S
sbenak1@mac.com
New member
Once upon a time, I lived and recorded in an attic apartment with low angled ceiling, wall to wall carpeting, and a very unboxy shape in general. My recording came out very dry, and I added reverb to taste afterward. Then I moved. Not knowing much about room acoustics at the time, I was shocked at how much more of the room I could hear when I recorded in a boxing, not carpeted room. Not knowing any better when I got my LDC mic, I ended up with a cheap samson omni. In the dead room, it worked fine. In my little box, it limits my options.
I recently recorded a very sparse demo for a male singer/songwriter - vox,guitar, harmonica. For a few of the tracks, I used only the omni and simply recorded his live performance. Mic, to pre, to compressor, to disk. The only reverb I used was the room's natural reverb.
In this case, the result was very good. The artist wanted simple and warm, maybe even a little dirty, and that's what he got. I've gone back a listened a few times since and I really like sound of the natural small room reverb.
I'm wondering how many people in home studios use natural reverb for guitar and vox. Does anyone have good ideas/techniques to get different reverbs naturally in home studio environment?
I also like to be able to get good dry signal when I want it, and I suspect that's not possible without a different mic or lots of room treatment. What mics are good for getting a very isolated signal? I know I'll need to close mic, but I'm guessing some mics are better than others at NOT picking up the room. Thanks for any help.
I recently recorded a very sparse demo for a male singer/songwriter - vox,guitar, harmonica. For a few of the tracks, I used only the omni and simply recorded his live performance. Mic, to pre, to compressor, to disk. The only reverb I used was the room's natural reverb.
In this case, the result was very good. The artist wanted simple and warm, maybe even a little dirty, and that's what he got. I've gone back a listened a few times since and I really like sound of the natural small room reverb.
I'm wondering how many people in home studios use natural reverb for guitar and vox. Does anyone have good ideas/techniques to get different reverbs naturally in home studio environment?
I also like to be able to get good dry signal when I want it, and I suspect that's not possible without a different mic or lots of room treatment. What mics are good for getting a very isolated signal? I know I'll need to close mic, but I'm guessing some mics are better than others at NOT picking up the room. Thanks for any help.

Cheers!