micing a big band.

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andydeedpoll

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hull there :)

in a couple of weeks, i plan on doing a little demo of my big band. it's five saxes, four trombones, four trumpets, bass guitar, electric guitar, keys drums and auxiliary percussion. just stuff from a rehearsal, nothing too fancy. i just thought i'd run my plan by you, to see what you think... my real limitation is the fact i've only got 6 inputs on my sound card, though i can mix more than one mic to one channel.

here's what i was thinking.

two studio projects B1's to cover the horns - i was thinking either directly above the saxes, facing towards the trumpets, to get a spread of the whole section across the stereo image, or one in front, mainly to cover the saxes and get a bit of the 'bones, and the other placed to pick up mainly the trumpets with a bit of the bones, to get more of a saxes-trombones-trumpet thing going once they're panned. any thoughts on that one? i was thinking the first one is more likely, as the second could sound unbalanced.

fairly minimal with the drums - overhead in the form of an SE1a condensor and a bass drum mic, and possibly snare, all mixed down on to one input. i would probably also put the auxiliary percussion onto this channel too.

i was planning on putting the bass guitar, guitar and keys onto two tracks, again as a stereo image, with the bass dead center, and the keys and guitar either side. again, not too sure about this one.

i'd use my last channel as a 'solo' mic - for ocassional vocals, and any solos that are played on any of the wind instruments. this'll probably be an SM58 or some other dynamic mic.

i'm expecting a fair amount of bleed, and the room won't sound that great, but these things are kind of out of my control - like i said, i'm basically recording a rehearsal here.

any thoughts or suggestions?

ta :)

Andy
 
I've recorded a couple of big bands, comparable in size. I had the choice of going 'big' or 'small' the first time I did this. Because of time and technology constraints, I settled on 'small'.

I just used two LDCs, placed as close to the bandleader as I could, a couple of feet above his head, in a rough x-y shape. This worked a treat, and the listener gets to hear (roughly) what the bandleader does.

On other occasions I have added a pair of SDCs to supplement the LCDs, same height, but spaced wide. This works as well. I expect that there are better placement techniques, but these work ok for me.

I didn't worry too much that the kit was off-centre. It was reasonably balanced by timps and other percussion on the other side.
 
ah cool, that sounds like it might be useful, except for the fact that our rehearsal room sounds dreadful :( - i was hoping that using a number of closer mics might help illiminate some of the crappy boominess and things to it.

any other thoughts?

Andy.
 
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