D
DJL
Self Banned
The AKG C451's are a bright sounding mic... and so are the MXL603S's... but, unlike the 603S the 451 seems to handle cymbals better than the 603S. The 451's are my favorite overhead mic's and the 603S is one of my favorite acoustic guitar mic's. I wonder if DOT's opinion will agree with Jay's opinion of the C4's vs 451's? Anyway, good re-post Flatpicker... thanks.Flatpicker said:Here a post from Jay Lison I found on the Studio Projects forum over at R.O where he compares his newly puchased C4s to his B1s:
"I just got my C4's today! Here's my first impression of them.
First thing, I must have the bad shockmounts, because my mics don't stay in them at all. When I was putting it on the mic stand, I forgot about this, and nearly sent one of my brand new C4's slipping through the shock mount, and right into the ride cymbal. These guys don't want to stay in the shock mounts...at all. Right now, I'm relying on the mic cable to keep them held in place.
I tossed them up on my drum kit with the cardiod capsules on. I put a 57 on snare and a 112 on kick, and thought I'd see how the C4's hold up capturing the rest of the kit. I thought the C4's sounded fantastic on the cymbals, and the snare mixed with the 57 sounded great too. The hi-hat also sounded frickin' great. Since I didn't have mics on the toms, they sounded a bit thin, as one would expect. Even with no filter being used, these guys don't have very much going on in the low end department, which is exactly what I want out of a pair of SDC cardiod mics.
I've been using the B1 mics as overheads for the past couple months at home in my home studio, while I was deciding what overheads to buy. The B1's had too much low to low mids to be used as drum overheads, but sounded very much how my drum kit sounds in my room (which is nearly totally dead; 6" insulation). The toms with the B1's as overheads didn't need close mics, they sounded full and just like my toms. The problem was, the whole kit was too full sounding, so it needed a lot of EQ to fit it in a rock mix, which resulted in the toms being thinned and needing close mics anyway. So, the C4's fix that, and now I'm just going to toss up the B1's on my toms, or use them for overheads when doing jazz or sparse instrumentation recordings.
In conclusion, these are exactly what I wanted, great overhead mics for my drums. I'll be recording a session over the weekend, and I'm going to put them up against a pair of 451's (which I'm not all that fond of for the money(too bright)). I'll try to post a link to some audio samples later next week."
You can visit the thread here:
http://www.recording.org/ubb/ultima...26;t=000146;p=1