P
pure.fusion
New member
Hi all,
I've been mic'ing the guitar cab up close with a SM57 with "ok" results. Recently I've been trying to capture some of the room with a condenser mic with crap results. The room actually sounds pretty good, so I think the problem is the (cheap) condenser mic I'm using. It does capture the room and when I mix it in with the SM57 (and make sure the phase issues are minimised) it does add a natural space to the sound but it also adds something ugly to the signal (probably an EQ issue); so much so that I tend not to mix too much in as a result.
Should I just stop wasting time here, use a single SM57 to get that dry up-close direct sound and apply a small room reverb to mimic that natural room ambience? I guess what I'm asking is, it's effectively the same thing right?
I'm guessing that the only alternative is to try another mic as the room mic.
Cheers,
FM
I've been mic'ing the guitar cab up close with a SM57 with "ok" results. Recently I've been trying to capture some of the room with a condenser mic with crap results. The room actually sounds pretty good, so I think the problem is the (cheap) condenser mic I'm using. It does capture the room and when I mix it in with the SM57 (and make sure the phase issues are minimised) it does add a natural space to the sound but it also adds something ugly to the signal (probably an EQ issue); so much so that I tend not to mix too much in as a result.
Should I just stop wasting time here, use a single SM57 to get that dry up-close direct sound and apply a small room reverb to mimic that natural room ambience? I guess what I'm asking is, it's effectively the same thing right?
I'm guessing that the only alternative is to try another mic as the room mic.
Cheers,
FM