ofajen said:
I'd like to have a pair of high end condenser omnis that cost about $2000 each. Instead, I've located the best mikes I can find that I can also afford.
I'd also love to have a cabinet full of top-of-the-line mics, even just a couple. A pair of AKG 414s, a U87 or two, sure...Unfortunately "the best I can afford" is an arbitrary statement at best. If ya got a hundred bucks and different advice coming from six or sixteen different guys, you're gonna get what ya get and deal with it. If ya got $5000 to burn, your perspective is going to be WAY different on what "the best I can afford" is. I had a hundred bucks, and I made a poor choice with the Behri, but I learned a lot about using a parametric in the process that I might not have with a more stably responsive mic.
My RE-55s cost less than $100 each and the SM-80 capsules were about the same. I don't think it makes a bit of sense to waste time on crappy sounding mikes. You will learn something with good mikes or bad, but you will learn what things really sound like and how to record them better with good mikes.
You have to define "good mics" here. Do you mean the $2000 condenser omnis? I have a pair of Joemeek JM27's that I paid $60 for...
For the pair, that is...These SDC condensers are sweet, quiet, very forgiving on the bottom, and reproduce what I'm recording with no EQ needed. I consider them "good mics". I'm sure that in some (even many) cases $$=quality, but I also have no doubt that in the case of more than a few brands the bulk of the hefty price is a surcharge on the trademark...
Now, if learning is what you want and you want to be well rounded, you will ultimately want to end up with at least one dynamic cardioid (say, SM-57), one SDC (say, SM-81), one LDC multi-pattern condenser (uhh, you name it, too many choices) and one figure-8 ribbon mike and maybe a true omni (little 1/4" cheapies if nothing else). Better yet, two of each and a copy of the New Stereo Soundbook, since you just might want to know something about stereo recordings.
Someone at the level you're suggesting here would likely not care to invest in all that gear off the bat. The learning that I'm talking about has to do with someone who
has gear and perhaps an inapropriate mic and could use a deeper understanding of his signal chain's capabilities. If he finds good mics from the start, great! But, judging from the cornucopea of opinions and advice here, just what are the odds?
I can't see any point to purposely choosing inferior tools. There are some good, cheap examples of several of these categories, and it makes sense to me to use all the information available to find ones that best serve your purposes.
And I don't advocate actively seeking out "bad" mics just to make life hard on yourself, my point was that, should you wind up with an unsuitable mic and have no alternatives, an opportunity to enrichen your knowledge of the capabilities of your sidechain gear arises.
I also think there is a lot of benefit when learning to have an accurate omni mike (better yet a pair of them) because it offers you the chance to really listen and learn what things really sound like at various mike placements as a reference so that when you use other mikes you have that point of reference to compare to. Otherwise, you're just kind of flailing about.
Cheers,
Otto
Can't agree more...
Eric