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My ex girlfriend sold my ol Sure Ksm27 and i never had a chance to use it. its in a range of 299.. i saw an AKG c3000b for the same price. I ask you... . . Which is better?
I also like the way the Blue mics look . ... ... this also has me wondering . ... should i go ahead and save a few more hundred and try one of the blue bad boys?
Every ones opinion is Highly valued in this thread. An advanced thank you notice placed in this post for your reply .

Comments

anonymous Wed, 10/05/2005 - 12:49

Sound engineers love to share their opinions about equipment. However, the best test of an piece of equipment is how it sounds to you.

Of course, there is so much equipment available that it's great to be able to narrow the choices based on the advice of people you trust.

As unusual a view as it is, I'm not a fan of AKG microphones. In my opinion, they tend to sound overly bright (sometimes brittle and harsh). However, I just did a collaboration with a guy in Italy who recorded all of his tracks with an AKG c2000 (I think that was the model), and the tracks sounded great (don't know how he did it).

My workhorse microphone is my Shure KSM44. It might be a little out of your price range. I've heard one SE Electronics microphone, and I thought it sounded great. You may want to check them out (http://www.seelectronics.com).

jonyoung Wed, 10/12/2005 - 12:41

I own a C3000 and hardly ever use it. It is, as James suggests, on the thin and brittle sounding side. It's OK for certain types of acoustic guitar sounds, and I used it on trombone with decent results. My favorite low cost condenser mic is the Audio Technica AT3035, about $180 average street price. Way above average for vocals, especially female. Meaty sounding on electric guitar amps, smooth and even tempered on tenor sax, on and on...........I just bought a 2nd one for using on choirs, piano, anything else I can think of.

TheArchitect Fri, 10/28/2005 - 18:40

McCheese wrote: Blue mics are wierd, they're good, but each model has a very distinct sound. I wouldn't recommend one for a 'universal' mic. The AT 40xx series is nice, I'm going to pick up a 4050 here very soon.

I just ordered a 4050 myself this morning. I was looking hard at a Red / B7 cap as well. Something in the ballpark of a U47 was very tempting. But I couldn't audition it, it is a single pattern, no pad, no rolloff and I have found a total of 1 review that wasn't a verbatim copy of the Red propganda.

I needed a proven all 'rounder and the Red just isn't yet. The 4050 is a proven entity, has omni, F8 and Card patterns, a bass rolloff and pad and was about half the price leaving a few coins for filling in other weaknesses in the recording chain.