
kubeek
New member
I heared that walls have ears, so maybe they even have mouths whitch whisper "stop recording that garbage and find some normal bands" 

Well, we just had an earthquake here in California, so I think anyone recording at that time would have had actual room noise.
When we say room noise, we don't mean the room is the source of the noise so much as whatever noise is present in the room, regardless of it's source. It's room noise as opposed to noise injected by the signal chain. There are actually cases where the room itself makes noise though, by way of mechanical coupling of vibrations from nearby freeways, train tracks, mechanical equipment, etc. Those subsonic vibrations can cause walls, floors and ceilings to become transducers, which is why high end recording facilities have floating construction that decouples these structural elements from the rest of the building.
Something you might want to give a try... Open a hardshell guitar case and stand it on end up on a table. With a boom stand, place the mic or mics inside the case and you'll get pretty much the same isolation effect as a vocal booth.So I realize every major studio has a vocal booth but truly how necessary is it to get a decent recording? I suspect the main reason for a vocal booth is to isolate who/what is inside from the outside and/or vice versa, but let's say I don't need the isolation but I need something to help with standing waves, would the blanket trick work?
For those who don't know, you can take a few mic stands and while using some moving blankets (the ones movers use to protect furniture) create a 'booth' with them. I figure using an absorption panel right behind the mic (in front of the person singing but behind it) in conjunction with the blanket method described, the only thing left to blame for poor sound is the singer and/or the engineer right?
I'm new to recording vocals so I figured I'd ask. Thanks for any comments/criticism/insight.
If you are using a highly sensitive condensor mic made for studio vocal recordings (ie Neumann) then a vocal booth is a must. These mics are so sensitive for the reason of picking up as much detail as possible. So if you are not using a vocal booth then it will pick up alot of unwanted room noise.
If however you are using a budget vocal mic like the Rode NT2, then you can simply place a blanket up behind the mic and that should be enough to get a clean vocal recording.
I can give you an example: I built a studio with a moderate amount of room treatment in my garage. If my girlfriend is in the room closest to the studio, the mics will pick up the sound of her voice bitching at me. The same is true if she's in the room past that, or even the master bedroom, which is the furthest point from my studio.
There are even times that I swear I can hear the sound of her voice nagging me as she's pulling in the driveway.
Well, we just had an earthquake here in California, so I think anyone recording at that time would have had actual room noise.
When we say room noise, we don't mean the room is the source of the noise so much as whatever noise is present in the room, regardless of it's source. It's room noise as opposed to noise injected by the signal chain. There are actually cases where the room itself makes noise though, by way of mechanical coupling of vibrations from nearby freeways, train tracks, mechanical equipment, etc. Those subsonic vibrations can cause walls, floors and ceilings to become transducers, which is why high end recording facilities have floating construction that decouples these structural elements from the rest of the building.
I wouldn't say a vocal booth is necessary to isolate the mic from outside noise, like cars driving by, or a dog barking, but to get a more dry vocal sound that isn't influenced by the room. I've never sang in a vocal booth but I have a similar setup with panels and record guitar there. The difference in sound quality is night and day, even when close miking. I've always had a hard time getting "what I heard while playing" onto tape until I setup some absorber panels. Now, everything I record sounds good...as far as sound quality anyway. The music usually sucks real bad.
If you are using a highly sensitive condensor mic made for studio vocal recordings (ie Neumann) then a vocal booth is a must. These mics are so sensitive for the reason of picking up as much detail as possible. So if you are not using a vocal booth then it will pick up alot of unwanted room noise.
If however you are using a budget vocal mic like the Rode NT2, then you can simply place a blanket up behind the mic and that should be enough to get a clean vocal recording.
Eck
rode NT2-A = every bit as sensitive as a U87
Came across this link in another forum. A poor mans vocal booth. Looks pretty cool. Im gonna try it . http://digitalprosound.digitalmedianet.com/articles/viewarticle.jsp?id=89503
I use a Neumann on most all my vocals. It's smack dab in the middle of the tracking room. There's a little tiny hum from the G5, but otherwise, I don't have ambient noise issues.
Ive tried using Neumanns in the middle of a large studio room. All the walls and ceilings were slanted to eliminate standing waves and there were insulators around the room. I got room ambience.
It might not have been that noticeable at tracking stage, but it was at the mixing stage. Vocal booths are really good for getting a great vocal recording which really helps a vocal sit in a mix better.
Eck
Hmmmm, I use a VERY sensitive gefell mic for most of my vocal recording, and never had it be a problem tracking in my lage tracking room. Sure, you pick up a bit of the room sound, but then again, all the instruments were tracked in that room, so they have that same sound. Actually adds some cohesiveness to the mix. Also, I have never had trouble getting vocals to sit in the mix either.......
Best rule of thumb - if your not sure if it's hurting your recording, you are probably worrying about the wrong thing.
I'd take a nice (usually large) room or recording environment over a booth any day. I say booths are more important for when you don't have that option and the room just makes everything sound shitty/lo-fi...like a small bedroom.
But sometimes you don't want ambiance at all (for example, a lot of rap vocals) and that's another situation where a booth is real helpful. Mic selection being even more important.