C
chessrock
Banned
coloradojay said:Thanks for the reply Chessrock. I guess what I'm wondering is what should I be listening for in a track like this to note that the room is not good, or adding some undesirable sound to the recording. I think the answer is: there isn't enough mic in this configuration, picking up the room to notice it right now, but when overhead condensors are added the room will be an issue. Am I understanding that correctly?
No problem, Coloradojay.
I think the best way to put it is that it would be very difficult to notice what the room is contributing without hearing the same kit with the same player A/B'ed in a well-treated rooom.
Then it would be a situation where you'd listen to the treated room sample against the non-treated room sample and probably conclude that the bass sounds a lot "ballsier" and present (in the treated room), and the overall balance of the kit noticeably improved. You'd be able to feel more of the kick drum thump in your chest; that sort of thing. You might not even be able to put your finger on it, but you'd notice the difference and the treated-room sample would just sound more professional to you.
You might even believe the entire signal chain was upgraded or that he was playing on a better kit -- it has that much of an effect.
I got to deal with my crappy room. I hope it will be enough for demo quality recording, or a pre-production kind of thing, before going to "pro quality" studio. Wait....I got a better idea, I should sell everything I bought for my homerecording project, and focus in my drumming 
Mostly corning 703 rigid fiberglass (3 lb density, 4" thick) that I place about 3" from the walls hung from hooks. The boards are covered, either with packing blankets -- I just sort of wrap them in the blankets, which looks kind of interesting. A few of them I have covered with funky-looking tapestries and/or any artistically interesting fabric I might find at the fabric store.