R
Richard Monroe
Well-known member
Just to clarify...I notice I said 609 one time instead of 604...but I always meant 604.
Too bad, I rather like the 609 on snare. Oh well.
Just to clarify...I notice I said 609 one time instead of 604...but I always meant 604.
But dark and dull is something I wouldn't give to an e609.
Accuracy is not always a good thing. If that's what everyone was after, then most LDCs would be out the question, including some seriously sought after and expensive mics.I appreciate that the e604 is producing the sound you want on snare. Is that the sound of the snare you like, or the sound of the e604? I want a mic to reproduce the actual sound of the instrument, and if the mic can't accurately reproduce the sound of a Djembe, or a zither, a crumhorn, whatever, how can it accurately reproduce the sound of a snare drum? If I wanted an *analogue* of the snare sound, instead of the real sound, I'd use a drum module and triggers.
I just never bothered once I couldn't get them to work on guitar cabs. They've been sitting in their boxes for the last 5 years...I just use my better mics for most things.
Same goes for the SM57 mics. I have a couple of them sitting in their boxes right next to the 609 mics...haven't used them either in 5 years. Too nasty souding on guitar cabs...but I liked it on snare, though now I use the 604, which I think sounds better for snare.
Maybe my memory about them has faded a bit in 5 years....
I'm just not a big dynamic mic user for recording...though I do use them on some things.
And yes, I believe that the e604 creates a "false" sound, which may or may not be useful to any given finished product.
It is my personal mission to "capture" real acoustic sound in real acoustic space, not to create it. This requires careful mic selection and placement, and almost nonexistent post production processing. I am fully aware that that philosophy is more appropriate to an ethnomusicologist than a modern pop/rock producer.
It is my personal mission to "capture" real acoustic sound in real acoustic space, not to create it. This requires careful mic selection and placement, and almost nonexistent post production processing.
Fair enough, and I agree with you 100% that given your premise and goal, your approach is pretty much the only approach, especially when like you stated you're recording classical music, or even jazz for that matter.I agree with you Noisewreck, especially about triggers and samples. My earlier statement is not dogma, but more an expression of philosophy. I understand that many, perhaps even the vast majority of modern AE's, are trying to create a recorded sound that they like, and which sits well in the mix. And yes, I believe that the e604 creates a "false" sound, which may or may not be useful to any given finished product.
It is my personal mission to "capture" real acoustic sound in real acoustic space, not to create it. This requires careful mic selection and placement, and almost nonexistent post production processing. I am fully aware that that philosophy is more appropriate to an ethnomusicologist than a modern pop/rock producer. In that sense, I am doing what many recording people did years ago, to the extent that their skills and equipment allowed. The techniques that we use are always impacted by our goals. If the snare sounds like shit, then I'm going to create a recording of it that sounds like shit, or at least, that is what I will try to do.
It is not my opinion that my goals represent the "one true way", and that every other goal is somehow invalid. *My* mission is to record sound that sounds as close to the original source as possible, hopefully as it sounded in a good room. My experience is that when that is your goal, you're much better off starting with a good room, and a good performance of good music on a good instrument. Otherwise, the truth will hurt. It's not religion. It's just my intent. But then again, that's why I have a degree in Anthropology. I *am* an ethnomusiciologist, not a modern pop-rock producer. On the commercial side, that philosophy works a lot better for recording classical ensembles than the latest Hip-Hop CD.-Richie
All I'm saying is that I record different things than a lot of folks on this board, and trying to get a punchy snare drum sound that sits well in a rock mix is *way* down on my list of needs.
......
Y'all have your problems, and I have mine.