H
Harvey Gerst
New member
I just remembered the name of the group that was in here when the MXL-V67G arrived last year. It was "The Touch". They have mp3s of some of the songs we did on their website. Here's 3 with some notes on the recordings:
This is the over the shoulder mic technique I've talked about for acoustic guitars. The mic is an Audix TR-40, almost identical to the Behringer ECM8000. Bass went direct to the board. Drums were ATM25 on kick, Beyer M201 on snare, Sennheiser 504Ds on toms, 421 on floor tom, and Audix TR-40s for over heads. All vocals were thru the V67G without any eq, just some compression using the RNC and the board preamp.
Same basic setup, without the acoustic guitar. This one has the voice a little more out in front so you can hear it a little better. Again, no eq and just some compression on the vocal. Electric guitar was thru a small Charvel 15 watt amp that I designed in the late 80s (I found this one last year in a pawn shop for $20), miced with a Shure SM-57.
Lee has one of the best voices around this area, and he's one of the few people that could have pulled this off. This was our fun song. I added some delay and a little more reverb to his voice for this one. I used the same basic mics for all the instruments, but did some drastic eqing to get a little closer to the sound I wanted on everything.
I don't know how the quality of the mp3s will come thru on your systems. This computer has a pretty crappy sound card so I can't tell how good or bad these mp3 are, but hopefully they'll give you some idea about the mics.
This is the over the shoulder mic technique I've talked about for acoustic guitars. The mic is an Audix TR-40, almost identical to the Behringer ECM8000. Bass went direct to the board. Drums were ATM25 on kick, Beyer M201 on snare, Sennheiser 504Ds on toms, 421 on floor tom, and Audix TR-40s for over heads. All vocals were thru the V67G without any eq, just some compression using the RNC and the board preamp.
Same basic setup, without the acoustic guitar. This one has the voice a little more out in front so you can hear it a little better. Again, no eq and just some compression on the vocal. Electric guitar was thru a small Charvel 15 watt amp that I designed in the late 80s (I found this one last year in a pawn shop for $20), miced with a Shure SM-57.
Lee has one of the best voices around this area, and he's one of the few people that could have pulled this off. This was our fun song. I added some delay and a little more reverb to his voice for this one. I used the same basic mics for all the instruments, but did some drastic eqing to get a little closer to the sound I wanted on everything.
I don't know how the quality of the mp3s will come thru on your systems. This computer has a pretty crappy sound card so I can't tell how good or bad these mp3 are, but hopefully they'll give you some idea about the mics.
Reminds me of my head-bangin' days. Good bass. Kinda' heavy-funky, and very tight with the drummer.

therefore a mp3 recorded at 48kb/s takes approx 2 seconds to download for each second of music. A 96kb/s mp3 takes 4 seconds per second of audio and a 192kb/s takes 8 seconds per second of audio.