N
Nadzilla
New member
Hey all,
I watched a video of Devin Townsend recording vocal parts for his Addicted album a while back, and he was just using an SM7b but hand-held, rather than on a stand / harnessed.
I'm not sure if he was just "tracking" ideas or whether those vocal parts were actually the ones he used for the final mix...
I know that the SM7b has some kind of special construction that reduces "impact" noise, so is it possible to use them hand-held and still get a good quality from them without having to worry about any noise coming through from shifting your hand on the casing or moving the mic around in general?
I ask because I sing / open up much better and get a way more emotive vocal performance out of myself if I am free to move around with the mic instead of having to stand in front of a stand and pop shield and limit my movement. I want to be abel to get across not just the vocals but also the "feel" of the lyrics, and I think it translates in recordings. Take Skid Row's "Inhuman Race" album, for example. I know they had a ton of production gear and compressors etc at their disposal, but they basically got the best results by giving Seb a hand-held (SM58 or similar) mic and just let him go at it like a loon in the vocal room, and I really think you can hear that. There's just a certain feel and quality that comes across and that's what I want to capture with the SM7b.
I watched a video of Devin Townsend recording vocal parts for his Addicted album a while back, and he was just using an SM7b but hand-held, rather than on a stand / harnessed.
I'm not sure if he was just "tracking" ideas or whether those vocal parts were actually the ones he used for the final mix...
I know that the SM7b has some kind of special construction that reduces "impact" noise, so is it possible to use them hand-held and still get a good quality from them without having to worry about any noise coming through from shifting your hand on the casing or moving the mic around in general?
I ask because I sing / open up much better and get a way more emotive vocal performance out of myself if I am free to move around with the mic instead of having to stand in front of a stand and pop shield and limit my movement. I want to be abel to get across not just the vocals but also the "feel" of the lyrics, and I think it translates in recordings. Take Skid Row's "Inhuman Race" album, for example. I know they had a ton of production gear and compressors etc at their disposal, but they basically got the best results by giving Seb a hand-held (SM58 or similar) mic and just let him go at it like a loon in the vocal room, and I really think you can hear that. There's just a certain feel and quality that comes across and that's what I want to capture with the SM7b.