Get a preamp or a mic?

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abbazabba

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Here's what I have:

2 SM57s
2 Marshall 603s
Marshall MXP 2001
Sennheiser MD421
AKG D112
AKG D1000e
Soundcraft M8 mixer
Digi 001
(plus a number of old weird mics...have no idea what most of them are, but they're fun to use just for color)

I will be recording a standard rock band setup - guitar, bass, drums, 2 vocalists. I feel like I can definitely make do with what I have and creatively make it work, but I want to invest in something else that will improve my recordings in general.

My budget is ideally around $500 but I'd be willing to take it up to $800 for the right thing. I had been pretty sure that what I needed to round off my collection was a high quality vocal/all-purpose mic and have been eyeing some of the Rodes.

I'm not 100% newbie but I don't have any experience with preamps. Lately I've read enough about them and see the importance people put in them, so I've started wondering if that's what I should be looking at instead of a mic.

What would the smartest thing to purchase? A mic, a nice 1 channel pre, or one of the 8 channel preamps? Would the preamps on my Soundcraft and Digi be sufficient or could a preamp within my budget enhance the quality of my recording significantly more with just the set of mics that I have?
Thanks for your advice.
 
What monitors are you using and is your room acoustically treated? Those would be the first things that will make nice improvements in your recording and mixing endeavors.
 
It would be easier to bob for apples than to come up with the right answer to this question.
 
What scrubs said. You could buy a neve pre and a u87 and they both are gonna sound crappy in a shitty sounding room.
 
If you're recording in an ugly sounding room, it helps to mic everything really really close in my expirience. Then again, I record in a 20ft tall, slanted ceilings, spacious living room :D
 
Well the Rode's are nice. Like the NT1a.I've got two and they are great. The NT1000 is super clean and pick up a pin drop. But If you're that concerned with your sound pick up a nice mic like a Neumann. A pre would be good if you had a garbage board-but you've got a Soundcraft so you're in the matrix. I'd say just pick up a nice mic and maybe some software plugins..
 
wheelema said:
Personally I would pop for a Shure SM7B ($320) and a M-Audio DMP-3 ($160). This would give you a gold (albeit budget) vocal channel.

i like this suggestion as well, but unless you are short on pres, i doubt if the DPM3 is going to be significantly better in the pre department than the M8s pres. I don;t have any really experience with any non budget pres, but i have both the DMP3 and a soundcraft M4 and there is not htat significant a diffence in my experience. Whether a mid range pre like the brick or RNP would show a signicant improvement either, i can't tell you, but personally you have a pretty good general use mic cab and decent mic pres in the M8, i would make the next investment all in a much-better-than-budget mic or pre.

Look at all the suggestions about treatment and monitoring if you haven't already as well.

if you don't need to treat your space, a nice vocal mic might be a good option, AT 4050, SM7 (cheaper), SP T3 all things i would consider if i had $400-500 to spend, for $700 a 414 might be an option.

daav
 
daav said:
i like this suggestion as well, but unless you are short on pres, i doubt if the DPM3 is going to be significantly better in the pre department than the M8s pres. I don;t have any really experience with any non budget pres, but i have both the DMP3 and a soundcraft M4 and there is not htat significant a diffence in my experience. Whether a mid range pre like the brick or RNP would show a signicant improvement either, i can't tell you, but personally you have a pretty good general use mic cab and decent mic pres in the M8, i would make the next investment all in a much-better-than-budget mic or pre.

Look at all the suggestions about treatment and monitoring if you haven't already as well.

if you don't need to treat your space, a nice vocal mic might be a good option, AT 4050, SM7 (cheaper), SP T3 all things i would consider if i had $400-500 to spend, for $700 a 414 might be an option.

I had given up on this thread after the "bobbing for apples" comment and only just now checked it. Thanks to everyone who responded constructively.

Perhaps I should have been more specific or something. Yours and danico4not's replies was what I was looking for. I understand the importance of a good room and good micing and performance and all that. I'd heard the M8 pres were quality, but as I said, I have no experience with anything else.
I think I'll go with the buying a solid vocal mic. I'll check out all your recommendations.
 
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