jonnyc said:
Well you really need to point the end more towards the head. Make the drummer raise his cymbals. Remember its not about comfort, its about getting the sound right.
In many ways it really
is about comfort as you want the drummer to give you the best performance possible... however, in this particular case it's the drummer that would be my first guess as to why there is a problem in the first place.
By raising the cymbals you'll do two things... first; you'll have room to put the mics on the toms the way you'd like... second; you'll cause the drummer to hit the cymbals softer [I don't know why that happens... but most of the time when you raise the cymbals the drummer seems to hit the cymbals softer... which is usually a good thing, but not always].
Your major problem at the moment really isn't mic placement, it's the drummer. If the drummer was hitting the toms properly then you'd experience a significant level difference between the toms and the snare. Your drummer is hitting the toms rather lightly which is why you don't have the level difference you'd like.
So... where does that leave you? You can either replace the drummer with a good one; tell the drummer that he's hitting the toms like a pussy... which is giving you agita on getting the toms to sound like toms... so if he wouldn't mind hitting the drums as a man might hit the drums then your life will be easier; and last but not least [ok, probably least... this is a real "80's" trick]... get some "contact pickups" [like you might use on an acoustic guitar] and tape them to the top heads. Record their output on separate tracks. Use the output from these pickups as a "key/trigger" track for some noise gates so you can accentuate the glancing blows to the toms in the context of the mix.
I guess the 4th thing you could do [even if it's just as an excercize to show the drummer that he's playing like shit] is mic the kit with 2 or 3 mics [like it's one big instrument] and tell the drummer that he is now 100% responsible for the balance of the drums. If the hi hat is too loud... he's going to have to hit it softer... if the toms aren't loud enough, he's going to have to hit them harder, etc., etc., etc.
Hey... the 2-3 mic thing was used on most of the Led Zeppelin and Who records... why not yours?
Best of luck with it.