What mic to buy?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Tasha Morgan
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Tasha Morgan

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I am wanting to buy a microphone for home recording purposes. This mic will be used 95% of the time for lead vocals only. I want a mic that will give me a warm natural sound that has a good all around balanced sound. Right now, I have a cheap CGM CG-2000 mic that I'm using. When I record with it, the track on my pc sounds like it is in a hole. I don't have the capabilities to prepare the room I'm in, my back bedroom. Can anyone suggest a good all around vocal mic? I really can't afford to spend over $100 right now. Also, what is the difference between a dynamic and condenser mic anyway?
 
Tasha Morgan said:
I am wanting to buy a microphone for home recording purposes. This mic will be used 95% of the time for lead vocals only. I want a mic that will give me a warm natural sound that has a good all around balanced sound. Right now, I have a cheap CGM CG-2000 mic that I'm using. When I record with it, the track on my pc sounds like it is in a hole. I don't have the capabilities to prepare the room I'm in, my back bedroom. Can anyone suggest a good all around vocal mic? I really can't afford to spend over $100 right now. Also, what is the difference between a dynamic and condenser mic anyway?

Many musicians use the trusty Shure SM58. For around $90 you get a dynamic microphone that is built like a tank, and can withstand all manner of abuse. Its cardioid (heart-shaped) pickup pattern gives it a characteristic "warm" sound when used close-up for vocals (proximity effect - noticably on all directional mics.)

Dynamic mics use a coil attatched to the diaphragm to generate their electrical output, similar to a loudspeaker in reverse...
Advantages: very robust, self powered, inexpensive
Disadvanges: frequency response and sensitivity limited by mass of diaphragm and moving coil

Condenser mics generate their signal by having their diaphragm being one of the plates of an electrical capacitor, the capacity of which changes with the air pressure on the diaphragm. This change of capacitance can be measured and amplified.
Advantages: very light diaphragms can give condenser mics very accurate response; they can also be very sensitive.
Disadvantages: fragile (both electrically and mechanically), expensive, signal is so weak that it needs amplifying in the mic, and so needs power (either "phantom-power" or a small battery in the mic; actually, some condensers are "electret" where the capacitor has a permanent charge placed on it at the time of manufacture)

er, um - hope this helps -

Good Luck -
- Wil
 
Choices..

Hey Tasha:

If you are going to use your mike mainly for live situations, but need to stay around $100, check out:

Shure: SM 57
Audix; A few dynamic mics in this range

Some people prefer Audix dynamics over Shure, but I would suggest starting out buying a Shure SM-57.
There is not a condensor mic worth anything for $100.
DJ
 
I'm disappointed with the last two recommendations as they're blatant, "follow the pack" people. I have two friends that have both bought Shure SM58 mics and although they are good mics, I don't think it suits them.

So, to be different, I'm going to recommend some different models in no specific order:

1. AKG D880 - £29 (Cheap price for decent lead vocals)
2. Electro-Voice ND767 - £99 (Good price/build and great sound)
3. Shure SM57 - £45-75 (Cheap price = decent vocal sound)
4. Shure SM58 - £50-85 (Reasonable price = not bad for vocals)
5. AKG D65s - £29 (Cheap price and decent vocal sound)
6. AKG C1000s - £99 (Great price for a v.nice sound)
7. Beyer TGX58 - £69 (Don't know much about this one, but Digital Village has been bragging about the quality of them!)

Just a small selection of what I could remember, but it should convince you that there is plenty of choice. Not just one brand to deal with.

Adam.

http://www.adamsalbum.co.uk
 
?

Well these are good suggestions, the C1000 is a great mic, but doesn't fall into $100 USD prices.

But, if you can get another $40 or so for the C100 or another 60 for the Rode NT1 you would have a decent mic.

I'm more interested in what the path is, what kind of sound card, preamp?

Elaborate a bit on that and someone can probably give you some suggestions.
 
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