S
SteveD
New member
Overheads
Close micing a drum kit can lead to sterilizing the sound, which can tend to sound unnatural. The overhead mics can bring the drums back to life by blending them back to a single kit, as well as giving the cymbals life and positioning them in the stereo field correctly.
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A classic move is also to boost 15KHz for a nice sheen to the cymbals.
(sonusman insert here) A great trick to try BEFORE you eq your overheads is to TRACK ADVANCE the overheads so that the snare hit has no delay between the snare track and the overheads. You would be surprised as to how much more beef this can add to the drum kit.
Question: Does anyone know how to TRACK ADVANCE the overheads as suggested by Sonusman in the article above?
As far as I know... there's no way to set a parameter for number of samples or amount of timed delay to actually RECORD this way in Sonar... right? The only way to do this is to drag the snare or overhead tracks into alignment after they are recorded.
Or am I missing something here?
Thanks.
SteveD
www.5adayclub.net/music/