B
Bambi Busboom
New member
Mates,
For several years I've been recording home practice, some broadcast voice tracks, and rehearsal sessions thus:
Kawai KG5 (6'8" grand) /sometimes with viola da gamba, cello, or clavichord or, harpsichord > 2-Oktava MC012 cardioid> Peavey VMP-2 all tube mic pre > Audiowerk 2 > Pentium 750 40GB dedicated HD > CD-R
- and this has worked quite well. The Oktavas reminded me a bit of the darker, softer KM84s a recording engineer friend lent me. After selecting from 14 at Guitar Center, the sound was quite pleasant. Some voice tracks I've used a U89 and EV RE20 from the station and these worked nicely on my thin, dry voice. Actually, for my voice, the RE20 gives the smoothest, most balanced sound of any mic I've ever used.
The Peavey VMP-2 is a real sweety too- after fussing with the tube selection***. The all-tube design is excllent compared to "tube warmth" designs, and the tube EQ a bonus. I recommend this one highly, though it was unfortunately discontinued some time ago.
***2-Sylvania 12AX7WAs, 2-Sylvania 3-mica 5751s (low gain 12AX7), 2-GE JAN 5751s, 2-Siemens 3-mica E81CC (12AT7sub)
The Audiowerk 2 has given a good sound but is now far surpassed by 24/96 cards.
I was pleased to see that some prices for recording gear has actually gone down- the Oktavas I paid $160 for are now $100 and the M-Audio Audiophile 2496 has gone to $99 (*Sweetwater" with free shipping no less). I couldn't pass on the Audiophile for so little. As you can see from my speciallised use, the number of imputs is not a limitation for me.
In respect of the new soundcard, I thought I'd buy new microphones and this time buy them specifically for this use and a quality that will suit me for a long while. My recording friend has asserted that I should go ahead and buy a pair of Shoeps CMC6/MK4s, and these are wonderful, but these are just wildly expensive for this use. As a Schoeps, Neumann, and classic U87 user, he is just not tuned into the crop of "value" mics.
I've been impressed- though daunted by the variety- by the Chinese and Russian mics such as Studio Projects, Marshall MXL, and the large diaphragm Oktava MC319. Being a tubeophile, a Studio Projects that intrigues me is the T3 tube with it's multiple patterns- I thought it would be fun to experiment with Figure 8, plus Blumlein, ORTF, Decca tree and etc. The MXL V77s is a single pattern tube mic, but also intriging and less than the SPs. If they'r really a lifetime, great purchase, I might consider Neumann KM184s or AKG C-414 B-ULSs, but I'm not afraid to spend less if the results are appropriate. I've been told that for my use, large diaphragm mics might be more difficult to place than small.
There actually seem to be better values on microphones than when I last shopped- but also many more possible choices!
Any thoughts?
Cheers,
Bambi B
PS: I've done a lot of tube experiments with the Peavey and my 9 other pieces of audio tube gear if anyone would like to chat about NOS tubes, let me know. Also,- come and visit us tube nuts at Tubes Asylum: http://www.audioasylum.com/audio/tubes/bbs.html
For several years I've been recording home practice, some broadcast voice tracks, and rehearsal sessions thus:
Kawai KG5 (6'8" grand) /sometimes with viola da gamba, cello, or clavichord or, harpsichord > 2-Oktava MC012 cardioid> Peavey VMP-2 all tube mic pre > Audiowerk 2 > Pentium 750 40GB dedicated HD > CD-R
- and this has worked quite well. The Oktavas reminded me a bit of the darker, softer KM84s a recording engineer friend lent me. After selecting from 14 at Guitar Center, the sound was quite pleasant. Some voice tracks I've used a U89 and EV RE20 from the station and these worked nicely on my thin, dry voice. Actually, for my voice, the RE20 gives the smoothest, most balanced sound of any mic I've ever used.
The Peavey VMP-2 is a real sweety too- after fussing with the tube selection***. The all-tube design is excllent compared to "tube warmth" designs, and the tube EQ a bonus. I recommend this one highly, though it was unfortunately discontinued some time ago.
***2-Sylvania 12AX7WAs, 2-Sylvania 3-mica 5751s (low gain 12AX7), 2-GE JAN 5751s, 2-Siemens 3-mica E81CC (12AT7sub)
The Audiowerk 2 has given a good sound but is now far surpassed by 24/96 cards.
I was pleased to see that some prices for recording gear has actually gone down- the Oktavas I paid $160 for are now $100 and the M-Audio Audiophile 2496 has gone to $99 (*Sweetwater" with free shipping no less). I couldn't pass on the Audiophile for so little. As you can see from my speciallised use, the number of imputs is not a limitation for me.
In respect of the new soundcard, I thought I'd buy new microphones and this time buy them specifically for this use and a quality that will suit me for a long while. My recording friend has asserted that I should go ahead and buy a pair of Shoeps CMC6/MK4s, and these are wonderful, but these are just wildly expensive for this use. As a Schoeps, Neumann, and classic U87 user, he is just not tuned into the crop of "value" mics.
I've been impressed- though daunted by the variety- by the Chinese and Russian mics such as Studio Projects, Marshall MXL, and the large diaphragm Oktava MC319. Being a tubeophile, a Studio Projects that intrigues me is the T3 tube with it's multiple patterns- I thought it would be fun to experiment with Figure 8, plus Blumlein, ORTF, Decca tree and etc. The MXL V77s is a single pattern tube mic, but also intriging and less than the SPs. If they'r really a lifetime, great purchase, I might consider Neumann KM184s or AKG C-414 B-ULSs, but I'm not afraid to spend less if the results are appropriate. I've been told that for my use, large diaphragm mics might be more difficult to place than small.
There actually seem to be better values on microphones than when I last shopped- but also many more possible choices!
Any thoughts?
Cheers,
Bambi B
PS: I've done a lot of tube experiments with the Peavey and my 9 other pieces of audio tube gear if anyone would like to chat about NOS tubes, let me know. Also,- come and visit us tube nuts at Tubes Asylum: http://www.audioasylum.com/audio/tubes/bbs.html