A
artCROSS
New member
I have a very crappy pulse drum set (sells about 150 on musiciansfriend) but i love it to death. It does what i need it to do, which is mainly to let out some aggression
However, i've been wanting to record it, in a mix with piano, distorted, clean, and acoustic guitar, and a bass, and I'm completely new to drum micing. My question is, is it worth it to buy an atm25 for the bass and a sm57 for the snare (using my existing condensers as overheads) or should i just buy one of those nady/samson/at drum mic kits that are $200 or less. Since the drums aren't high quality, would it be a waste of money to shell out for a nice kick/snare mic that would be limited in recording a decent sound source, or would using crappy mics just make a crappy set sound crappier?
also, i heard i could make the worst set sound better if i just put some decent heads on it...true or false? Any constructive advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
However, i've been wanting to record it, in a mix with piano, distorted, clean, and acoustic guitar, and a bass, and I'm completely new to drum micing. My question is, is it worth it to buy an atm25 for the bass and a sm57 for the snare (using my existing condensers as overheads) or should i just buy one of those nady/samson/at drum mic kits that are $200 or less. Since the drums aren't high quality, would it be a waste of money to shell out for a nice kick/snare mic that would be limited in recording a decent sound source, or would using crappy mics just make a crappy set sound crappier?also, i heard i could make the worst set sound better if i just put some decent heads on it...true or false? Any constructive advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!

IMO, homerecordists have no money to waste. You don't have time to get stuff that you'll end up selling. Buy once ... buy quality ... buy the best you can afford ... and grow!