As promised…The "Deep Purple" Session…
Band line up:
Bass (Peavey Mk4 Head, running 2 1x15"cabs)
Drums (Tama Kit)
Rhythm Guitar (Marshall Stack)
Lead Guitar (Marshall Stack w/Line 6 POD)
Vocals
Keys (Oberheim OB3 + Sharma Rotary Cab)
Recorder - Roland VS1680 (MT2 mode)
Mics:
AT Pro 25 (Bass Drum)
Shure SM57 (Snare Drum)
Shure SM58 (2) (Guitar Cabs) - I know it should have been 57s, but I've only got one!
AT Pro 31a (Hi Hat)
Behringer ECM8000 (2) (Drum Overheads)
Bass - taken from XLR DI out on the amp.
Keys & vox to be overdubbed later…
I took the "bugger the spill" approach, and we set up in an area roughly 30 feet by ten feet. Drums in the middle, bass rig next to it (to the right of the kit as you're looking at it) but facing away from the kit, rhythm stack to the right of the bass rig, lead stack to the left, about fifteen feet, facing away from the kit. Kind of like this:
LEAD/-------------\KIT/--\BASS--\RHYTHM
Hope that's clear. The overheads were set up as spaced omnis, not XY, and the stereo image I got was superb.
Anyhoo…a quick (recorded) level check revealed that everything was running ok, but there was a nasty bassy thud coming from the lead rig, the snare was lacking some bite and definition and the rhythm quitar sound was
godawful - muddy and crackly (stock US Strat through top-end Marshall - how could this be?).
Solutions…I shifted the 57 to point directly at the centre of the snare, which sorted that out (along with a coupla db boost at 1K). Over to the rhythm stack. I assumed I was overloading the mic pre, so I pulled the mic back, knocked the gain down and got the guitarist to play. A-ha! There's the problem. His tone was bloody dreadful. Five minutes' work at the amp and I'd sorted out a nice raw tone which blended well. There's a lesson in there somewhere…Now the Lead Rig…A quick listen revealed the thud was coming from the top cab, so we unplugged it. Easy. Nice tones all round and press "Record".
Got the 1680 back home after a successful evening's recordings (they were expecting to get three tracks down. We got FIVE!).
Set the 1680 back up and had a quick listen. Compress the bass using the "CompBass" insert effect…add 3db @ 800hz…
nice. Knock everything below 300hz off the hi hat mic and pan to 3 O'clock…[/i]nice[/i]. 3db of boost on the bass drum…punchy - the Pro 25 captured loads of beater click, so I didn't have to eq that in! Again,
nice...Pan the guitars to 7 & 5 O'clock…bit more 1K on the snare and a short (0.9 sec) plate reverb. All so far, so good.
Time to check the overheads. First off - believe
EVERYTHING that's been written on here about using ECM8000s for overheads! They capture everything from the kit. I also noticed that I had virtually no spill from the guitar amps, and just a little from the bassamp. The sound was a little too "full" though - the cymbals sounded a little too "trashy" and phasey. First I messed around with EQ, which wasn't doing it for me, and then I thought "what about the MTK algorithms in the 1680 fx boards?". After a couple of experiments which got it nearly right, I tried the "MTK: Acoustic" algorithm. Overhead heaven. My o/h's now had a beautiful "sheen" to them like you hear on "real" records. I'd recorded them originally on to tracks 1&2, so I bounced them to 15&16 as a stereo pair and printed the insert fx to tape (disc?) as I did it, so I could free the fx board up for mixdown (multi-band compression is
seriously resource-intensive).
Marvellous night and marvellous pieces of kit. I've previously used a pair of 4033s as overheads, but the ECM8000s just slaughter them.
Hope this helps.
KEEP ON RECORDING!