B
busyboy
New member
Tim[/QUOTE]
I have an R3CWE made in 2000. It's the cutaway electric version. I play a lot of pop and jazz. This guitar is perfect for that. My wife and I got lost in Madrid and I ended up coming across what I can only describe as the Jose Ramirez factory outlet. She went shoe shopping while I played gazillions of guitars- all with (to me) imperceptible blemishes. The R3 the one that the boys there felt suited me the most. Anyway, this was before the Euro. The dollar was really strong and I got this guitar for about the price of a decent Korean guitar. It sounds really nice in front of a mic and not too bad plugged in. I only plug in for live gigs though
BTW I love both clips. If your clients aren't thrilled with what your doing than they need to find another line of work. There's a funny psycho-acoustic thing going on with the cello clip. The guitars sound so natural and present that it takes a couple of listens before you realize that the cello isn't. Philip Glass used to use that phenomenon to his advantage.
Keep up the good work. Now I'll have to start hanging out in the MP3 section to hear what your up to.
I've got a similar situation room-wise. My best recording room is a joined liv/din room with high peaked ceilings at different hts, with a lot of irregularities in the walls' surfaces for diffusion. And it's open at one end to a high entryway that adds a distant reverb depending on where the mic's are.
Yeah, that's kinda describes my "tracking room" too. When I'm recording out there, I control my DAW (Digi001) with an iBook that has an airport card in it- I can see and manipulate the desktop of my G4 using OSXVNC.
And the U87... man, that's a different mic, huh? I used one in a flamenco session at another studio last month and loved it - through an Avalon tube pre. Totally different sound than the Schoeps - more "in your face bigger than life" - and in a good way. Well, it just fueled my gear lust.
Well, yeah. I'm very fortunate in that my dad (the engineer) has left much of his mic collection in my care. I have the Scheopps with the cardiod & omni capsules. I mostly use the omnis. I also have two U-87s that I like a lot. I mostly use them on vocalists. The switchable pattern is a great tool. Again, I mostly use the omni setting. It really opens up the mic, making it more natural sounding. But if you have a thin- sounding vocalist that cardiod adds some bottom. You can use the proximity effect to your advantage.
Ramirez... nice. Which model and year do you have? Many are very good recording guitars with a lush tone, IMO.
Ramirez... nice. Which model and year do you have? Many are very good recording guitars with a lush tone, IMO.
I have an R3CWE made in 2000. It's the cutaway electric version. I play a lot of pop and jazz. This guitar is perfect for that. My wife and I got lost in Madrid and I ended up coming across what I can only describe as the Jose Ramirez factory outlet. She went shoe shopping while I played gazillions of guitars- all with (to me) imperceptible blemishes. The R3 the one that the boys there felt suited me the most. Anyway, this was before the Euro. The dollar was really strong and I got this guitar for about the price of a decent Korean guitar. It sounds really nice in front of a mic and not too bad plugged in. I only plug in for live gigs though
BTW I love both clips. If your clients aren't thrilled with what your doing than they need to find another line of work. There's a funny psycho-acoustic thing going on with the cello clip. The guitars sound so natural and present that it takes a couple of listens before you realize that the cello isn't. Philip Glass used to use that phenomenon to his advantage.
Keep up the good work. Now I'll have to start hanging out in the MP3 section to hear what your up to.