinking about the usual hihat/snare/bass/overheads combination of microphones. any mic recommandations?
Comments
you can get a real hot sound out a couple cheep SM57s. it's all about mic placement. I did alright just setting up the kit facing a corner and using two overheads in a V from behind. Just experiment with it. Theres some heads in here can prolly give you more specific advice.
did you get any cool bassdrum sound with the sm57s?
"cool bass drum" = re20
Yeah! tried it! that's what's the best for recording low freqs
I have a lot of love for Audio Technica's too, 4040's real nice, even for vocals. SM57 is good for snares, and definately get something for the kick drum like the aformentioned D112 or Shure Beta52, both under 2 bills. You might get a nice sound with just those four (two auidotechnica overheads, sm57 top snr and kick) but i'd get a Sennheiser MD421 ($350) if you want to get some tom sound.
honestly the best sounding Mic I have ever used/heard on overhead, proximity and direct miking are Royer ribbon mics. I'm sure they have a website somewhere where you can download thier sample cd. They are pretty astounding when used correctly.
Also remember that a mic is only as good as the gain stage behind it, and changing your mic pre and subsequently the input impedance and a variety of other factors will change the way even an SM58 sounds. The question is as much about mics as it is about pres.
In that realm I recomend I recomend a million different things but for drums Telefunken v672, v72 and v76s come to mind.
hope this helps
you could go beatles stlye and have two condensors as "under heads" and a single condenser overhead right in the middle of the kit... so all three mics meet right above the middle of the kick. and some kick mik (if you can use a close and a distant mic to blend later... you could use that pvc trick or just make a tunnel with a thick blanket taped to the kick and the other end to a chair.. just to isolate the distant mic).
i really like using as few mics as possible for drums, but its dicey... you really have to make sure that your happy with the clarity of the kit ( you get enought snare/hat/kik.. cause you got no options later). but its a stylisitc choice for me... less to worry about when mixing.
otherwise, your gonna have to buy 8 mics and pre's....
if you have the time to set up/mik the drums.. my best advice is trial and error... AND CHECK YOUR PHASE!
http://www.boomspeed.com/fannywagon/drum36.mp3
(i get a little sloppy at one point)
another clip, same set-up:
http://www.boomspeed.com/fannywagon/drumxx.mp3
love that sound ako!
Really nice!
is it the old set or the gretsch?
Man, you're reeealy tempting me to get the kit out of the attic.
Shit sounds great, any compressor or tube pre's on there or is that stright into the board?
make sure you tune your drums up with some fresh heads(unless you are going for that super dirtball grimey kit sound), and that you consider baffling around the set. i got the hook up on some real cheap foam if you need it.
-> Ako - nice drumming
that's fresh man...what type o ride is that?
nice.
thats my old Swingstar, but my 70s ludwig snare (which im continuing to use with the Gretsch)
the ride is a Sabian AAX and the hi-hats are shitty Zildjian ZBTs (i need new ones, but these dont sound that bad really..)
and this was the two mics ran straight into a cassette deck. the only thing i did post-recording was boost the bass, the reverb is all natural.
glad you like it! i think it has a good sound.
MP3 is shit, can't hear nothing but it seems you play well.
haha, what do you mean? it doesnt work?
it is only 128kbps...
128kbps... Aah! That's what I said: you can't hear nothing.
I mean, this is not easy to say "yeak! That Kick sounds great..." listening to a 128kbps mp3 file, nahmsayn...?
Wanna hear more of your stuff.
Which preamp do you use?
haha, none...the mics ran straight into the L&R inputs on a tapedeck, i listen with the headphones in the headphone jack
ive done really nice recordings with just a boombox before...ill try to find one.
awesome snare.
i finally got tosco hihats (after messing around with some paiste and zildjan stuff), which i bought 2nd hand from a guy who bought them 2nd hand. i played at school with tosco cymbals and they kicked me but i havent seen them in any of the drum stores around here yet. i think they quit business or something, but if you ever get your hands on tosco cymbals or hihats, buy them.
Right on the money! If you have the cheese... Earthworks condenser mics are the shit. If you had 2 of those and a kick drum mic you would be in good shape. Overall, mic placement is the key. 3 mics on a kit...in the right place is all you need.
peace,
dirk
I am also of the as-little-mics-as-possible school, which just takes a little more pre-planning in oder to get over. I also have found for some reason that fibre-based heads work much nicer in recording situations.
Blood Sugar Sex Magik is widely reagrded as the benchmark for overcompressed radio mix, I would assume the 58s have nothing to do with it.