
Blue Bear Sound
New member
...(the ones Alan posted a deal on a little while back) and I tried it out on a session tonight.
Being that I'm usually a firm believer in "you get what you pay for", I guess I was expecting something along the lines of the MPX2001 (which, for those that don't know - would NOT be a good thing!)... no offense Alan - I'm just not prone to hype, so until I try something, I won't buy into it!
Before I tried it, I read thru the manual that comes with it - I raised my eyebrow at the fact that yet another manufacturer writes specs without tolerances - a bit telling in that the specs were written by the marketing department as opposed to the engineering team.
A freq. response of 20-20000hz is absolutely meaningless without an indication of variance (ie -2db, +1db), so why even bother writing it??? Minor point I suppose, but it is a pet peeve of mine.
BUT anyways, although I only used it on one vocalist so far (so I've hardly used it enough to declare it the "RNC of mics"), I must say it worked very well as I listened to the monitors while the vocalist was warming up....
I like the mic - I used it on a fairly deep-voiced male singer - somewhat throaty - and it captured the sound excellently -- smooth, airy, no harshness, nice depth... I was impressed... upon listening to the track after the session was over it struck me that there was more "space" to the vocals than I'd heard when tracking vocals with other mics... it reminded me of the dimension of sound I noticed when I first tried mic'ing guitars with a Beyer M160... there was that "little bit deeper" sound to the track. Very nice.
It doesn't have the slightly-mid-scooped, sweetened highs of the Rode NT2 and is rounder and smoother (on the top-end) than the AT4033 (a mic which, although I like, I find can be harsh at times.) I'm looking forward to trying the C1 on voice-over work - I suspect it will help minimize overly-bright speakers with sibilance issues, since it sounds smooth....
The C1 will be put to some good use at Blue Bear Sound -- I'll try to find time to post more mic comparison clips - maybe using acoustic guitar....
While I personally can't say if it holds its own with the Neumanns, Schoepps, B&Ks, etc, of the mic world - even if it doesn't, considering the price, and assuming the quality control is consistent, in my opinion - it's definitely very usable and a good value for the money.
Bruce
Being that I'm usually a firm believer in "you get what you pay for", I guess I was expecting something along the lines of the MPX2001 (which, for those that don't know - would NOT be a good thing!)... no offense Alan - I'm just not prone to hype, so until I try something, I won't buy into it!
Before I tried it, I read thru the manual that comes with it - I raised my eyebrow at the fact that yet another manufacturer writes specs without tolerances - a bit telling in that the specs were written by the marketing department as opposed to the engineering team.
A freq. response of 20-20000hz is absolutely meaningless without an indication of variance (ie -2db, +1db), so why even bother writing it??? Minor point I suppose, but it is a pet peeve of mine.
BUT anyways, although I only used it on one vocalist so far (so I've hardly used it enough to declare it the "RNC of mics"), I must say it worked very well as I listened to the monitors while the vocalist was warming up....
I like the mic - I used it on a fairly deep-voiced male singer - somewhat throaty - and it captured the sound excellently -- smooth, airy, no harshness, nice depth... I was impressed... upon listening to the track after the session was over it struck me that there was more "space" to the vocals than I'd heard when tracking vocals with other mics... it reminded me of the dimension of sound I noticed when I first tried mic'ing guitars with a Beyer M160... there was that "little bit deeper" sound to the track. Very nice.
It doesn't have the slightly-mid-scooped, sweetened highs of the Rode NT2 and is rounder and smoother (on the top-end) than the AT4033 (a mic which, although I like, I find can be harsh at times.) I'm looking forward to trying the C1 on voice-over work - I suspect it will help minimize overly-bright speakers with sibilance issues, since it sounds smooth....
The C1 will be put to some good use at Blue Bear Sound -- I'll try to find time to post more mic comparison clips - maybe using acoustic guitar....
While I personally can't say if it holds its own with the Neumanns, Schoepps, B&Ks, etc, of the mic world - even if it doesn't, considering the price, and assuming the quality control is consistent, in my opinion - it's definitely very usable and a good value for the money.
Bruce
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