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i will be starting a new session with my band and i was just wondering two things. first how would you record the violin? think of it as a beethoven style solo violin. one more thing the violin, bow and musician are top notch and the room is treated(hanging form the topnotch)

think about that...

now same question keeping in mind that i have this to work with;
Sebatron 4000e
goove tubes brick
Mackie 1604 vlzpro
Tascam m35

RCA 74b
CAD m9
2 kel hm1
2 SP C4
3 ev 636
3 sm57
1 RODE nt1a

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frob Wed, 07/27/2005 - 17:22

frob wrote: i will be starting a new session with my band and i was just wondering two things. first how would you record the violin? think of it as a beethoven style solo violin. one more thing the violin, bow and musician are top notch and the room is treated(hanging form the topnotch)

im not adding anything. there is a violin in the band. im recording in a modern style recording studio. think of the room as a mid-large vocal booth about 10x14 with 10 foot ceilings.

Cucco Wed, 07/27/2005 - 19:47

Given your equipment options, it's almost unimportant what type of music you're recording.

I would most definitely use the RCA.

The problem is, you'll need a pre with decent gain -

Try the Brick, but you'll likely need additional gain - take the line out from the Brick and patch it to the line in on the mackie and make up any additional gain there.

Or, I don't know the Sebs, but a lot of people here really dig 'em, so I would say, give it a try. You can cascade multiple channels on it to get a usable gain out of it.

I can't see any other mic that I would want to use on solo violin or accompanied/backing, etc violin. The pres- most of them will work, but I think the two "thicker" sounding pres would work the best.

Hope this helps.

BTW - be careful with double posts - I thought I saw this same post elsewhere on the board? It's considered spamming to do that.

No harm, we'll only send someone to your house to rough you up and bash in your monitor... :lol:

J.

Cucco Wed, 07/27/2005 - 22:39

Don't worry - nobody will kill you. (Okay, Kurt might)

It's frustrating sometimes - I've posted stuff that I wanted a reply to and didn't get one for over a month. Some poor sap must have run across it and gotten it bumped.

FWIW, I never mind if someone PMs me or e-mails me directly (or heck, even calls me - all my info is on my webpage which is linked in my profile) just to ask me to reply to a post. I try to be on the ball, but I get a tad forgetful regarding the forums that I don't moderate.

Thanks!

J (y)

KurtFoster Fri, 07/29/2005 - 12:51

"Screechy" violins happen because people don't play correctly. If the player is talented, this is not usually a problem. I would go with one of the the small diaphragm mics over the shoulder (so the mic is hearing what the violin player hears), a foot or two above the sound board of the violin through the Sebatron (set flat). If that's too bright then switch to the HM-1. You will probably need to apply a few db's of compression to get the violin to set correctly in the mix, so the quieter passages don't get buried or the louder ones don't overwhelm.

frob Fri, 07/29/2005 - 14:20

this is what im planing;

using the seb with a cardio c4 over the shoulder

then under the violin sort of to the side use the RCA throught the brick(most likely) and use the seb if i need more gain. i will post some clips when i get it done.

also screechy violins can come from good players if the engineer isnt paying attention. it happend at another studio.

TheArchitect Fri, 07/29/2005 - 14:20

Kurt Foster wrote: "Screechy" violins happen because people don't play correctly. If the player is talented, this is not usually a problem. I would go with one of the the small diaphragm mics over the shoulder (so the mic is hearing what the violin player hears), a foot or two above the sound board of the violin through the Sebatron (set flat). If that's too bright then switch to the HM-1. You will probably need to apply a few db's of compression to get the violin to set correctly in the mix, so the quieter passages don't get buried or the louder ones don't overwhelm.

Very true... I just don't see many violins let alone one's with good players attached. :)

anonymous Tue, 08/09/2005 - 11:54

screechy violin

As a violin/fiddle player and recordist, one plays better some days than others - just like singers and every one else. I've recorded violin through a Demeter preamp with SP C4 at 135 degrees with the fiddle between them. I've gotten some good results in smoothing the sound using an aux channel with Waves Super-tap 2 chorused reflections and busing some of the violin there. Be careful not to use too much of the delay channel or the violin will sound "spacey."

My $0.02,
Ted Simon
http://www.downhomefiddle.com