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drumrguy
New member
Okay, im new to the forum and have a few questions.
IM doing some home recording, and have a korg d1200 recorder, and PA head, which i use as a mixer sometimes if i need that many tracks. For my drum recording i use 2 samson condenser mic's over head, and an SM 57 on the snare, and SM 58 or EV 500(i think) for the bass drum.
oh yeah also, im recording in a room that is about 12X18 have padding up on the walls. Am concidering building a drum booth but dont have the resources right now to fund that.
Anyways, back to the question:
First question: with the mics i have mentioned, can there be any better placement?of them, or would i be better off only using one of those condensers over head, and use one for something else.
2. When i listen back on the play back the 2 condensers pick up the bass drum, alot, and produce a bad recording, is there anything i can do to limit the amount of bass that is bled into the microphone
3. Any one who wants to help me in any way, i am very appreciative, im getting into this recording stuff, and im having a hard time figuring drum recording.
Final THought?
Does the room i am recording in need to be padded up all over the whole thing? And Will recording in room with a whole lot of natural bounce from the walls produce a bad recording? (as far as drums go)
IM doing some home recording, and have a korg d1200 recorder, and PA head, which i use as a mixer sometimes if i need that many tracks. For my drum recording i use 2 samson condenser mic's over head, and an SM 57 on the snare, and SM 58 or EV 500(i think) for the bass drum.
oh yeah also, im recording in a room that is about 12X18 have padding up on the walls. Am concidering building a drum booth but dont have the resources right now to fund that.
Anyways, back to the question:
First question: with the mics i have mentioned, can there be any better placement?of them, or would i be better off only using one of those condensers over head, and use one for something else.
2. When i listen back on the play back the 2 condensers pick up the bass drum, alot, and produce a bad recording, is there anything i can do to limit the amount of bass that is bled into the microphone
3. Any one who wants to help me in any way, i am very appreciative, im getting into this recording stuff, and im having a hard time figuring drum recording.
Final THought?
Does the room i am recording in need to be padded up all over the whole thing? And Will recording in room with a whole lot of natural bounce from the walls produce a bad recording? (as far as drums go)