emptyframe
New member
I'm interested in getting some new microphones for a project I'll be working on this summer. I've made lots of recordings, but am fairly clueless in the area of microphones. That's why I'm here, soliciting your expertise. Up until now, I've gotten by with a single SM57 (seen better days), several noisy electret mics(move the cable around until it stops making the hum), and the built-in stereo mic in my Zoom H2(sent away for repairs). As far as I can tell, just about anything will be a step upward.
I'm involved in a mostly improvisational, avant-garde project. We play for hours and hours, then edit and collage the results. We love abrasive editing flourishes and unusual effects processing. We'll be recording in several untreated rooms. Instruments: saxophone, glockenspiel, bucket drums, viola, amplified electric guitar, hand-held cassette-tape-players, finger-cymbals, voice, some piano maybe... pretty much anything that's lying around. Electronics and effects will be added "line-in" for the most part. I am interested in getting a stereo pair of microphones so that we can capture the actual space of the performance. I'd like to have a more-or-less fixed recording setup where we can play and move about the room, without having to re-adjust the microphones often. What microphone style would be best for this application? From my research, it sounds like a pair of small to medium diameter condenser mics might work.
My budget is approximately $200. Right now, I'm considering the following configurations:
1. Stereo pair of SDCs (MXL 603, SP1, CAD GXL1200, or Naiant X-Q) for live room recordings with mostly acoustic instruments. MXL V67g for over-dubbing solo instruments and voice.
-OR-
2. Stereo pair of Studio Projects B1s to use for live stereo recordings and solo recordings.
Please let me know if you think these setups sound appropriate. I'm not interested in spending $300+ on a microphone, so please don't try to upsell. We'll be using the stock preamps on my Echo AF8, so all that fanciness would just go to waste. It doesn't have to sound expensive. In fact, given the project's aesthetic, it shouldn't. We just need something that works, something that will accurately capture the sounds we're making with minimal hassle. I know that nowadays there are many options in the "cheap" price-range. I doubt I'll be able to tell the difference between them.
The B1s seem to get the most widespread approval, but would they work for the "stereo live-space" application? Would it be better to go with the first option for more variety? Am I way off? Do I need something entirely different?
I'm involved in a mostly improvisational, avant-garde project. We play for hours and hours, then edit and collage the results. We love abrasive editing flourishes and unusual effects processing. We'll be recording in several untreated rooms. Instruments: saxophone, glockenspiel, bucket drums, viola, amplified electric guitar, hand-held cassette-tape-players, finger-cymbals, voice, some piano maybe... pretty much anything that's lying around. Electronics and effects will be added "line-in" for the most part. I am interested in getting a stereo pair of microphones so that we can capture the actual space of the performance. I'd like to have a more-or-less fixed recording setup where we can play and move about the room, without having to re-adjust the microphones often. What microphone style would be best for this application? From my research, it sounds like a pair of small to medium diameter condenser mics might work.
My budget is approximately $200. Right now, I'm considering the following configurations:
1. Stereo pair of SDCs (MXL 603, SP1, CAD GXL1200, or Naiant X-Q) for live room recordings with mostly acoustic instruments. MXL V67g for over-dubbing solo instruments and voice.
-OR-
2. Stereo pair of Studio Projects B1s to use for live stereo recordings and solo recordings.
Please let me know if you think these setups sound appropriate. I'm not interested in spending $300+ on a microphone, so please don't try to upsell. We'll be using the stock preamps on my Echo AF8, so all that fanciness would just go to waste. It doesn't have to sound expensive. In fact, given the project's aesthetic, it shouldn't. We just need something that works, something that will accurately capture the sounds we're making with minimal hassle. I know that nowadays there are many options in the "cheap" price-range. I doubt I'll be able to tell the difference between them.
The B1s seem to get the most widespread approval, but would they work for the "stereo live-space" application? Would it be better to go with the first option for more variety? Am I way off? Do I need something entirely different?
