H
HapiCmpur
New member
Does anybody have any personal experience recording vocals and/or acoustic guitars with a Shure KSM27? If so, what do you think of it and how do you get the most out of it? I’ve run a search on the BBS and have found that people only mention the 27 in equipment lists. Nobody seems to have anything good or bad to say about it. Here’s why I ask.
A trusted salesdude at my local Guitar Center sold me a KSM27 for $250 on the assurance that it would reproduce sound as authentically as any $500 condenser mic. I haven’t really worked with it much yet, but so far I’m not terribly happy with it. It’s giving me cold, thin, rather colorless vocals. However, there are so many variables involved here that the problem is more likely to be with my room than with the mic itself. That leaves me with four options (I think), and I’m looking for the one that will cost me the least in terms of both money and labor. They are:
a) Buy a new mic--one that adds warmth.
b) Stick with the 27, but EQ the hell out it. (Something I don’t do very well.)
c) Stick with the 27, but process the sound through other gizmos. (Something I have no experience with.)
d) Add sound absorbers and diffusers to the room.
Since I record in my bedroom and my wife has already granted me considerable leeway in terms of “decorating” with my equipment, I’m leaning away from adding sound absorbers and diffusers. The most I can really do in that regard, I believe, is hang some heavier drapes over the windows. And even so, I don’t know if deadening the room will add color to vocals.
Anyway, I’m wondering if anybody can give me some first-hand insight into the KSM27 and what might be done to warm it up—or what I might replace it with to counteract a "cold" room.
A trusted salesdude at my local Guitar Center sold me a KSM27 for $250 on the assurance that it would reproduce sound as authentically as any $500 condenser mic. I haven’t really worked with it much yet, but so far I’m not terribly happy with it. It’s giving me cold, thin, rather colorless vocals. However, there are so many variables involved here that the problem is more likely to be with my room than with the mic itself. That leaves me with four options (I think), and I’m looking for the one that will cost me the least in terms of both money and labor. They are:
a) Buy a new mic--one that adds warmth.
b) Stick with the 27, but EQ the hell out it. (Something I don’t do very well.)
c) Stick with the 27, but process the sound through other gizmos. (Something I have no experience with.)
d) Add sound absorbers and diffusers to the room.
Since I record in my bedroom and my wife has already granted me considerable leeway in terms of “decorating” with my equipment, I’m leaning away from adding sound absorbers and diffusers. The most I can really do in that regard, I believe, is hang some heavier drapes over the windows. And even so, I don’t know if deadening the room will add color to vocals.
Anyway, I’m wondering if anybody can give me some first-hand insight into the KSM27 and what might be done to warm it up—or what I might replace it with to counteract a "cold" room.
