I need help choosing some drum mics.
Drum setup:
snare, hihat, kick-drum, 2 toms, floor tom, ride, crash
Related equipment: Alesis MultiMix 8 Channel Mixer
M-Audio DMP3 2 Mic Preamp
ART Tubepac Preamp
M-Audio Firewire Solo
I want to use a simple setup with a kick-drum mic and 2 overhead mics.
I am thinking of connecting the 2 overhead mics on the M-Audio DMP3 and the kick-drum mic on the ART Tubepack.
A budget of 350-400 EURO for all 3 mics is the max i can pay right now. (will be used for home studio recording, nothing professional but i want it to sound decent)
So, I am open to your suggestions.
Comments
The 58 goes on the snare. A kick mic of some quality goes on the
The 58 goes on the snare. A kick mic of some quality goes on the kick. A stereo pair of overheads goes on the ..........errr.... overheads. Tune the kit . Tune it so that no drum excites another one into sympathetic overtones. NO snare rattle while other things are being hit. Cymbals decay at a rate that allows all the other instruments in the mix to hold their ground. In short....create an environment for the drums that allows space for everything else and tightens the sound of the drums to point that everything done on them is important to the sound.
Mics and quality of gear will follow this lead. You'll find you dont really need that much to accomplish the task at hand.
You can also use the SM58 for a kick mic since it produces good
You can also use the SM58 for a kick mic since it produces good signal down to 40hz. I've used it as such many times.
Some inexpensive small diaphram condender mics that work well as overheads would be EV RE200, and Crown CM700. For a little more cash you can move up to the Oktava 012.
I bought a pair of AT3031's recently, waiting to try them for ov
I bought a pair of AT3031's recently, waiting to try them for overheads, but I've been using AT3035's for OH in a 4 mic setup. They have a slight bump around 200-300Hz that makes for nice big tom sounds, also reinforces the snare. I come in over the drummer's shoulders to get a good balance between drums and cymbals.
The best kick mic I recommend is the Audix D6. Search the net fo
The best kick mic I recommend is the Audix D6. Search the net for some reviews, you'll hear nothing but praise. It usually rates 5/5 on most retail stores online. It's a great kick mic that barely needs any EQing. I'm using an SM57 for the top of my snare, layed off using a bottom mic just for the sound I'm trying to achieve (still picks up some snares though, I guess it helps to buy new ones after all). I'm using two Samson C01 large condensor mics for overheads, they sound good enough, could sound a little warmer but they capture the high end really well which is what I really use my overheads for, cymbal capturing. I'm in the process of figuring out which tom mics work well, I sure would NOT recommend the tom mics from Samson, terrible :(
forgot to add i already own a Shure SM58
forgot to add i already own a Shure SM58