Shure Beta 57a dynamic mic

  • Thread starter Thread starter Mr Blues
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Mr Blues

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A singers best kept secret.
Since I brought my used Mackie 1202 onyx mixer I have found that my older mic that i use to use a lot in the past. The Shure beta 57a.
It sounds excellent going through it, it strange but i find the dynamic mics on the Onyx comes across much clearer then the expensive condenser mics that i have .


The special thing about the 57a i am discovering is that the higher I set the gain on the fader and the trim the more clarity with hardly any feedback I am getting.

There is great warmth & detail and a nice open top end that is not there on the beta 58a although the beta 58a has more bass. The 58a can sound nasely, don't get me wrong still a great mic .

I am tempted to experiment with the 57a for homerecording as I have read it can handle very high volume.

Has anyone else used this for studio as well as live?

Dave
 
Sure, all the time. But you will find that if you swap the headbaskets on the Beta 57 and 58, then the 57 will be a 58, and vice versa . . .
 
Hi mshilarious

Is that so, I did'nt realize so is it the grill that effects the sound.

I use to thing that have'nt more bass on a mic is the be all and end all but the more more I am using the 57a the more I am seeing it captures that sweet spot in the mid range of one's voice.

I mainly just perform vocals and guitar.

Now if I was in a band setting things might be different maybe the 58a will cut through the mix more.

Dave
 
Grilles affect two things mainly: high-frequency response peaks, due to interference from the grille aperture, and minimum distance to capsule, which in a directional mic changes the proximity effect (bass boost when used up close). Also, the 58 basket has thicker foam to suppress pops (the 57 has a very thin piece of felt/paper kinda stuff, I recall), that will cost a bit of HF response too.

The change in HF response will create a psychoacoustic effect where you will think that lower frequency response has changed when it really might not have (if you are outside of the proximity zone, say more than a foot away).

I always kind dug the Betas for the swappable baskets; I would buy 57s and then the 58 basket separately, then when I did a gig I would use the basket according to application (drums, vocals, etc.).
 
Man I could have saved money and just brought the 58a grill. I have brought both a few years ago now. lol.

also mshilarious with condensers although they appaer to sound clearer in live applications, ( I have the Shure Beta 87a the AKG C 535) I am finding I am getting more response with the 57a which is a lot cheaper than the others.

Maybe its also the Onxy mic pre's that make the 57a really shine , I don't know.

I always brought the condenser mics because of there wide freqency responce 20 hz - 20 Hz.
The 57a & 68a are only 50 Hz -16Hz, but I am now seeing thats more then enough for live vocals
Dave
 
Yeah, live sound isn't too concerned with the highest octave. I dunno why Mackies, for example, put their HF shelf at 12kHz. I would prefer it an octave lower.
 
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