
Chris F
New member
OK, I've reread THE BIG THREAD, and checked out the FAQ, and have also done a search - this last turned up little more than members bitching about who's a troll and who isn't. After all of that, I'd still like to learn a lot more about how to handle proximity effects of LDC's.
Here's my setup: A variety of cheap LDC's (B1, V67, Superlux, etc - none offer Fig 8 or Omni, which may well be the problem) into a Soundcraft M12, going into a MOTU 1224, then into a G4 running DP4. I'm a jazz bassist with a fantastic axe (see pics on the photo page of my site). When I record in the studio, the engineer is usually able to get a great sound on my bass (see "Fifth Business" on the soundclips page if interested). At home, I can get a good strong sound, but it always seems to have a low end rumble that is disturbing when the volume comes up even a little. Once I've recorded it that way, if I try to EQ it out, I lose too much body of the sound in the process.
My first thought is that I've got the mic too close to the table of the bass - about 12" is normal. If I get further away than that, the sound gets too thin for my liking, and picks up a lot of room noise that makes it "weaker" sounding. So with what I have my options seem to be:
1) Moving the mic away and just dealing with the room noise.
2) Keeping the mic close, but using the 100hz rolloff on the M12 - I fear this may rob too much fundamental on the low notes, but...
3) Building a few Rock Wool partitions to block room noise, then backing the mic away from the bass and later compressing it to get that "up close" sound
4) Doing the above, but purchasing a LDC that offers fig 8 and/or omni.
Any thoughts/suggestions? I'd love to get a comfortable bass recording setup that produces a basic sound I'm happy with, as I record a lot as part of my practice regimen. All non-flaming input welcome!
Here's my setup: A variety of cheap LDC's (B1, V67, Superlux, etc - none offer Fig 8 or Omni, which may well be the problem) into a Soundcraft M12, going into a MOTU 1224, then into a G4 running DP4. I'm a jazz bassist with a fantastic axe (see pics on the photo page of my site). When I record in the studio, the engineer is usually able to get a great sound on my bass (see "Fifth Business" on the soundclips page if interested). At home, I can get a good strong sound, but it always seems to have a low end rumble that is disturbing when the volume comes up even a little. Once I've recorded it that way, if I try to EQ it out, I lose too much body of the sound in the process.
My first thought is that I've got the mic too close to the table of the bass - about 12" is normal. If I get further away than that, the sound gets too thin for my liking, and picks up a lot of room noise that makes it "weaker" sounding. So with what I have my options seem to be:
1) Moving the mic away and just dealing with the room noise.
2) Keeping the mic close, but using the 100hz rolloff on the M12 - I fear this may rob too much fundamental on the low notes, but...
3) Building a few Rock Wool partitions to block room noise, then backing the mic away from the bass and later compressing it to get that "up close" sound
4) Doing the above, but purchasing a LDC that offers fig 8 and/or omni.
Any thoughts/suggestions? I'd love to get a comfortable bass recording setup that produces a basic sound I'm happy with, as I record a lot as part of my practice regimen. All non-flaming input welcome!
