crazydoc
Master Baiter
Darn! I'm so disappointed.
No reason to buy one then.
No reason to buy one then.
No reason to buy one then.
5 String said:The most frightening use of a mic for 'kick' was when an engineer I was working with shoved a vintage valve Neumann inside the drum.
I was horrified but the mic IS spec'd for high spl and it sounded great.

noisedude said:There's reason singers with 58s sound like they're singing through a sock ... and it ain't just bad technique ...![]()

photoresistor said:I would suggest looking for a good deal on an AKG D-112 kick mic... I found mine for around $120-130 new. Other suggestions are the Audio Tehnica Pro 25 that can be found real cheap on Ebay and MF (I got mine for $40.... doesnt sound bad on the kick! I'm using it for floor tom though and it sounds pretty good for $40!).
https://homerecording.com/bbs/showthread.php?t=98745ggunn said:I read out on another forum that some folks have talked about using a speaker for a kick drum mic. Anybody in here ever tried it? Supposedly some great older recordings were done that way.
I didn't get any details about what size speaker, baffling, electrical connections, etc. I guess you'd want to hook it up through a transformer for low Z operation, especially if you've got phantom power enabled.
KevinDrummer said:Hi.
My opinion... get a cheap set of drum-specific clip-ons like the samson 5Kit. Clip 'em on and turn 'em down. Get 2 decent MXL condensors for overheads - turn 'em up. The mix should be 75% overhead and 25$ close mics (less for the snare). Experiment with placement (and angle on the close mics - i.e. proximity effect / tone). The 5 kit can be had for less than $200 for 5 mics, and add another $180 for the MXLs.
