Simulating a room mic that was deleted

  • Thread starter Thread starter FattMusiek
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FattMusiek

FattMusiek

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I recently recorded drums to a song I'm working on with a buddy of mine. The room mic track was half-overwritten and is now unusable for the sake of symmetry. The drum tracks I have are top snare, undersnare, kick, floor tom, hi hat, left overhead, and right overhead. Does anyone have any tips or tricks on simulating a room mic for that extra flavor without re-recording my drum tracks for the 80th time?
 
do the tracks sound terrible without the room mic?

I guess you could route all the drum tracks to an effects track with a room reverb on it...then slowly blend that in with the dry tracks.
 
you could mix all the tracks and play them thru speakers into the room while recording it.
 
Thanks for the reply. The drums sound good without the room track, but the room track made the recording a little more lively. I don't I have the capability to route signal to an effects processor (plugin or outboard) as far as I know. Any other ideas?
 
I have done exactly that, benny, and I liked the results.
I prefered a convolution reverb with an impulse from a nice live sounding room because I think it creates a more realistic "room mic" sound.
I've also tried compressing that pretty hard just like a room mic and gotten pretty cool results.
 
FattMusiek said:
Thanks for the reply. The drums sound good without the room track, but the room track made the recording a little more lively. I don't I have the capability to route signal to an effects processor (plugin or outboard) as far as I know. Any other ideas?

What are you using to record and mix?
 
TravisinFlorida said:
you could mix all the tracks and play them thru speakers into the room while recording it.


Uh huh. What you want to do is re-amp the tracks.

.
 
metalhead28 said:
What are you using to record and mix?

I'm using the Presonus Firepod and Adobe Audition 1.5. Very cookie cutter but it gets the job done. (Pro Tools...drool)
 
Mix all of the drum tracks down to a single track and apply a room reverb to it with the mix set to fully wet. Now you have a new room mic track.
 
chessrock said:
Uh huh. What you want to do is re-amp the tracks.

.



Now people you are not listening. Listen up! Send a mix of the drums through a speaker into a room and record the room sound onto an open track. Now you have the sound of the room you like. Why simulate a room mic when you can have the real thing? So the next post I guess will be soemthing about rendering a digital reverb?
 
ez_willis said:
Can anyone offer up some advice on rendering a digital reverb?
How about rendering some pork rinds instead?

G.
 
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