famous beagle
Well-known member
Ok, here's what I'm running:
vocals ---> MXL V67G ---> DMP3 ---> Yamaha AW16G
The attached picture shows a rough sketch of my recording room. It's part of a garage; the floor is still concrete, and the walls are sheetrock. (The bottom wall is brick on the outside, the other brick outside wall is about two feet above the top wall, the house is to the left, and the garage door is to the right, about two feet on the other side of the right wall.) The blue lines are fiberglass panels (light blue are hanging from ceiling. Red and black are singer and mic, respectively.
I'm recording a vocalist who sings VERY loudly. It's a gospel/rock song. He's got a great voice, and it sounds great in the room, so I don't just want to tell him to "sing quieter."
The first verse is nice and mellow, and I had no problem getting a decent sound. I set the levels for that and recorded it first.
However, for the second verse he jumps up an octave and really digs in. So I reset the level for that, and here's my problem.
I'm not close to redlining on the DMP3 or the Yamaha, but it still sounds distorted at times and as if I have no headroom at all. I've tried having him back away from the mic, but then we get too much room sound in the mic.
So here are my questions:
1) Are we distorting the mic itself?
2) If I were able to surround him with gobos (I have the parts, I just need to build them), would he be able to back off the mic more without compromising the sound?
3) What are any other options?
Any input would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
vocals ---> MXL V67G ---> DMP3 ---> Yamaha AW16G
The attached picture shows a rough sketch of my recording room. It's part of a garage; the floor is still concrete, and the walls are sheetrock. (The bottom wall is brick on the outside, the other brick outside wall is about two feet above the top wall, the house is to the left, and the garage door is to the right, about two feet on the other side of the right wall.) The blue lines are fiberglass panels (light blue are hanging from ceiling. Red and black are singer and mic, respectively.
I'm recording a vocalist who sings VERY loudly. It's a gospel/rock song. He's got a great voice, and it sounds great in the room, so I don't just want to tell him to "sing quieter."
The first verse is nice and mellow, and I had no problem getting a decent sound. I set the levels for that and recorded it first.
However, for the second verse he jumps up an octave and really digs in. So I reset the level for that, and here's my problem.
I'm not close to redlining on the DMP3 or the Yamaha, but it still sounds distorted at times and as if I have no headroom at all. I've tried having him back away from the mic, but then we get too much room sound in the mic.
So here are my questions:
1) Are we distorting the mic itself?
2) If I were able to surround him with gobos (I have the parts, I just need to build them), would he be able to back off the mic more without compromising the sound?
3) What are any other options?
Any input would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
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