B
Big The Cat
New member
Hey, i've got quite a problem i could do with some advice with...
This is a long problem that I've been trying to address on a few forums, but I've had no real success. I just keep getting the answer, "You won't know till you try it, since its what ever YOU think sounds best!". But I'd like some answers that could give me a bit of direction since i don't have a lot of money to throw about.
(the exact sound I'm after is that warm sound you hear on records such as Nirvana's Nevermind and Jeff Buckley's Grace. But i plan on putting my own sound onto that)
Anyway, I'm currently working with my own band and i have quite a bit of gear but its not getting the exact sound I'm after, so I'm looking into expanding
At the moment i have:
lexicon ionix fw810s
Macbook pro 15inch intel i5
Logic 9 / Ardour(Rarely)
An SM58
and i tend to borrow a few mics from friends (In most cases its Gatt Drum mics, and Behringer C1)
(Also, the gear the band uses is sound, A high quality kit with a good drummer behind it, the amps are fender and mesa Both Valve using fender, ibanez and prs guitars)
I know your thinking that the mics i use are the bad link, but im buying some new mics.
I planed on buying a Rode K2 or NTK, A sontronics stc1 and a Sennheiser e602. I would mic the drum kit using the Glyn John method for a more open sound (And to save on the budget...) and then use the K2 and the sm58 for just about everything else.
I've been told that a valve preamp would be useful, and a hardware analogue mixer (To EQ in all the drums properly (Rather than using the DBX software mixer that comes bundled with the Lexicon).
I also have an old phillips 4 track Tape recorder thats currently getting repaired at the moment, and some people said that i should bounce my tracks down to that to help give the analogue sound.
To sum up, my questions are
1. What gear would help my current setup help me achieve the 90s sound i'm after? And would the mics i said that im investing in help me achieve that sound?
2. Would a hardware mixer give me a better analogue EQ than the software mixer?
3. Would bouncing my tracks to a tape recorder, then back on help achieve my analogue sound?
4. What kind of space to record in would be the most beneficial for the sound?
I know this is a very specific question, but any advice would be appreciated!
Thanks!
This is a long problem that I've been trying to address on a few forums, but I've had no real success. I just keep getting the answer, "You won't know till you try it, since its what ever YOU think sounds best!". But I'd like some answers that could give me a bit of direction since i don't have a lot of money to throw about.
(the exact sound I'm after is that warm sound you hear on records such as Nirvana's Nevermind and Jeff Buckley's Grace. But i plan on putting my own sound onto that)
Anyway, I'm currently working with my own band and i have quite a bit of gear but its not getting the exact sound I'm after, so I'm looking into expanding
At the moment i have:
lexicon ionix fw810s
Macbook pro 15inch intel i5
Logic 9 / Ardour(Rarely)
An SM58
and i tend to borrow a few mics from friends (In most cases its Gatt Drum mics, and Behringer C1)
(Also, the gear the band uses is sound, A high quality kit with a good drummer behind it, the amps are fender and mesa Both Valve using fender, ibanez and prs guitars)
I know your thinking that the mics i use are the bad link, but im buying some new mics.
I planed on buying a Rode K2 or NTK, A sontronics stc1 and a Sennheiser e602. I would mic the drum kit using the Glyn John method for a more open sound (And to save on the budget...) and then use the K2 and the sm58 for just about everything else.
I've been told that a valve preamp would be useful, and a hardware analogue mixer (To EQ in all the drums properly (Rather than using the DBX software mixer that comes bundled with the Lexicon).
I also have an old phillips 4 track Tape recorder thats currently getting repaired at the moment, and some people said that i should bounce my tracks down to that to help give the analogue sound.
To sum up, my questions are
1. What gear would help my current setup help me achieve the 90s sound i'm after? And would the mics i said that im investing in help me achieve that sound?
2. Would a hardware mixer give me a better analogue EQ than the software mixer?
3. Would bouncing my tracks to a tape recorder, then back on help achieve my analogue sound?
4. What kind of space to record in would be the most beneficial for the sound?
I know this is a very specific question, but any advice would be appreciated!
Thanks!