D
dogwomble
New member
Hey guys,
I decided that it's about time I added a few more mics to my collection. At the moment I've got a Lane mic I haven't tried out yet (probably crappy coz it's a cheapie brand) and a Shure PG48.
I've had the PG48 sound really good as a live vocal mic - got used at a karaoke night and really cut through quite nicely compared to the mics that were normally used at the club.
I dropped into my local music store, with the idea of just getting an 'all-rounder' mic, ie. one that would do well for vocals, would make for a reasonable instrument mic (particularly for acoustic coz that's what I play), and didn't want to pay thousands because with the band stuff I'm wanting to get going I'll need 2 of them.
I was suggested a Rode M3 mic. I've checked out the specs online and it does seem pretty reasonable, the demo they've got there sounds pretty damn good. However, I just wanted to see what people's experiences were rather than just relying on the marketing hype.
I decided that it's about time I added a few more mics to my collection. At the moment I've got a Lane mic I haven't tried out yet (probably crappy coz it's a cheapie brand) and a Shure PG48.
I've had the PG48 sound really good as a live vocal mic - got used at a karaoke night and really cut through quite nicely compared to the mics that were normally used at the club.
I dropped into my local music store, with the idea of just getting an 'all-rounder' mic, ie. one that would do well for vocals, would make for a reasonable instrument mic (particularly for acoustic coz that's what I play), and didn't want to pay thousands because with the band stuff I'm wanting to get going I'll need 2 of them.
I was suggested a Rode M3 mic. I've checked out the specs online and it does seem pretty reasonable, the demo they've got there sounds pretty damn good. However, I just wanted to see what people's experiences were rather than just relying on the marketing hype.