C
chessrock
Banned
theletterq said:I sure hope that wasn't a rental kit on "Just Like So" on your examples page.![]()
Yea, you bring up a really good example of what happens when people bring in crappy-sounding kits.

theletterq said:I sure hope that wasn't a rental kit on "Just Like So" on your examples page.![]()
nicolaad30 said:The point is that you can make the nice drums to sound like shit and the simple one to souhnd like a god with micing tachniques. It not only depends on the drums...
This is for all of you thinking that the drums make the sound...
kjam22 said:One more thought..... If anyone (including Chessrock) has some suggestions how I can achieve a better drum sound (besides buy a new kit and hire a drummer) I'm wide open for suggestions. Typical micing technique is two sm-81 overheads, beta 52 in kick, and 57 on snare.
chessrock said:
2) EQ : 25 khz is the golden frequency -- on snare, it will give you more crack, and on kick it will give you more click. The tricky part is that on overheads, it will also make the cymbals sound like ass . . . so first you gotta' gate the snare and kick, then give 25k a boost on kick if it needs more click, and / or snare if that needs more crack.
chessrock said:Thanks for the corrections, LD.
I've made the necessary revisions above -- in bold, so as to make it Littledog proof.
Yes, folks, in case you couldn't have used deductive reasoning to perhaps figured out yourself that it was, indeed, a typo. I was refering to the frequency of 2,500 hz . Just so you didn't think I was trying to drive your dogs crazy or anything . . .
Once more for our friend, Littledog, that's two-thousand five-hundred, hertz.
Hey, LD, I thought you were going to Gearsluts to "hang" with your "pal," Jules.I thought he might be touched by the fact that you missed him.
kjam22 said:I'm with you on the EQ and I'm typically in that ballpark. I think the sound I'm looking for is close... but I haven't really obtained it yet.
No doubt I'm not a great drummer. Not a lot I can do about that. And my kit is 6 month old Pearl Export. Sabien cymbals. To me... it sounds much better live than it does when I record it. That's why I feel like I'm not doing something right when recording it.
Since I'm on a Yamaha hard disk recorder.... I'll do some checking to see about Phase. I had not thought of that... and that might make a lot of sense.
Thanks for the advice.
chessrock said:After listening to your stuff, I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with the sound of the kit or the way your're playing.
Your style just seems to be very laid-back, ala Grateful Dead as opposed to Led Zep or Pearl Jam. I really like your tunes, by the way. Very impressive stuff.
Paying more attention to phase will give everything more clarity and focus . . . but other than that, it sounds like you have all the tools. Your kit and playing are more than adequate for the style of music you're doing -- it's a good fit, actually.
If anyting, you might just keep trying to improve on your overall recording and mixing skills. Just plain better recordings in general will make everything sound better, including the drums.
theletterq said:I may see close mics on the toms in your future - doesn't have to be anything extravagant, just something to add a little beef and attack. Or play with the overhead EQ, which gets tricky with the cymbals in there. A bigger, deeper, larger tuning may help as well.
Try experimenting with your snare mic positioning. I've found on my snare, that it benefits from having the mic up and out a little - about an inch or so outside the rim and up about 2-3 inches. This gives the sound a little room to develop.
Remember that most "studio" snare sounds are either samples, compressed with a very good compressor, EQ'd with a very good EQ or played very hard with rimshots which deliver that smacky, crack sound.
chessrock said:I'm sure there's plenty of documentation of some type somwhere of the type of drums Bonham used . . . how he tuned them . . . how hard he hit them, etc. etc. etc.
And I don't know about you, but I have a rental shop close by that can get me just about anything I'd need for a day or two. Usually around $50 - 75. Pretty reasonable.
Go ahead and stick your room mics up and compress 'em good. You're still not going to sound a damn thing like Bonham . . . not even remotely close -- perhaps a sad, sick comparison at best . . . utill you figure out how to get his sound on your own. And once that's accomplished, I'll guarantee you I could put up a couple mics overhead, one on kick and one on the snare . . . slap on some "huge-ass tank" or "warehouse" reverb and compress the crap out of it and it will likely sound like a reasonable approximation that would do Bonham proud.