X
XLR
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This thread has gone 3 pages past where it needed to and made a simple problem convoluted. Here’s a summary of what I’ve said in it:
For a natural acoustic guitar sound recording a player with a wide dynamic range:
...Avoid compressing ac gtr while tracking, but if you must do it, try an RNC in supernice mode. It controls dynamcis but leaves the highs sounding pretty natural. On acoustic though you're way better off doing any processing after the fact, and a multiband used well always sounds better to me than a broadband comp on acoustic.
...Use volume automation when mixing
...Try varied mic positioning for fingerpicking/strumming, or doing different takes for the soft and loud ac gtr passages - changing mic position for each.
...Use consistent playing technique. If one isn’t getting consistent results during quiet fingerpicking, the best thing you can do is fix it at the source.
...You have to experiment and see what works with your guitar sound and taste. There are many solutions... Try everything and decide for yourself. The main point is to do the tracking by using good mic technique for whatever's being played rather than finding a processing fix for ineffective mic'ing.
----------------------------
Before commenting at the beginning of the thread I listened to the OPs tracks at his site and at CD Baby. Vocals sound good as does the writing and arranging. Acoustic gtr sounds too compressed and unnatural in both strumming and fingerpicked sections in the several tracks I heard. This of course is just my own taste as I prefer a natural sound on ac gtr in this type of music.
Re tracking softly played steel string, the following tracks were done with a small-bodied acoustic strung with slinky .009’s. (doesn’t get softer than this). No broadband compression used. All had gain staging done so that even loud strumming with heavy gauge strings wouldn’t have clipped anything. I do this as a rule when I record myself so I have a huge safety margin to avoid clipping a decent take.
mk41 mic at 2 ft. http://www.lightningmp3.com/live/file.php?id=11936
$30 naiant mic, 2 ft. http://www.lightningmp3.com/live/file.php?id=11937
ECM8000 mic. Mic’s don’t come more noisy than that old ECM8000.
http://www.lightningmp3.com/live/file.php?id=11938
For a natural acoustic guitar sound recording a player with a wide dynamic range:
...Avoid compressing ac gtr while tracking, but if you must do it, try an RNC in supernice mode. It controls dynamcis but leaves the highs sounding pretty natural. On acoustic though you're way better off doing any processing after the fact, and a multiband used well always sounds better to me than a broadband comp on acoustic.
...Use volume automation when mixing
...Try varied mic positioning for fingerpicking/strumming, or doing different takes for the soft and loud ac gtr passages - changing mic position for each.
...Use consistent playing technique. If one isn’t getting consistent results during quiet fingerpicking, the best thing you can do is fix it at the source.
...You have to experiment and see what works with your guitar sound and taste. There are many solutions... Try everything and decide for yourself. The main point is to do the tracking by using good mic technique for whatever's being played rather than finding a processing fix for ineffective mic'ing.
----------------------------
Before commenting at the beginning of the thread I listened to the OPs tracks at his site and at CD Baby. Vocals sound good as does the writing and arranging. Acoustic gtr sounds too compressed and unnatural in both strumming and fingerpicked sections in the several tracks I heard. This of course is just my own taste as I prefer a natural sound on ac gtr in this type of music.
Re tracking softly played steel string, the following tracks were done with a small-bodied acoustic strung with slinky .009’s. (doesn’t get softer than this). No broadband compression used. All had gain staging done so that even loud strumming with heavy gauge strings wouldn’t have clipped anything. I do this as a rule when I record myself so I have a huge safety margin to avoid clipping a decent take.
mk41 mic at 2 ft. http://www.lightningmp3.com/live/file.php?id=11936
$30 naiant mic, 2 ft. http://www.lightningmp3.com/live/file.php?id=11937
ECM8000 mic. Mic’s don’t come more noisy than that old ECM8000.
http://www.lightningmp3.com/live/file.php?id=11938