B
buryher17
New member
haha yea i completely agree... its so hard t explain to the 15 year old kids why they cant have there drums sound as good as my drummers does on our recordings, and im just honest and im like "thats years of experience... you have to learn hwo to tune them correctly, and hit them correctly. Any idiot can hit a drum, you have to hit everything in a certain way to get a "grovy sound" or GOOD sound."Yep. Probably a delicate conversation to have with a client...
"How come my drums don't sound good on the recording?"
"Um, becuase your drums don't sound good".
Kids don't understand the years of work it takes.
Theres so many replies id like to reply to but i dont kno where to start haha. Basically i've never used a room mic because my room mci would be a mxl 990 and i HATE that mic haha so i shy away from that. But what im tyring to getw ith my drum sound is "in your face" I want the cymbals to be obviously there but not loud, and the primary sound is from the snare/toms/kick.
A perfect example to anyoen who knows is Black Dahlia Murder's new cd. The drums are exactly what i'd dream to have it sound like. There all in your face and perfect sounding. And i spoke to the singer of BDM and he told me how they used triggers on all the drums and for cymbals they were replaced with pre recorded cymbals. The drums sound amazing!
for pop bands that i record however i mic them (not trigger) unless they feel there kick is too weak and want it triggered with a nice trigger sound that suites them. I personally think the kick trigger is ideal for ANY genre of music. Theres hundreds of presets in my dm5 that all sound great.
thanks for the advice guys