L
littledog
New member
Re: whoa...
As far as one size fits all, most people I know tend to use only one or two basic drum mic'ing schemes anyway - this is just a different one. So far, it's worked for me on every kit and style I've tried it on, but that doesn't mean you'll like it as much as I do - I'm just suggesting you try it once before trying to argue that it might not work.
The advantage is that it focuses the overheads on the snare. Most people end up with overheads that pick up more cymbals than anything else. This forces them to become more dependant on close mics for the drums themselves, so often end up just rolling off all the low end on the overheads and using them just to get a good cymbal sound. Recorderman's method still gets a great cymbal sound, but you are also getting a great snare sound as well. And it seems to help the kick and toms too.
As I said, try it first. You might like it.
As far as the rest - I usually don't EQ or compress my overheads while tracking. I control clipping by setting the gain on my mic preamps appropriately. Admittedly, drummers tend to play louder during songs than during sound checks, so I often have to adjust the mic preamp volumes downward from time to time on each particular song. Since I record digitally at 24 bit, it's not that big a concern to have every track as "hot" as possible, so I can err on the side of caution with gain settings.
If you are using very sesnitive mics (like the Earthworks QTC's, e.g.) try using an in-line pad before the signal gets to the preamp.
Aurora said:Thanks, littledog, that sounds awesome.
The only problem is that Recorderman's method sounds a bit too one-size-fits-all in theory. I mean, folks come in all the time with different cymbal setups and stuff of that nature, it sounds like that doesn't always accomodate variables very well. Any variations of the method you've had to try?
And also, what is the consensus on EQ for the overheads? And should they be compressed quite a bit or little at all? Without comp, my snare threatens to peak my ovhd mics constantly, but with too much it squashes everything and sucks the life out of it.
Thoughts?
thanks
R
As far as one size fits all, most people I know tend to use only one or two basic drum mic'ing schemes anyway - this is just a different one. So far, it's worked for me on every kit and style I've tried it on, but that doesn't mean you'll like it as much as I do - I'm just suggesting you try it once before trying to argue that it might not work.
The advantage is that it focuses the overheads on the snare. Most people end up with overheads that pick up more cymbals than anything else. This forces them to become more dependant on close mics for the drums themselves, so often end up just rolling off all the low end on the overheads and using them just to get a good cymbal sound. Recorderman's method still gets a great cymbal sound, but you are also getting a great snare sound as well. And it seems to help the kick and toms too.
As I said, try it first. You might like it.
As far as the rest - I usually don't EQ or compress my overheads while tracking. I control clipping by setting the gain on my mic preamps appropriately. Admittedly, drummers tend to play louder during songs than during sound checks, so I often have to adjust the mic preamp volumes downward from time to time on each particular song. Since I record digitally at 24 bit, it's not that big a concern to have every track as "hot" as possible, so I can err on the side of caution with gain settings.
If you are using very sesnitive mics (like the Earthworks QTC's, e.g.) try using an in-line pad before the signal gets to the preamp.