
bouldersoundguy
Well-known member
Yeah, I probably wouldn't put a 4x12 on a chair, but for combos it's the way to go.
Maybe I'm now being a dick, but as for your blumlein setup in the pic, wouldn't that be more of a mid/side setup, but just using two fig 8 mics? At least the way I think of blumlein would be you'd face both mics similar as you would to an XY pattern, except using fig 8 instead of cardioids. In your setup it looks like you are using one pointed at the source and the other off axis. Where as XY are both pointed at the source from different perspectives.
For one it's hot big and bold right up the middle. Don't know about the first few notes but there seems to be a few layers at play too.Whatever Petty and Co. did to get the guitar sound at 1:04 in this tune is pretty much the only method I'd ever want to use. (Though I have no idea how they got it.) The tone's got teeth! Frickin' awesome.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BP5YWmcp49U&list=PL637vGdGXuvKAWGNjz3AxZl0JO3vvjyE-
For one it's hot big and bold right up the middle. Don't know about the first few notes but there seems to be a few layers at play too.
No, not for me, because I close mic, and when you close mic something that's loud as shit with dynamic cardioids, you don't have to turn the mics preamp gain up much at all, thereby minimizing the mic's sensitivity to everything except for what's beating it in the face. I would say that even at low volumes a cardiod mic right on the grill isn't going to be significantly influenced by room sound. They just don't pick up signal that way.
If I were using omnis, figure-8 ribbons, or general room mics, it might be an issue, but even then I'd just move the mic(s) around until I found a good spot for it.
No room mics, no amps on chairs, no blanket tunnels, all big volume all the time with dynamic cardiods right up on the grill. Bam. Done. That's how I do it. There's no reason to get all silly for rock and roll guitars. Dial in a good sound, turn the fucking amp up, and stick a mic on it in a good spot. It's not rocket science.
I thought you were being funny too. But aren't you concerned with damaging your ears? That's gotta be a shit-ton of volume right? Being exposed to that for long periods of time can't be good. Also I'm surprised at how much preamp gain you dial in. I figured you would go a bit lighter on that. The power tubes? - didn't surprise me as much.
That pic was mostly just a joke to demonstrate that I think louder is better. I do usually go much lighter on the preamp gain. Too much preamp gain can sound fizzy and mushy. I pretty much universally prefer less preamp gain and more master volume power section breakup. Depending on the master vol setting, I might run the preamp gain as low as 3 or 4 and still get tons of overdrive. Yes, it's loud as shit and will damage your ears in the long term. These amps have literally knocked things off of my walls. But I think I get better tracks like this, and I'm wearing heavy duty drummer's iso cans anyway when tracking. They attenuate the roar pretty well. All that loud aggressive guitar sound slamming a mic translates into the mix IMO. I hear tracks sometimes from people and you can just tell it was done relatively quietly with too much gain. The sound is stiff and sterile. Sometimes fizzy. I believe in moving air. It makes a difference. If I'm doing a long session of big volume recording, I'll sometimes roll the cabs and mics out into the hallway with long cables and keep the head in the room with me. Even with hearing protection, all that relentless sound can give you a headache. It rattles your brain.
And the neighbors?![]()
Whatever Petty and Co. did to get the guitar sound at 1:04 in this tune is pretty much the only method I'd ever want to use. (Though I have no idea how they got it.) The tone's got teeth! Frickin' awesome.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BP5YWmcp49U&list=PL637vGdGXuvKAWGNjz3AxZl0JO3vvjyE-
OK that makes sense. I'm also learning that preamp gain sounds quite a bit different than power tube gain. Fizzy is one way to describe it. On my Mark V I'd also describe it as "crackly" - like bacon frying. Just too much sizzle. A little sizzle is fine. But too much is too much.
You gotta find that sweet blend of just enough preamp gain combined with power section breakup. That's where I think greatness happens.
They like it.
Yeah. And it can be real touchy. Just a bit too much preamp and you get fizz/crackle/whatever you want to call it. Just a bit too little, and the damn thing sounds like a clean channel.![]()