S
spuntotheratboy
New member
Hello all,
I want to record a fiddle and guitar duo playing live (that is, at the same time, not in front of an audience) traditional music: Old-time, Irish and Swedish mostly.
The instruments are great, both rich and bright, the players are good (the fiddle player is me so take that with a pinch of salt if you like) so there will be some expressive dynamic and tonal variation.
The room is untreated but not awful: a largish, irregularly-shaped combined kitchen and living room with a pitched ceiling, wood floor, plasterboard walls, tiles at one end and sofa at the other, wooden dining table and so on.
The interface is a Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 — only two of those inputs send phantom, so as far as I can see I'm limited to two condenser mics at a time. I could probably borrow a DI box for now, actually, or even buy one, but a decent mic pre-amp is a distant dream.
Mics available: I have two crappy SM58 copies, and that's it for dynamic mics (for the moment: I plan to get a couple of SM57s when I can afford them). I have an Audio-Technica clip-on goose-neck condenser which I've used on the fiddle live for many years — it's a great mic. I've got some more kit arriving soon: a matched pair of Behringer C2 small-diaphragm condensers, and an Audio-Technica 2050 large-diaphragm condenser which is switchable cardioid-8-omni.
The guitar has a reasonably good internal pick-up with a 1/4" TS out.
Does anyone have any advice on how to get the best out of what I have available? My original thought was to spot with the C2s and have the 2050 between us in figure 8, but I don't have enough phantom for that... although DI box?
I've been a musician for 44 years, I've recorded in studios all over the world and worked with some great producers and engineers, but I haven't done any recording myself since I had a cassette four-track in the nineties, and that was only ever a sketchbook so I never put any thought into sonics. Any advice gratefully received!
Thanks,
Ben
I want to record a fiddle and guitar duo playing live (that is, at the same time, not in front of an audience) traditional music: Old-time, Irish and Swedish mostly.
The instruments are great, both rich and bright, the players are good (the fiddle player is me so take that with a pinch of salt if you like) so there will be some expressive dynamic and tonal variation.
The room is untreated but not awful: a largish, irregularly-shaped combined kitchen and living room with a pitched ceiling, wood floor, plasterboard walls, tiles at one end and sofa at the other, wooden dining table and so on.
The interface is a Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 — only two of those inputs send phantom, so as far as I can see I'm limited to two condenser mics at a time. I could probably borrow a DI box for now, actually, or even buy one, but a decent mic pre-amp is a distant dream.
Mics available: I have two crappy SM58 copies, and that's it for dynamic mics (for the moment: I plan to get a couple of SM57s when I can afford them). I have an Audio-Technica clip-on goose-neck condenser which I've used on the fiddle live for many years — it's a great mic. I've got some more kit arriving soon: a matched pair of Behringer C2 small-diaphragm condensers, and an Audio-Technica 2050 large-diaphragm condenser which is switchable cardioid-8-omni.
The guitar has a reasonably good internal pick-up with a 1/4" TS out.
Does anyone have any advice on how to get the best out of what I have available? My original thought was to spot with the C2s and have the 2050 between us in figure 8, but I don't have enough phantom for that... although DI box?
I've been a musician for 44 years, I've recorded in studios all over the world and worked with some great producers and engineers, but I haven't done any recording myself since I had a cassette four-track in the nineties, and that was only ever a sketchbook so I never put any thought into sonics. Any advice gratefully received!
Thanks,
Ben