
FALKEN
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how do you keep the drums out of the vocal mic?
FALKEN said:how do you keep the drums out of the vocal mic?
SouthSIDE Glen said:6. You can have the vocaists sing when recording the rest of the band, but just don't keep the vocals. Then playback the band mix in the vocalists' headphones and record the vocal clean as an overdub.
SouthSIDE Glen said:i know you don't want to hear from me because everyting I say is always wrong but...
1. Face the vocalist towards the drums with a cardioid mic facing away from them.
2. Put the vocalist in a vocal booth or put a Reflexion filter around the vocal mic.
3. Gobos/blankets around the drums. if you're getting to much reflection around them, then the number of and/or placemet of the baffles is inadequate. If you're getting a bad reflection around a gobo, kill the reflection.
4. Accept some bleed. If the bleed is so strong as to adversely affect the sound of the drums in the mix, then you have waaaaay too much bleed and need to go back and look at points 1, 2 and 3 again.
5. If you still have too much bleed, get a larger room or better iso booth.
or, my favorite...
6. You can have the vocaists sing when recording the rest of the band, but just don't keep the vocals. Then playback the band mix in the vocalists' headphones and record the vocal clean as an overdub.
G.
SouthSIDE Glen said:i know you don't want to hear from me because everyting I say is always wrong but...
1. Face the vocalist towards the drums with a cardioid mic facing away from them.
2. Put the vocalist in a vocal booth or put a Reflexion filter around the vocal mic.
3. Gobos/blankets around the drums. if you're getting to much reflection around them, then the number of and/or placemet of the baffles is inadequate. If you're getting a bad reflection around a gobo, kill the reflection.
4. Accept some bleed. If the bleed is so strong as to adversely affect the sound of the drums in the mix, then you have waaaaay too much bleed and need to go back and look at points 1, 2 and 3 again.
5. If you still have too much bleed, get a larger room or better iso booth.
or, my favorite...
6. You can have the vocaists sing when recording the rest of the band, but just don't keep the vocals. Then playback the band mix in the vocalists' headphones and record the vocal clean as an overdub.
G.
bigtoe said:i'm working on a brazilian thing tonight thru the xmas eve...4 of the tracks have live vocals...2 drum sets and about 50 pieces of percussion with an ampeg svt bass amp, a dr z maz 18 guitar amp, a fender rhodes thru i forgot to look and a sax/flute. all in the same room. i'm setting everyone up fairly tight...as they set up in practice...
MIke
bigtoe said:sometimes. sometimes a figure 8 actually just picks up more verb as it's picking up reflections. that is a good call if it works...
try positioning the singer closer to the drums...it seems counter intuitive but you get cleaner bleed.
AGCurry said:A variation on Glen's #1: You may actually get more isolation and less bleed using a figure-of-eight-patterned microphone and taking advantage of its superior rejection in its nulls. A bidirectional mic results in less room sound than a cardioid.
SouthSIDE Glen said:i know you don't want to hear from me because everyting I say is always wrong but...
1. Face the vocalist towards the drums with a cardioid mic facing away from them.
2. Put the vocalist in a vocal booth or put a Reflexion filter around the vocal mic.
3. Gobos/blankets around the drums. if you're getting to much reflection around them, then the number of and/or placemet of the baffles is inadequate. If you're getting a bad reflection around a gobo, kill the reflection.
4. Accept some bleed. If the bleed is so strong as to adversely affect the sound of the drums in the mix, then you have waaaaay too much bleed and need to go back and look at points 1, 2 and 3 again.
5. If you still have too much bleed, get a larger room or better iso booth.
or, my favorite...
6. You can have the vocaists sing when recording the rest of the band, but just don't keep the vocals. Then playback the band mix in the vocalists' headphones and record the vocal clean as an overdub.
G.
OK, I had that one coming, didn't I?MCI2424 said:1-6 is wrong. The rest is OK
All the more reason to suround the kit with gobos (and don't forget above). Two birds for one... Tightens up the rest of the room and the other things in the room.FALKEN said:thanks all for the advice. We're going for a dry-as-fuck drum sound but with live vocals "all in one room" so you could see the problems I am having....