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Post by scumbum on Nov 3, 2014 23:32:48 GMT -6
So I try again and again to use another drum mic set up , but I always come back to the Glyn Johns drum mic setup . For rock music it just sounds perfect . The drums sound natural , alive , like your in the room with the drums . For me I think its decided...Glyn johns is the winner . I can mic up the drums with 10 mics and it never sounds as natural and interesting to listen to . When I listen to Glyn johns recorded drums they seem to pull me in , keep me interested and listening .
Here's a cool video with him setting up the mics .
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Post by kcatthedog on Nov 3, 2014 23:40:27 GMT -6
I had a duplicate post so edited to delete !
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Post by kcatthedog on Nov 3, 2014 23:49:48 GMT -6
Ha!
Just used it and agree completely !
In terms of the other " how to bring more traffic to RG thread?
What if we had a "how to" section with videos ?
here's my current "how to" , showing how to use WA76s for tracking/mixing drums using glyn john's technique too !
Interesting what Glyn says about snare mike I used one but muted it in mix: didn't need it.
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 4, 2014 0:37:40 GMT -6
cool vid matt! I love the Glyn Johns set up, the better the drummer, the better it seems to sound imo.
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Post by cenafria on Nov 4, 2014 1:36:19 GMT -6
It's a great technique. It compliments the sound of many bands. I found that when placing the floor tom side mic it is important to look out for excessive proximity effect from the floor tom and for a "tremolo" like effect from any cymbal that might be too close if the mic is placed at exactly cymbal height. As you know, cymbals radiate sound in a figure of eight pattern.
When placing the "over the snare mic", it is often useful to favor the rack tom as it can often end up sounding a little weaker than the floor tom in the speakers.
Usually, closing slightly the pan pots of the two tracks gives you a more solid snare sound.
I've had good results with this technique using condenser mics but usually end up using 4038s or, most often, a pair of m160s.
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Post by roundbadge on Nov 4, 2014 3:40:59 GMT -6
my fav setup!
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Post by levon on Nov 4, 2014 3:57:44 GMT -6
It's a great technique. It compliments the sound of many bands. I found that when placing the floor tom side mic it is important to look out for excessive proximity effect from the floor tom and for a "tremolo" like effect from any cymbal that might be too close if the mic is placed at exactly cymbal height. As you know, cymbals radiate sound in a figure of eight pattern. When placing the "over the snare mic", it is often useful to favor the rack tom as it can often end up sounding a little weaker than the floor tom in the speakers. Usually, closing slightly the pan pots of the two tracks gives you a more solid snare sound. I've had good results with this technique using condenser mics but usually end up using 4038s or, most often, a pair of m160s. Good points, I find that I like the over-the-snare-mic halfway between snare and tom best, with slight preference to the tom. I also never pan the mics hard left/right. These days, I prefer to treat the drums as a single instrument.
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Post by Ward on Nov 4, 2014 7:48:22 GMT -6
Then why doesn't Glyn Johns use it?
I agree it sounds pretty cool for minimalist applications but most of my productions are very dense and multiple layers of vocals, guitars, stringed instruments and keyboard instruments. So, I usually record drums with 15 to 18 channels. More mix options. More sound control.
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 4, 2014 11:25:22 GMT -6
I'm probably not understanding wards post, but imv Drums ARE indeed a single instrument, Glyn uses it because he discovered it by accident, and it sounds great, he's tracked some of the greatest drummers/sounds in recording history this way.
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Post by cenafria on Nov 4, 2014 12:17:41 GMT -6
Then why doesn't Glyn Johns use it? I agree it sounds pretty cool for minimalist applications but most of my productions are very dense and multiple layers of vocals, guitars, stringed instruments and keyboard instruments. So, I usually record drums with 15 to 18 channels. More mix options. More sound control. I use it often but I don't just put up the overheads and kick and snare. I'll have tracks for toms (top and bottom mixed to one track), a mic on the kick drum beater and stereo room. Sometimes I'll have a spot mic for the ride or any cymbal that might need to be reinforced.
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Post by scumbum on Nov 4, 2014 12:20:56 GMT -6
Ha! Just used it and agree completely ! In terms of the other " how to bring more traffic to RG thread? What if we had a "how to" section with videos ? here's my current "how to" , showing how to use WA76s for tracking/mixing drums using glyn john's technique too ! Interesting what Glyn says about snare mike I used one but muted it in mix: didn't need it. Nice job ! That was a really well done video . The drums do have that perfect vintage sound . I have to look into the wa76's some more , they sounded really good .
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deni
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Post by deni on Nov 4, 2014 12:37:18 GMT -6
I actually just finished this demo video for our Model 2 ribbon mic. The drums were recorded in a Glyn Johns technique using three Model 2's! Check it out!
-Deni
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Post by drbill on Nov 4, 2014 12:41:20 GMT -6
Then why doesn't Glyn Johns use it? I agree it sounds pretty cool for minimalist applications but most of my productions are very dense and multiple layers of vocals, guitars, stringed instruments and keyboard instruments. So, I usually record drums with 15 to 18 channels. More mix options. More sound control. Agreed. I've recorded some of the best drummers in LA, and I never use the GJ setup. They sound great without the GJ setup. IMO, it's "OK" if you've got a bad room or are having phase problems, but it always sounds a little strange to me. Not a real fan....
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 4, 2014 12:54:57 GMT -6
I actually just finished this demo video for our Model 2 ribbon mic. The drums were recorded in a Glyn Johns technique using three Model 2's! Check it out! -Deni very good sounding drums! cool stuff man! that overhead must be a mile high! there is a ton of room in that sound, just a sugg, you should try moving it down to the same distance off the snare, as the off the floor tom mic (which could be moved a bit?) maybe move that cymbal above the floor tom out of there, and move the kick mic toward the floor tilted and aimed at the bottom of the hoop(picking up a little floor reflection gives spatial cues to the brain, and drives the kickdrum down in the speakers ime), and back it off the same distance away from the snare as the other mics, it'll bring it all into phase/focus and PUNCH!
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 4, 2014 12:56:32 GMT -6
Then why doesn't Glyn Johns use it? I agree it sounds pretty cool for minimalist applications but most of my productions are very dense and multiple layers of vocals, guitars, stringed instruments and keyboard instruments. So, I usually record drums with 15 to 18 channels. More mix options. More sound control. Agreed. I've recorded some of the best drummers in LA, and I never use the GJ setup. They sound great without the GJ setup. IMO, it's "OK" if you've got a bad room or are having phase problems, but it always sounds a little strange to me. Not a real fan.... hey Bill, i escaped lol 8) I always found that Glyn Johns tech to suck in a bad room as the room becomes way more a part of the equation...no?
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deni
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Post by deni on Nov 4, 2014 13:07:23 GMT -6
I actually just finished this demo video for our Model 2 ribbon mic. The drums were recorded in a Glyn Johns technique using three Model 2's! Check it out! -Deni very good sounding drums! cool stuff man! that overhead must be a mile high! there is a ton of room in that sound, just a sugg, you should try moving it down to the same distance off the snare, as the off the floor tom mic (which could be moved a bit?) maybe move that cymbal above the floor tom out of there, and move the kick mic toward the floor tilted and aimed at the bottom of the hoop(picking up a little floor reflection gives spatial cues to the brain, and drives the kickdrum down in the speakers ime), and back it off the same distance away from the snare as the other mics, it'll bring it all into phase/focus and PUNCH! Thanks! All the mics are equidistant from the snare. The room is very big, highly reflective, and untreated which is why it sounds so roomy. The mics are bidirectional as well, picking up all that room sound.
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Post by scumbum on Nov 4, 2014 13:47:20 GMT -6
I actually just finished this demo video for our Model 2 ribbon mic. The drums were recorded in a Glyn Johns technique using three Model 2's! Check it out! -Deni Hes smacking the hell out of those drums . The mics sound bright like condensers to me listening through this ipad .
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Post by scumbum on Nov 4, 2014 13:53:51 GMT -6
Agreed. I've recorded some of the best drummers in LA, and I never use the GJ setup. They sound great without the GJ setup. IMO, it's "OK" if you've got a bad room or are having phase problems, but it always sounds a little strange to me. Not a real fan.... hey Bill, i escaped lol 8) I always found that Glyn Johns tech to suck in a bad room as the room becomes way more a part of the equation...no? Yeah I've found the room is actually more important with the Glyn Johns setup . With Spaced Pair overheads , or any overheads over the drums you can cut all the mids out , 300-500hz , and then have nice bright cymbals and transients on the overhead tracks . Mix in the close mics and the room is much less important . With the Glyn Johns setup you can't really cut out the mids because the toms are in the overheads mics .
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Post by scumbum on Nov 4, 2014 14:42:19 GMT -6
Then why doesn't Glyn Johns use it? I agree it sounds pretty cool for minimalist applications but most of my productions are very dense and multiple layers of vocals, guitars, stringed instruments and keyboard instruments. So, I usually record drums with 15 to 18 channels. More mix options. More sound control. Agreed. I've recorded some of the best drummers in LA, and I never use the GJ setup. They sound great without the GJ setup. IMO, it's "OK" if you've got a bad room or are having phase problems, but it always sounds a little strange to me. Not a real fan.... Like everything in recording it's just personal preference and for some reason I keep coming back to the GJ setup . I think it sounds weird to people at first because its what the drums really sound like in the room and who's really used to that nowadays ? But that's why I love it , because it sounds so natural , like a drum set in a room . Oh yeah another thing , I had problems originally because I had the floor Tom mic in the wrong spot . After I watched that video of Glyn placing the floor Tom mic , I noticed he had it higher and at a different spot than a lot of people online say to put it . Once I adjusted the mic to where Glyn places it everything sounded great .
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Post by cenafria on Nov 4, 2014 15:44:58 GMT -6
Agreed. I've recorded some of the best drummers in LA, and I never use the GJ setup. They sound great without the GJ setup. IMO, it's "OK" if you've got a bad room or are having phase problems, but it always sounds a little strange to me. Not a real fan.... Like everything in recording it's just personal preference and for some reason I keep coming back to the GJ setup . I think it sounds weird to people at first because its what the drums really sound like in the room and who's really used to that nowadays ? But that's why I love it , because it sounds so natural , like a drum set in a room . Oh yeah another thing , I had problems originally because I had the floor Tom mic in the wrong spot . After I watched that video of Glyn placing the floor Tom mic , I noticed he had it higher and at a different spot than a lot of people online say to put it . Once I adjusted the mic to where Glyn places it everything sounded great . The floor tom mic placement is critical : ) If it's too low, you get too much bottom end from the tom. I find that bands that are influenced by late sixties/early seventies records get a real kick out of hearing their drums micd with this technique. I have also found that it works well in my room when the whole band is set up to record in the live room (as opposed to having drums in the live room and bassist and guitarists in the dead room).
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deni
Full Member
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Post by deni on Nov 4, 2014 16:14:15 GMT -6
I actually just finished this demo video for our Model 2 ribbon mic. The drums were recorded in a Glyn Johns technique using three Model 2's! Check it out! -Deni Hes smacking the hell out of those drums . The mics sound bright like condensers to me listening through this ipad . He's a very energetic drummer! The Model 2 has an extended high end response and is brighter than most ribbon mics.
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Post by kcatthedog on Nov 4, 2014 16:52:53 GMT -6
Ha! Just used it and agree completely ! In terms of the other " how to bring more traffic to RG thread? What if we had a "how to" section with videos ? here's my current "how to" , showing how to use WA76s for tracking/mixing drums using glyn john's technique too ! Interesting what Glyn says about snare mike I used one but muted it in mix: didn't need it. Nice job ! That was a really well done video . The drums do have that perfect vintage sound . I have to look into the wa76's some more , they sounded really good . Thx scumbum we kept it simple and I thougth running the snare and kick into the la610 with its opto comp and EQ > apollo would be a nice complement to the 2 overheads going into the tonebeasts, wa76 and burl. Looking forward to having the drummer, Matt Aston around again. I'd been hearing him play in a few local bands for years and always really liked his chops and really pleased with his contribution to my song; will have him back 4 sur !!
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Post by scumbum on Nov 4, 2014 17:42:43 GMT -6
Like everything in recording it's just personal preference and for some reason I keep coming back to the GJ setup . I think it sounds weird to people at first because its what the drums really sound like in the room and who's really used to that nowadays ? But that's why I love it , because it sounds so natural , like a drum set in a room . Oh yeah another thing , I had problems originally because I had the floor Tom mic in the wrong spot . After I watched that video of Glyn placing the floor Tom mic , I noticed he had it higher and at a different spot than a lot of people online say to put it . Once I adjusted the mic to where Glyn places it everything sounded great . The floor tom mic placement is critical : ) If it's too low, you get too much bottom end from the tom. Yes, thats the problem I had too much low end , the floor tom was not balanced in the mix . So I would then move the mic farther back away from the drums and then it started sounding too distant . A lot of descriptions online say to put the floor tom mic on the right side of the kit , pointing across the drums at the high hat , with the diaphragm just above the rim of the floor tom . That always gave me a crappy balance and things sounded weird . placing it how Glyn does in his video is the correct way to do it .
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Post by scumbum on Nov 7, 2014 10:23:26 GMT -6
Too bad they took the Mercenary Audio website down , there was some cool how to recording tips on there . I found the Fletcher drum mic setup article posted on another forum . I tried it one time and it worked very well . Everyone that likes the GJ setup should try it .
The following is a response to a question asked on rec.audio.pro
Start of quote:
proaudio101 wrote: How do you do this with the overheads (where should they be in height, distance, aimed at?), and are KM84 usually good tools for the OH pair? Will there be any polarity problems if I throw in a snare and room mic?
Fletcher wrote: There a half a dozen "3 mic drum techniques" that I'm familiar with. Is there any particular one to which you refer?
Here are a few of them:
I usually start with a mic in front of the kit. It could be 6 feet or one foot off the bass drum. The object of this mic is usually to get the "front of the kit". I look for a good bass drum sound, but also the bottom of the toms and a bit of snare...cymbals will also exist here. The tuning of the kit, the proficiency of the drummer, the mic selection and placement are all pretty damn important...you can do a little EQ to this, but not a whole hell of a lot. When you use equalizers on this mic, you will find that you often mess up the balance of the drums within the context of the kit. Depending on the tone you're looking for, a ribbon, lg. diaphragm condenser or dynamic might be the most appropriate.
For ribbons my choices are usually Royer 121's, RCA-77's...for lg. diaphragm condensers, Neumann 47 FET's, M-147's; Soundelux U-195’s/U-95S’s and/or U-99’s; dynamics MD-421’s; AKG D-30's often work pretty well, but they're a bitch to find and I don't own one. Sometimes [rarely] a Shure 57.
Now, in mono, one speaker, I put up a second mic. This can go anywhere from directly over the snare to over the drummers right shoulder...or anywhere in the arc in between. The key here is to add that mic so you get the snare, hat, top of the toms and cymbals without the cymbals being out of balance with the rest of the kit. If the drummer can't control this balance, you're pretty much f****d and should revert back to the close mic'ed SR methods they teach at the recording schools.
The reason I do this in mono-1 speaker is to insure that I'm not going to **** with the bottom of the bass drum because of an inconsistent phase relationship with the front mic. For this I will often use a ribbon, like a Coles 4038, or a condenser. U-67's often work. I find that as I get closer to 'behind the drummer', a small diaphragm condenser, like a KM-54 will often work a bit better.
Mic #3 is often placed next to the floor tom, just peeking over the rim of the drum at the snare. It's usually placed equidistant from the over mic as it relates to 'ground zero' [where the drummer actually hits the snare drum, not the center of it]. As always, one speaker mono is your friend.
Another set of fun ones...a pair of small diaphragm condensers about 4-5 feet over the front mic, aimed at the outer edges of the crash cymbals. I like an SM-2 because I have to worry about the phase relationships of the two mics less, but still worry about that relationship as it relates to the 'FOK' [front of the kit] mic. Lately I’ve been using a Royer SF-12 in this application, and absolutely loving it. Big , clear, open, not too brash, yet no shortage of high end “silk”. Absolutely my first choice these days.
There's another I've done where I use two lg. diaphragm condensers [like 47's] and spread them out. Like one in front of each rack tom [on the side of the toms. When I do this one, it seems that if all three mics are equidistant from 'ground zero' my setup time is pretty well reduced. Don't forget mono one speaker, or you may end up wanting to drink Drano when it comes time to mix.
Adding room mics is often cool, it kinda depends on how you're tracking. I hate musicians performing with headphones, so I like to get everyone set up in the same area so they can hear themselves. Like the old record said...'Let It Bleed'. The biggest problem with doing this is the bottom of the bass bleeding into the FOK mic and causing the bottom of the bass to get really smeary sounding. You may have to move the bass amp around for a while until you can get clear audio and the drummer can still hear and lock up with the bass player.
Sometimes a small speaker like a 10” or a 12” done as a satellite speaker placed in the null of the pickup pattern of the mics will work wonders getting the drummer to lock with the bass player while you move the bass amp farther away from the drum kit...gobos will often come in pretty handy too.
I find I get alot of my guitar reverb/ambience, at least on the basic track, by moving the guitar amp so the little bit of bleed in the drum mics makes it a cool ambience for the guitars...but doesn't overpower the drum kit.
You will be surprised the first few times you do these tricks how little bleed there actually is between instruments. If there are two guitar players, I recommend setting them up on opposite sides of the kit, that way you'll get a better stereo picture when you disengage the mono button.
So...room mics...now that you have the whole band set up in a room...mic the room. You should get a reasonable balance of all the instruments...it should sound like a band in a room [fancy that!!]...the mono button is still in until you're positive that you're not totally ****ing up the clarity of the bottom of the track.
Need more snare you think [first of all, if you really do, the drummers a pu**y and should learn how to hit the ****in' things]...but in those applications...a Shure 57 aimed about a foot off the side of the center of the shell of the snare drum usually will add all you need without complicating the rest of the balance.
A few other notes...first, the drummer *must* be competent...second, the kit should sound good, and be well tuned or you're screwed. There will be damn little EQ that can be applied to any of this without totally screwing up the whole picture, so it's gotta be right the first time.
You will also find that a large room, or at least a room with a high ceiling comes in damn handy or this can start to sound boxy in a hurry. I usually try to get soft things around the drum kit. I actually carry an 8' high, 20' wide [in the back], and 10' long [sides] that descend from 8' high in the back to 4' high in the front soft [4" insulation, cloth covered] booth. Front gobos as needed, usually just a gobo between the amps and the kit will work pretty well at helping you control the bleed.
This usually alleviates the bounce and splatter that will be caused by reflections off of hard walls. Depending on where you position the kit, these reflections [especially on the cymbals] will come back to haunt you as "Haas effect" s**t...
There are times when you're artist is going to need to play loud. Often, this means that the other players won't be able to hear the drummer when they're playing. This is when you really need a great big room...because you go to the old phone book/Rolodex and call the local SR company. Now, mic the kit as if it were a barroom, with those mics only going to the SR speakers, the mics to the tape are still the original mics you set up earlier. You can run the SR mics to the tape if you want...most times I don't have enough desk to bother, sometimes I'll just take an extra stereo feed off the SR desk, thought I find it's the first s**t to go if I run out of overdub tracks, or perhaps I'll add a little in and do a drum bounce if I need more tracks...
Last one I did like this, we used 4x EAW KF-852T & BH-852's a side [about enough system to do a 1500 seater with some headroom]. I also use this system if you're having the band play to loops. For larger acts that are already using "in-ear" monitor stuff...you can bring their monitor engineer along to set this kind of thing up [saves you beau coup hassle], but rather than treating it like a headphone system [which it actually is], I still try to maintain "gig"/stage levels.
If you don't need to get loud, then the musicians will usually balance themselves. Scratch vocal? Yeah, sometimes they are needed aren't they...well, if you're using an SR system, that's where it goes, if you have the 'ear monitor' option...a little in there too...if they're playing relatively quietly, like they don't need any of the SR stuff...often the singer can just belt it out over the band, other times a little guitar amp on a stool will work nicely [the mic being a handheld...record it just for s**t's and giggles, sometimes you even get on the bonus plan and get a performance].
At times, a floor monitor [like at a bar gig] will work well...make sure you can EQ the monitor so the little bit of bleed you get from the scratch vocal track can be used as a vocal reverb when it's time to mix. Sometimes it's a way, way cool thing to have the reverb of the scratch track be the main vocal reverb...not only are there always performance variations, but if you're trying to place the singer in the same room with the band...it works like a charm. Just like the guitar and bass amps...you may need to move it around for balance.
Most of the time the singer will actually gravitate to the spot in the room where the band's balance is best...sometimes using a stereo mic like an SM-69 [or on the last one I just did...Guysonic's Mr. Liteguy stereo head] at that spot works like a dream. With Mr. Liteguy, we got a doo-rag on him, a pair of shades and a cigarette hanging out of his mouth pretty quickly. We called him 'Curtis'...that way everyone pretty much forgot he was hangin' around...he was just another dude on the venue [that didn't cut in front of you on the dinner line...most excellent of him].
Tracking my basics like this I find I use fewer effect overall...that the overdubs require fewer effects, and the overall outcome is usually 'larger' sounding than when I do use a bunch of effect. The downside is that you have less control over the individual tones. You can't really do alot of "muscling it around" engineering. I know alot of brothers feel it's their god given purpose in life to move a whole shitload of knobs and stuff...so these methods will often cause a whole bunch of stress as knobs become less involved in the process...but you can use compressors to really make the whole thing come alive...so there are some knobs that can be turned.
Other problems: if you're working with sh***y musicians, there is a bit less you can do to obscure the fact that they suck. Fixing individual mistakes in the basics becomes more difficult depending on the level of separation achieved, and how bad the clam is. This mostly applies to bass players, but depending on how much guitar is in the drum mics...and again, how bad the clam is...it can be a bitch. This, from my experience, happens rarely.
I've also found that more often than not when someone makes a clam, it drags down the groove for a bar or two. If they're performing to a loop, then you can often cut in that section from another performance...if the drummer/band is really tight, they might have even done multiple performances at the same tempo...cutting takes together I guess is kind of an old school thing...I still work analog, so this is relatively easy to accomplish in my world...it's probably pretty workable if you're working to hard disk as well...but might, as in probably, will be a bitch and a half to deal with if you're using VCR's.
Good luck...oh yeah...don't get discouraged...the first half dozen or so times you **** with this stuff, it gets really overwhelming...practice on stuff that really doesn't matter that much. The first time I gave myself over to 3 mics on the drums, I was up all night the night before sweating it, puked before I left the house, and wasn't sure if I wanted to continue with the program all the way into the second day of the session.
Once I got past the anxiety and the 'everything I know is wrong' phase of the mental part...it started to get easier.
At this point I doubt I'll ever go back to the "too many mics" thing...but it took a while to get there. Another bonus...last project I recorded, I had three full setups, 3 drum kits, 3 guitar rigs, 3 bass rigs all set up in different environments, all coming up on a 40 input desk. All three setups were bussed to identical tracks, and I used the automation grouping to select which environment I was going to record. We had the "Mainstage" [the one with the big PA] as group one, the "Memphis Room" [small amplifiers in a smaller, walled off dead area] as group two, and the "Iggy Room" ...it was group 3.
We also fed the loops off the main recording console to each of the environments where they were required. There were a couple of songs where I had "turn off the loop" cues. These were either in like one bar breaks within the song, or to let the band take the out of the song without the loop keeping time.
Being terminally lazy, muting the loops from the control room became much easier. Now, another consideration... because there were no headphones involved...I was monitoring the band off the machine in repro...when I had a mute cue, I had to return the deck to 'input' or I'd be tardy on the cue. Because the band wasn't monitoring off the deck, I could switch back and forth at my leisure. We used the "loop send lines" if the musician needed to monitor the track to do a fix punch.
We could try any of the songs in any of the environments simply by selecting them with the automation group masters, and moving the musicians to that room and having them play. I think it made the record pretty interesting and diverse sounding, it also seemed to aid in getting some pretty bitchin' performances from the musicians [which afterall is said and done, what this sport is really all about].
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Post by Guitar on Dec 3, 2015 17:55:35 GMT -6
I actually just finished this demo video for our Model 2 ribbon mic. The drums were recorded in a Glyn Johns technique using three Model 2's! Check it out! -Deni Hes smacking the hell out of those drums . The mics sound bright like condensers to me listening through this ipad . I would personally refer to that as bad technique, but I thought the mics sounded good.
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