Submitted by JesterMasque on Tue, 02/05/2008 - 10:26

I have an Audix D6 that I use on the kick. 75% of the time I place it about 2-3" outside the sound hole.
Lately I have been recording a lot of metal bands that want a clicky bass drum. This leads to compression and frequency boosts between 6-7k.The problem is that there is a lot of cymbal bleed into the mic, which wouldn't normally be a problem except that those frequency boosts bring out a lot of that bleed in the mix.
I see the solution being to isolate the mic. But the only way I can see to do that is by placing it inside the sound hole. I have seldom been happy with the raw, mixing sound acquired with this setup. Is there a better way to isolate it? How would you mic and mix the kick for a metal band?
Thanks guys!

Comments

The D6 demonstrates all the aspects of a hyper-cardioid pattern mic. Use this to your advantage. Get the mic DEEP INSIDE the kick and position it 3 or 4 inches off the batter head. Dont aim it directly at the beater contact point but angle it DOWN so its facing away from anything above the drum. Make sure its the same heighth as the beater contact point, just aimed slightly down .

This will be your starting point. Manuver it till you LOVE the sound. Have a compressor on hand as well as an inline pad if needed.

You will never need to EQ while tracking again.

If you find the lowend is building up, then EQ, but cut only!!... or simply remove the resonant head and begin again.

Once, i used cinder blocks to make a shell around the mic that i was using for the kick. Then, i wrapped those cinder blocks into heavy sheets.

I have to say, it worked pretty well. I was then able to have the mic outside the kick drum without too much cymbals in there, so i could work on those high frequencies.

The thing about isolation is the heavier the thing you put between the mic and the thing you want to get rid of, the better the isolation...

Davedog wrote: The D6 demonstrates all the aspects of a hyper-cardioid pattern mic. Use this to your advantage. Get the mic DEEP INSIDE the kick and position it 3 or 4 inches off the batter head. Dont aim it directly at the beater contact point but angle it DOWN so its facing away from anything above the drum. Make sure its the same heighth as the beater contact point, just aimed slightly down .

are you suggesting this technique with the D6 specifically? or with all kick drum mics?

i'm curious to try it out

I use the D6 here as an example simply because this was the mic in question. The tighter the patern the better it will work. Theres more 'spill' witha D112 and the AT2500. The Beta 52 is a tight patterned mic but the D6 is the tightest. Like I said...hyper-cardioid.

This is why we need to learn the size and type of polar patterns our mics exhibit when placing them in a multi-mic recording situation. A drum kit is the best example of this as there will be bleed no matter what you do. However, with well executed placement and selection of mics, we're able to use the bleed as part of the overall sound of the instrument and make it work for us rather than be something we have to do surgery on later on.

Another option: use two mics for the kick.

Put one inside to capture the 'click' and another outside for the 'woomph' (technical term!)

You can then gate them both, if necessary using the inside mic to trigger the gate for the outside mic.

You can also roll off the highs on the outside mic to reduce the cymbal bleed, while still retaining the click of the inside mic.

This is a very common technique for live sound, usually using a boundary mic like a Beta 91 or e901 inside, and a dynamic such as a beta 52 or M88 outside (or in the hole).

One engineer I have worked with uses a Yamaha 'Sub Kick' outside instead of the conventional dynamic... it sounds great.

rockstardave wrote: I use the D6 here as an example simply because this was the mic in question. The tighter the patern the better it will work. Theres more 'spill' witha D112 and the AT2500. The Beta 52 is a tight patterned mic but the D6 is the tightest. Like I said...hyper-cardioid.

This is why we need to learn the size and type of polar patterns our mics exhibit when placing them in a multi-mic recording situation. A drum kit is the best example of this as there will be bleed no matter what you do. However, with well executed placement and selection of mics, we're able to use the bleed as part of the overall sound of the instrument and make it work for us rather than be something we have to do surgery on later on.

uh, i didnt type all that part. DaveDogg, did you accidentally press Edit on my post instead of Quote ?? :-P

thanks for the good info, it makes sense of course, i just never thought of it.

i actually used a d112 over the weekend in a live sound situation, and i set it up following this technique. great results!

rockstardave wrote: i'm curious to try it out

so, since i've posted this i've had the chance to use the big 3 ... d6 , d112 , beta52a .. using this technique.

nice! sometimes it's a pain to get it in there deep enough, but it sounds good. on the specific kick drum that i used the beta52 on, i barely had to do any eq at all! in fact, i almost wanted to turn 400-500Hz UP!!

wild