M
myurbanodyssey
New member
Wait, I mean a 4 piece band. Sorry!
This will be my first time recording a band, so I need a little help deciding what to mic, where to mic, and whatever else I should consider for getting this right.
This band has a very aggressive sound, and I really want to stay true to that in the recordings. We agreed on recording direct, in one-take, for that "live" feel. They're well-rehearsed, and they really like one-off recordings, so I'm not worried about sounding too "nice," or about getting caught-up in overdubs and whatnot. I just need to capture the intensity and still have a little room to tweak the sound.
The location:
We're recording in a local art space (my preference.) A while back I recorded a live show of their's in mono, and just I loved the sound of this space, and they really fill it. The live recording was great with just a cardiod condenser, but I'm going strictly dynamic this time around.
The Recording Equipment:
-1402vlz Mackie (I'm limited to 6 mics with this.)
-Tascam 238 Syncaset (It can record up to 8 tracks.)
-Shure 51 for vocals (The vocalist is female and has that Janis Joplin thing going on, and she's very good. The band is western, punk, and grungy. I think this will work nicely, but you may not.) I'm hoping the preamps on my Mackie will be enough for this thing. Though, I have a feeling some of you will frown at this.
-4 Shure sm57s
-1 Shure 58 (Now, I could just bum another 57 off a friend, but could I use the 58 as a decent instrument mic? Any wisdom?)
-All the other basics (cables, pop screen, blah, blah, blah...)
Okay, The Band (It's pretty standard):
-Vocalist/Rhythm Guitar
-Bassist
-Drummer
-Lead guitar
The Band's Equipment:
-The vocalist/rhythm guitarist plays through a Fender Twin Reverb Deluxe amp
-The lead guitarist uses a Line 6 Spider 2, with some minimal effects, mostly light distortion, screeching feedback, high-riding kind of stuff.
-The bassist uses a Ampeg 150w amp, if that's even important.
-The Drummer has your basic setup: snare, hi-hat, tom, a ride, a crash, a bass, sticks...
And now, Mic Placement!
-I know I'll need to mic each instrument, but I don't want to mic too close, and I really need tips on avoinding the bleeding from these loud amps, but I'm a little hung-up on how to mic the drums; Should I use two overhead mics, or should I go with one overhead and one on the bass? How to mic everything else seems pretty obvious, but how far do you guys think should I place the mics from the sources?
*My goal is to get the recording sounding really "full". Any tips will help!
Sorry this was so winded, guys.
Again, thanks!
Steven
This will be my first time recording a band, so I need a little help deciding what to mic, where to mic, and whatever else I should consider for getting this right.
This band has a very aggressive sound, and I really want to stay true to that in the recordings. We agreed on recording direct, in one-take, for that "live" feel. They're well-rehearsed, and they really like one-off recordings, so I'm not worried about sounding too "nice," or about getting caught-up in overdubs and whatnot. I just need to capture the intensity and still have a little room to tweak the sound.
The location:
We're recording in a local art space (my preference.) A while back I recorded a live show of their's in mono, and just I loved the sound of this space, and they really fill it. The live recording was great with just a cardiod condenser, but I'm going strictly dynamic this time around.
The Recording Equipment:
-1402vlz Mackie (I'm limited to 6 mics with this.)
-Tascam 238 Syncaset (It can record up to 8 tracks.)
-Shure 51 for vocals (The vocalist is female and has that Janis Joplin thing going on, and she's very good. The band is western, punk, and grungy. I think this will work nicely, but you may not.) I'm hoping the preamps on my Mackie will be enough for this thing. Though, I have a feeling some of you will frown at this.
-4 Shure sm57s
-1 Shure 58 (Now, I could just bum another 57 off a friend, but could I use the 58 as a decent instrument mic? Any wisdom?)
-All the other basics (cables, pop screen, blah, blah, blah...)
Okay, The Band (It's pretty standard):
-Vocalist/Rhythm Guitar
-Bassist
-Drummer
-Lead guitar
The Band's Equipment:
-The vocalist/rhythm guitarist plays through a Fender Twin Reverb Deluxe amp
-The lead guitarist uses a Line 6 Spider 2, with some minimal effects, mostly light distortion, screeching feedback, high-riding kind of stuff.
-The bassist uses a Ampeg 150w amp, if that's even important.
-The Drummer has your basic setup: snare, hi-hat, tom, a ride, a crash, a bass, sticks...
And now, Mic Placement!
-I know I'll need to mic each instrument, but I don't want to mic too close, and I really need tips on avoinding the bleeding from these loud amps, but I'm a little hung-up on how to mic the drums; Should I use two overhead mics, or should I go with one overhead and one on the bass? How to mic everything else seems pretty obvious, but how far do you guys think should I place the mics from the sources?
*My goal is to get the recording sounding really "full". Any tips will help!
Sorry this was so winded, guys.
Again, thanks!
Steven
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