L
LIMiT
New member
You guys act like mic'ing a guitar cab is in some way a delicate task.
Come on.
It's a fucking speaker. Okay?
It's not that big or spread out.
It's usually no more than the size of a very small vaccum cleaner. No, I take that back ... most vaccum cleaners are worlds bigger than a typical speaker in a guitar cab.
Honestly, this is painful for me to have to say this ... but a drum set ... is generally very complex to record. You should be stressing out about every inch that your mics might be off, because yes, it will make a difference. On something like a drum set. Just so we're clear on this.
Accoustic guitar? Vocals? Same thing. An inch will make a world of difference. But guys ... a guitar cab speaker is nothing. I hate to shatter your world and all, but it's a fucking speaker. Me and your three-year-old daughter / sister / niece ... we eat guitar cab speakers for breakfast. Like a bowl of shredded wheat or fruit loops. You have this little speaker in front of you ... you stick a mic on it, and as long as you're not fucking retarted or an idiot savant, you should be fine, and your world of recording should be all fine and dandy from that point on. Unless, of course, you are a complete and utter moron.
It's not that complex. Not a lot of square centimeters to cover ... and if figuring out the best positioning of a mic on a guitar cab speaker is in any way a challenge ... or something that requires even the most minute strain of energy in a single brain cell of your neural network ...
... then give it up! You'r enot cut out for this shit. Okay? I don't know how else to tell you this. But for the sake of all that is holy ... drop this shit. Now. Thank you.
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a speaker is a speaker huh...just like studio monitor is a monitor. Not to mention the cab enclosure, resonance of that speaker inside that enclosure ,..lifting the cab off the ground...wiring...etc etc. It all sound the same does it?
How long have you been doing this for?
I find it amazing how you can generalize how simple recording a guitar track is. I've assisted some pretty talented engineers, and more often than not, they go back to retrack, or re-amp the performance to get the sound best suited for the song.
And if you think moving a mic on a speaker away from the cone towards the dust cap doesn't change the tone, then you should quit...cause your ears are shot.
I wish people would only post helpfull stuff in threads...not tell people to quit when they're given advice to experiment with mic placement.
-LIMiT