J
Jsn7821
New member
How did I do? any tips?
jonnyc said:I'd say the noisey pre's could be the problem however I've used Behri gear and don't recall it being that noisey. I think you might want to turn the cymbals down a bit, use a lot less verb on the snare. Have you tried getting a good kick sound with just a little eq. Also how are you placing the mic in the kick? I've found that a proper tuning and mic placement can make a kick sound amazing. I used to eq the hell outta my kick then use a multiband to fix whatever was wrong. After getting pissed I figured I'd stop doing it the lazy way. You might want to play more with mic placement. Also you don't need to use effects to make songs sound good, I rarely use any effects and I think the last band I recorded turned out really decent. I'll see if I can get a sample up tomorrow of an instrumental with just a little eq touch on every track, and some very light compression on the master channel.
jonnyc said:Listening to the song again the snare isn't horrible. But now I'm hearing some scattered distortion, is the bass distorting? You're kit sounds very late 60's ish. When you say the mic is 18" out so you mean off the batter head or actually outside of the drum itself? As far as the over heads go I do the xy pattern over the middle of the kit and kinda low on it, its important not to be hard on the cymbals when you do that or period for that matter. Hit your drums harder, cymbals lighter. You're guitars sound a little too far back in the background. If you could maybe make them louder or use less reverb.
)gcapel said:the actual music being played is killer.
jonnyc said:You need to get the mic in the kick. If you do that you won't need a two mic set up. Most people freak out about cutting a hole in the reso head but don't sweat it, if you want you can just take the reso head off, but the mic really really needs to be in the kick. I can say that I also liked the tune so don't think its the song I'm being harsh on because it isn't. Try to get the snare mic closer to you strike point and also move the mic closer to the hihat pointed away from it to help prevent extra bleed, although you do want some bleed from it. With LDC's you may want them a bit more off the kit, a little higher maybe. Also if you can try that stereo configuration I was talking about. You could also just start with a mono three mic approach instead of trying to do stereo. Your style of music has that kind of bluesy raw feel and keeping the micing on the kit simple may actually benefit you.
jonnyc said:Sounds like a raw recording with reverb. Cymbals are really tinny and harsh. It was also pretty noisey all around. What type of set up are you using? How many mics on drums? Guitar amps? If I had a little info maybe I could give you some tips.

TravisinFlorida said:Maybe the mp3 clip has changed but I don't hear any noise. A little finger noise on the bass is all I hear. It does sound like the bass is distorting at times. Guitar sounds kind of dull to me. The recorded sound I mean, not the playing. I don't hear anything tinny or harsh either. Are my ears bad? I've been slammin around 40 ft. sticks of black iron all day.
