
LI_Slim
voice in the wilderness
Like most of us who have recorded acoustic guitar, I have tried various mics and combinations of mics in various placements, dutifully following the various excellent advice that I have seen on this BBS.
But the other day I kind of started over. It was the first time recording my new guitar, a Breedlove Focus (cedar/rosewood), and I was also trying out my new AT 4041 (small condensor). I used that single mic. I tried recording the same part of a song with the mic positioned five different ways:
1. Pointed at the fingerboard around the 14th fret, about 12" away.
2. Pointed just off the edge of the soundhole (the 1st string side) about 15" away.
3. Pointed just below the bridge about 15" away.
4. Pointed at the sound hole about 18-20" away.
5. Pointed at the sound hole about 6" away.
Number 5, I think, is what people do when they don't think about it. Number 1 is the most common suggestion.
Number 5 was by far the best. It sounded like the guitar sounds when you're sitting in front of it, clear and with full harmonics. Number 1 was too thin; Numbers 2 and 3 were kind of muddy and boxy; number 4 was, well, too far-away sounding.
Are we better off just putting the right mic in front of a nice guitar and hittin' the switch?
But the other day I kind of started over. It was the first time recording my new guitar, a Breedlove Focus (cedar/rosewood), and I was also trying out my new AT 4041 (small condensor). I used that single mic. I tried recording the same part of a song with the mic positioned five different ways:
1. Pointed at the fingerboard around the 14th fret, about 12" away.
2. Pointed just off the edge of the soundhole (the 1st string side) about 15" away.
3. Pointed just below the bridge about 15" away.
4. Pointed at the sound hole about 18-20" away.
5. Pointed at the sound hole about 6" away.
Number 5, I think, is what people do when they don't think about it. Number 1 is the most common suggestion.
Number 5 was by far the best. It sounded like the guitar sounds when you're sitting in front of it, clear and with full harmonics. Number 1 was too thin; Numbers 2 and 3 were kind of muddy and boxy; number 4 was, well, too far-away sounding.
Are we better off just putting the right mic in front of a nice guitar and hittin' the switch?