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Ribbon vs Condenser, Please help choose which mic is best for singer

Here are two versions of the same song, written and performed by a client of mine.

We decided to try two lead vocal tracks during pre - production, ( we're not sure of either one yet) - on one take we used a condenser on the vocal, and on the other, we used a ribbon.

There are certain/different things that I like - and mildly dislike - about each one of them.

I'd like input on which vocal track sounds sonically best to you.

THIS IS NOT A FINAL MIX - and as such, I'm not really looking for mix critiques; we're still working with this song and its arrangement. I would like to know, at this point in the song, which mic you would choose if you were producing/engineering this song.

:)

LV using Ribbon:

[MEDIA=soundcloud]donnythompson/this-longing-w-ribbon-mic-3-april-2-2015[/MEDIA]

LV using Condenser:

[MEDIA=soundcloud]donnythompson/this-longing-w-condsr-mic-3-april-2-2015[/MEDIA]

Comments

Boswell Sun, 04/05/2015 - 10:12

What were the mouth-mic distances in the two cases? Any effects in use on the vocal channel?

Of the two tracks you posted, I prefer the MXL 860 ribbon, since to my ear the AKG 214 condenser has either more room sound in it or more effect. The ribbon track would give me a better starting point for a mix.

BTW, there's something a bit odd about the stereo spread on the piano reverb!

DonnyThompson Sun, 04/05/2015 - 11:29

Boswell, post: 427593, member: 29034 wrote: What were the mouth-mic distances in the two cases? Any effects in use on the vocal channel?

around 4-5 inches.

Boswell, post: 427593, member: 29034 wrote: Any effects in use on the vocal channel?

yes. some hall reverb. Same on both, same kind, roughly same amount, same aux return.
There may be more room on the condenser, which is a bit strange in that the ribbon is a Fig 8 and should have picked up the same amount - if not more. But they are two completely different takes, so it's possible he was closer in proximity to the ribbon.

Boswell, post: 427593, member: 29034 wrote: BTW, there's something a bit odd about the stereo spread on the piano reverb!

Yes, there is. It's a sample I'm not crazy about, one of the Independence pianos, ( there are also a few cases of distortion caused by me not paying attention to the VSTi level). The piano is strictly there for cue purposes. I think the piano track will likely end up being an EP - Rhodes or Wurli, we haven't decided yet.

Right now I'm leaning towards the ribbon for the "darker" warmth. I understand the attraction to the condenser because of its presence peak, but there are spots I find it to be just too much with his voice. He's got a rasp that seems to exaggerate around 6 k or so, I had to pull quite a bit of that out on that track because it was just too much... or, maybe that's also an inherent character of the AKG 214. This is the first time I'd used that mic, so I didn't really know what to expect with it.

Thanks all for taking the time to listen, and or your input. It's greatly appreciated. ;)

pcrecord Sun, 04/05/2015 - 14:43

I feel the condenser sound unnatural and accentuate HF too much but could be what you are looking for depending on the type of production you're doing (with a good EQ curve) :).

The Ribbon sound more balanced but I would choose it only if it can take a bit of HF boost well. I know some ribbon does and some don't.

audiokid Sun, 04/05/2015 - 14:58

Fwiw, the condenser has that same edgy sound that I've heard in quite of few of your tracks. Do others agree?
I'm wondering if its the same mic, combo or something else that I would without doubt, stop using. There is a distinct sound of it thats doesn't sound natural. In fact, it sounds "broken, or very wrong like a bad electronic component. Does the ribbon mask? Is the condenser accentuating whatever it really is, which may not be the condenser? Not sure...
I'm thinking that mic is problematic. Hope that helps.

pcrecord Sun, 04/05/2015 - 18:57

audiokid, post: 427607, member: 1 wrote: Fwiw, the condenser has that same edgy sound that I've heard in quite of few of your tracks. Do others agree?
I'm wondering if its the same mic, combo or something else that I would without doubt, stop using.

I do agree of hearing this HF airy sound on some other of Donny's recording.
It would be very interesting to compare the 214 to another one and hear if they all sound like that. For it to be broken would be a drastic and surprising find.
My instinct tells me that they might be all like this and are one of those mics that need a push from a nice warm pre that would sweeten the HF.

When I bought my 2 KSM44, I partly did it upon some comments that said that it was less bright than the 414. Some said that with warm preamps or classic console and tape recording it was ideal but with digital recordings, it could be too clear.. Of course I'm not saying I believe this for a fact, but it was enough to doubt them enough to get a shot at the 44. 2 years later, I now think about trying a 414 since I aquired better preamps.
I'm saying all that because if the 214 is anything close sounding to the 414 it might have retain this bright side in the conception process.
We all know that budget gear conception often try to apeal to newcomers with extremely bright sounding units.
If only everyone could understand that : Bright doesn't equal Quality !

I'm very curious about the sound of the 214 Donny !! Hope you get back to us on this ! ;

DonnyThompson Sun, 04/05/2015 - 22:05

The thing is, I have that transformer based ADK Pre, ( not exactly what I'd call "budget", LOL) but this time decided to bypass it and go directly into the Presonus. And, I have a 414EB, but wanted to see what thw 214 could do (the 214 isn't mine, it was borrowed, just to try something diffeent) Maybe I should have used the ADK and the 414... I'm not minding the ribbon mic version though...

DogsoverLava Sun, 04/19/2015 - 00:00

This might sound weird but the ribbon mic sounded like the vocal and the mix were in the same geometric space - like the singer was bundled in a blanket. where the condenser placed the vocal outside (and above - as in height) for me - like he was singing from above and downward on the mix. I liked the blanket better

DonnyThompson Sun, 04/19/2015 - 02:55

audiokid Boswell , DogsoverLava , pcrecord , thatjeffguy freightgod

DogsoverLava, post: 428161, member: 48175 wrote: This might sound weird but the ribbon mic sounded like the vocal and the mix were in the same geometric space - like the singer was bundled in a blanket. where the condenser placed the vocal outside (and above - as in height) for me - like he was singing from above and downward on the mix. I liked the blanket better

The responses have shown it to be about 50/50... I'm also including the opinions of some other people I've asked outside of this forum - colleagues of mine - and the general consensus is about the same, 50/50, which shows that it really is a personal preference thing.

The ribbon has an inherent "darker" sound, which is kind of the point and what you are going for when you use it for vocals. I like to refer to it as a "syrupy" kind of sound.
But, just as many prefer the condenser, because they like the brighter sound, more presence.

Truthfully, it's still a coin toss for me. There are things that I like and dislike about both for this song.

I decided to not use any compression or limiting on the 2-bus. The RMS is pretty low on this, which results in the dynamic range being really wide.
A LUFS meter measurement put this in the ballpark of -20db or so, with a true peak of -6.5. This is a pretty big DR (15db) and, is intentional - for the time being - I want to keep the dynamic range as big as possible on this track.

Eventually, it's going to be professionally mastered anyway, so I'll let the M.E. decide what's best at that time, but speaking in "averages", I'd like to see this ultimately sitting at around -12 to -13db RMS (or so) with a True Peak of -0.3.
I'd be happy with a dynamic range of 12 to 13 db for this track, because it's very dynamic by nature. I don't see any need to squash it. It's not that kind of song that demands "power".

Here's the latest update for it. We're still not completely done - we're still working with the string arrangement, and the vocal. Songs like this can be really tough to get right, because there's not a whole lot going on, there's nothing to "hide" behind, performance wise
.
Everything has to be really solid and sound like it belongs where it is, and, that's not always easy. That's where the art and skill of arrangement comes into play, (and IMO, a side of the craft that I fee;l has gotten lost a bit over the years).
On a song like this one, the accompaniment has to be complimentary yet subtle, and shouldn't distract the listener away from the vocal. LOL ... "The focal is the vocal". ;)

As a side note - we tracked this lead vocal without headphones, choosing to instead place a speaker behind the the mic as close as possible to the null. And, I didn't crank playback, either. I kept it soft - just loud enough for him to use it as a cue.
This version is a condenser, Neumann U89i. We still haven't made a final decision yet on which mic we feel is best.

So - arrangement wise, performance wise, mix wise...we're not there yet ... but we are getting a little closer each time we work on it. ;)

[[url=http://[/URL]="http://recording.or…"]This Longing 1 April 18 2015 MP3 320kb.mp3[/]="http://recording.or…"]This Longing 1 April 18 2015 MP3 320kb.mp3[/]

[MEDIA=audio]http://recording.or…

[MEDIA=audio]https://recording.o…

Attached files This Longing 1 April 18 2015 MP3 320kb.mp3 (7.1 MB) 

DonnyThompson Sun, 04/19/2015 - 07:50

pcrecord, post: 428168, member: 46460 wrote: The vocal is sounding great Donny, in fact the whole song is.
The only thing I like a little less is the high violins which sound appart from the rest. (the sound unnatural an with some small roomy reverb)

I'm right there with ya pal. The strings have been the thing(s) that have been giving us the most headaches on this track.

I like the actual parts ... and it's not like it's really even an EQ thing, either.... it's the quality of the sounds/samples that I'm not crazy about.

These are Garritan Personal Orchestra samples, 1st version, I think - 32 bit, probably like 10 years old now - and while I remember liking them okay back when they first came out, I don't think they stand up as well these days, to what I've heard with better sounding sample libraries being available now.

Thanks for listening and commenting :)

paulears Sun, 04/19/2015 - 11:16

I wonder if you have a preference? The reason for asking is that you've heard the voice for real, so hearing the two mics, AND the voice you are perhaps best placed to hear the benefit of the end result, while we just hear subtle differences. Maybe that isn't important because everyone judges on the end result, but as you say - you have a 414, and chose not to use it, when perhaps you know it very well.

I always knew what I like, but rarely know why! (for me, by the way, it was the ribbon - which I usually do not like??)

DonnyThompson Mon, 04/20/2015 - 02:36

pcrecord, post: 428180, member: 46460 wrote: If you send me a midi file I can make you a couple string tracks you can choose from

Thanks Marco...That's a very generous offer. We have one more session planned for the arrangement, to make sure that the parts are exactly what we want. I will be in touch after that, I'd hate to send something to you now and have it not be the exact part we want.

paulears, post: 428177, member: 47782 wrote: I wonder if you have a preference? The reason for asking is that you've heard the voice for real, so hearing the two mics, AND the voice you are perhaps best placed to hear the benefit of the end result, while we just hear subtle differences. Maybe that isn't important because everyone judges on the end result, but as you say - you have a 414, and chose not to use it, when perhaps you know it very well.

As I said Paul, there are things I like and dislike about both. For this song, for this context, and for this voice on this song, I'm leaning toward the ribbon... but when I say "leaning", I mean not really by much - like I'm 51 % in favor of the ribbon and 49% in favor of the condenser...so it's almost a coin toss.

I chose 214 strictly as a test - I wanted to see what the 214 sounded like, as opposed to the 414 " sound" that I was already familiar with.
Although, I will say that so far, I'm not crazy about the sound of the AKG 214 on his voice for this particular song. I felt that it was hyped too much in the upper frequencies, and lacked the fullness and warmth desired for a performance of this nature.

As a side note, a personal observation: For those thinking that the 214 is just a 414 without the bells and whistles, well, in my opinion, it's not. Features aside, when it comes down to strictly the sound of each, the 214 is not as nice as the 414 is sonically. That's not to say that the 214 isn't a decent mic for the money, but, if anyone is considering buying the 214 with the expectations of getting the sound of the 414 (without the features), you'll be disappointed.

The most recent update you heard was the Ribbon mic through the ADK AP1 pre, using a Jensen JT110 XFO, and a John Hardy 990C OpAmp. Terry was very close to the mic on this take ... 3-5". This made the track very warm sounding, but being closer also helped to preserve some of the sibilance that ribbon mics are normally known to attenuate; although I did end up having to do a fair amount of EQ'ing it the upper frequency ranges to enhance this, along with the 'air". LOL... it's funny, because 99% of the time I'm trying to get rid of sibilance, not enhance it... ;)

When we recorded it, I set up a three sided "box" around him, made of hanging packing blankets; I wanted to be cautious about how much room reflection we might possibly pick up.
DogsoverLava mentioned in his post that he felt it sounded as if "the singer was bundled in a blanket" - so actually, he wasn't all that far off in his description. LOL ;)

In the end, I probably would have been able to just get the sound I wanted with my old 414EB through the ADK pre, but... I also really wanted to see what the ribbon was capable of... it was almost as much a test of the mic - and its potential sound - as it was getting the right sound for the song.

I think this most recent vocal version sounds very nice, and is appropriate for the song. Sonically, I think it sounds good (everything except the strings), I've listened to it on several different playback systems other than my studio monitors - a pair of auratones, 2 car audio systems, 2 home theater/audio systems, an old boombox I have, and my iPad with cheap ear buds - and it translates evenly, and sounds very nice through each.

When it comes time to master this, I'm going to make it very clear to the M.E. that I really want the dynamic range to be preserved on this song. I don't mind some limiting, or an increase in RMS, but, even after those things, I'd still want a DR of no less than 12 db. If it has to end up being the last song on the album for that to happen, and so that it "fits" better, then so be it.

FWIW :)

d.

Boswell Mon, 04/20/2015 - 03:18

DonnyThompson Paulears makes the very valid point that everyone except the vocalist and you has no knowledge of how the vocal line should sound, if what you are aiming for is realism or possibly getting as close as possible to the natural voice. All we as listeners to the two microphone tracks can do is say which track we prefer the sound of. I'm assuming that during the final mix you will add some subtle reverb to the dry vocal so the acoustic fits with the piano.

It's a great song, well delivered and recorded, but, in my opinion, the string sample quality is the weak point. If Marco can help you achieve a string sound to match the recorded tracks, you will have a really great result.

DonnyThompson Mon, 04/20/2015 - 03:30

Boswell, post: 428193, member: 29034 wrote: All we as listeners to the two microphone tracks can do is say which track we prefer the sound of.

Initially, that's all I really wanted to know, how the people listening felt in terms of which take they preferred, without any preconceived notions planted by me as to how I felt about them. It was just meant as a fun little exercise in personal preference. ;)

Boswell, post: 428193, member: 29034 wrote: but, in my opinion, the string sample quality is the weak point.

I couldn't agree more, Bos. The strings have been the main source of hair-pulling on this one. And, because there's not much going on in the song, there's nothing to tuck them behind - or any way to masque the low quality of the samples, so they really do need to be dead on sound-wise.

I'm really looking forward to what Marco can do with the midi files I send him. It's a very kind and generous offer on his part.

I'm gonna have to give him a liner-note credit as co-arranger. ;)

I just need to go over the actual parts with Terry one more time to make sure that all the notes are exactly what we want. I don't want to put Marco out and have to take advantage of his kindness twice. ;)

d.

Davedog Thu, 04/30/2015 - 23:59

Late. Busy. The ribbon has a low-mids blankety kinda veil imparted to the vocal....I know you've moved on from this but there's something there that limits the breathiness and intimacy of the vocal. At least that is what I got out of the performance and as a producer I would be looking to enhance that part of the vocal rather than look for something which might hamper that part of it. I really did not like either mic for different reasons. I did like the performance and thats what counts anyway.

If I had a choice in my locker of a Neumann of any sort and anything else it would always be the Neumann that goes up first. Even if it isn't the perfect mic at the time, the fact that it imparts the type of intimate clarity without harshness that I'm hearing in certain frequency ranges from both of those choices, makes it an ideal partner to have at mix when anything you need to add to the vocal sound is easily accomplished simply because everything is already there ready to be shaped to your will.

On a side note...and I don't know if anyone cares or remembers that I own an older U87 that I have felt for years is only a good vocal mic in general and only great on occasion....I dug it out of its case the other day and threw it up on a secondary vocal in a duet situation and through the Manley and a Grace 502 optical comp it kicked my ass. Held its own with the U67 and the ViPre and an LA2A. Happy.

DonnyThompson Sat, 05/02/2015 - 01:21

LOL... I do appreciate you weighing in Dave - better late to the party than to not show at all, right? ;) But you're right, that ship has sailed. In the end, the final version was tracked with a Neumann U89i through an ADK preamp ( using a Sowter 9820c XFO and a John Hardy 990c OpAmp ).

I did like some things about the ribbon mic, though. For this track, I really quite liked the darker more "syrupy" sound. But in the end, it lacked the presence needed to compete with other current, similar commercial releases.

;)