Ive been in a band for 2 years and we have 3 members; 1 vocalist/electric guitar, 1 bass player, 1 drummer... we have an emx5014c mixer, and two Yamaha br-15 speakers, the music we play is mostly hard rock/punkish/scremo. .we will be using a mac book to record. can anyone recommend professional mics for vocals, guitar, bass,and hi-hat mics.
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Edit> Here are some relatively inexpensive mics I can't live wit
Edit> Here are some relatively inexpensive mics I can't live without, and my typical usage:
Shure SM57, 58, 81 - all purpose for vox, guitars, snare, etc.
Audio Technica 4050 - vox, overheads, guitars.
EV468 & 868 - Toms and Kik respectively.
Sennheiser MD421 & 441 - all purpose, more for bass, horns, toms, snare bottom.
There are tons more to choose from...
You might want to save some of that $3K on sound treatment to th
You might want to save some of that $3K on sound treatment to the room, especially if you're dealing with cranked amps and pounding drums.
At least get some of those padded moving blankets to drape around the room. Then you can just plop that U87 down in the middle of the room... :lol:
I love the subkick thing. I need to get down to the studio and f
I love the subkick thing. I need to get down to the studio and finish the one I have all the parts for.........(lazy ass).............I dont know how much the Yamaha is, but you better have good monitors if you want to use that thing in your mix......NOT for the cheap speaker set.
Spill is your friend. Hear it...control it...use it....love it.
This is one of those things that makes a curious engineers work worth it. Learn the strength and weeknesses of your mics. Learn their polar patterns....Expect the spill but arrange the mics so that it becomes part of the SOUND not a mistake in placement.
Theres a musicality in the spill.......
THERE'S NO NEED TO YELL! It takes more than "professional" mics
THERE'S NO NEED TO YELL!
It takes more than "professional" mics to get a professional sound.
What's your budget?