So ive been using tlm 103s on the sides and a u47 in the front ...i like the sounds that I'm getting but i was just wondering what the rest of the world uses!
How to mic a B3 leslie cabinet?
I prefer the 90 degree mic approach on the top. (Don't make the mistake of putting a mic wide (hard L and R) on each side, that's actually 180 degrees, and it will substantially negate any of the wonderful L-R panning & dopler effect you'll get with the horns moving. The horns are already 180 apart, so you'll want to have your mics at 90 degrees to get the true L/R auto-pan sound most folks want.
How to mic the bottom rotor?
The Leslie has 2 horns, only 1 is functional as the other serves as counter balance and does not produce sound.
What is a good example of a well recorded Leslie Organ?
Pick up a copy of Emerson, Lake and Palmer's "Brain Salad Surgery" and listen to the very first track with headphones on: The organ opening/intro to "Karn Evil 9, 1st Impression, Part 1". It's essentially a mini-2-part invention (like Bach) but done on a snarly, growly B3 just before the tune really kicks in. As good as it gets, IMHO.
Are there any good books on micing leslie cabinets?
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If you are attempting to mic a rotating Leslie, I agree with Joe
If you are attempting to mic a rotating Leslie, I agree with Joe about opting for mic placment at 90 degrees, as opposed to 180 (for the horns). However, per the below quote......." The horns are already 180 apart, so you'll want to have your mics at 90 degrees to get the true L/R auto-pan sound most folks want.
This is pure B.S...although the Leslie has 2 horns, only 1 is functional as the other serves as counter balance and does not produce sound. I use 1 U87 (or other large diaphragm condenser like AKG 414 if U87 is not available) on the front louvers and 1 on the side louvers for the horn (for a stereo pair). Since only 1 horn is functional, you are still getting the full doppler effect, regardless if you place mics at 90 or 180 degrees. I prefer 90 degree placement @ the horns because I also go stereo on the bottom bass with 2 Shure SM-7's (or Senn. 421's as an alternative) with 1 SM7 placed @ the front bottom bass louver and 1 @ the opposite side (90 degrees) from the top louver. I find the louvers to be a good selection for mic placement as they help deflect air from the speakers. Some engineers mic the open area on the rear of the cabinet, but the motor for the speed control tends to be noisy and is often audible when when the rear of the cabinet is miced. I have had good results with a hard pan for the horns and 10 & 2 pan on the bottom bass. A little leakage is not a bad thing and tends to liven the sound a bit. The best advice I can provide is to experiment with the room, mic placement and mic selection and go with what sounds best. The SM57 is a good alternative to SM7 on the bass, but I prefer a larger diaphragm if possible, like the SM7 or Senn. 421.
On another note, per the below article..."Believe it or not, a pair of the classic SM57's will usually sound great on the top rotors, and your choice of mic (usually an LD condenser for me) on the bottom, (with a little low-end rolloff?) usually does a great job on the bottom. If the band has a bass player, you may not be needing too much from the low end anyway (unless the organist plays PEDALS, too! Yeah.... ;-)
Again, this is B.S...The horn is producing hi-mid and hi frequencies. Stick with a condenser, preferably a large diaphragm when micing the horns. Vice versa for the bass. It would be counterintuitive to mic a condenser for low and dynamic for hi frequencies, this just doesn't make any sense.
Most of them are the wooden model anyway, with a 12 or 15 in the bottom, and a dual rotating horn (over a single tweeter/driver) up top. Depending on how well they've been kept up, they may or may not have the original wooden covers over the back areas. (Most leslies are used flipped around, with the nice "Furniture" side facing away, with the spinning horns exposed and visible from the audience persepctive.)
There's been a lot written over the years, and I recall Keyboard Magazine did a GREAT issue on this very topic a while back (late 90s?). (I don't get KYBD anymore, but I think they may have their entire past issue collection available online, or at least have articles available in a searchable database. Worth a few moments on their website, to be sure.)
Remember the whole organ leslie combo is a very dynamic, motion-based system, and it really lets the organ breathe, in a way. (There are some older (non-Leslie brand) Hammond cabinets that do NOT spin or move at all, and some older systems used a combination of these two. Hence the many sounds out there available on any given Jazz B3 combo recording.) On a loud rock gig, you may want to isolate it in a road case to get the most out of it. (Again, Keyboard magazine had a whole section on this, including Keith Emerson's custom, foam-lined road case that housed his Leslie 147 with built in mics, cables, etc.)
If you've got the Leslie isolated in a good sounding room, you can play around a LOT with close and distant mic'ing. Or, you can just get in close and work with tight mics and add your reverb and room tone later. You can even take some straight Organ alone (DI'd) and blend the mix to taste.
I prefer the 90 degree mic approach on the top. (Don't make the mistake of putting a mic wide (hard L and R) on each side, that's actually 180 degrees, and it will substantially negate any of the wonderul L-R panning & dopler effect you'll get with the horns moving. The horns are already 180 apart, so you'll want to have your mics at 90 degrees to get the true L/R auto-pan sound most folks want.
I don't have any pictures to show you (Maybe Keyboard mag still does?), but you can easily start with one mic slightly to the right of front/center, and the other one 90degrees to the left, even peaking inside the 4" top opening a bit. (don't get too close, or you'll get a lot of air hitting the mic as well...unless you WANT that effect.) You can also do this OUTSIDE of the entire wooden case itself, but you may be forced to do this on the covered, louvered side. (Which isn't all that bad either, and some would argue is a big part of the sound anyway......)
For the bottom rotor, a single mic (mono) is usually considered enough.
Most of this is low end material anyway, but the spinning drum does help move the sound around a bit. Don't get too close with that one, either..more than air hitting the mic, the big rotor at the bottom can really do some damage (Whack!) if it hits anything while spinning at the high setting.
Believe it or not, a pair of the classic SM57's will usually sound great on the top rotors, and your choice of mic (usually an LD condenser for me) on the bottom, (with a little low-end rolloff?) usually does a great job on the bottom. If the band has a bass player, you may not be needing too much from the low end anyway (unless the organist plays PEDALS, too! Yeah.... ;-)
I keep mentioning the Keyboard mag stuff, because they honestly DID cover this to perfection in their story (I think this was back in the 90's now...can't recall the year.)
And while there are tons and tons of great Jimmy Smith (and others') Jazz and Rock recording out there, I can point you to perhaps (IMHO) the best example of what a good, stereo-mic'd B3(or C3) should sound like in a recording.
Pick up a copy of Emerson, Lake and Palmer's "Brain Salad Surgery" and listen to the very first track with headphones on: The organ opening/intro to "Karn Evil 9, 1st Impression, Part 1". It's essentially a mini-2-part invention (like Bach) but done on a snarly, growly B3 just before the tune really kicks in. As good as it gets, IMHO. (Ditto for most of the rest of that record, but that's another story, another time...)[/QUOTE]
This might interest you [[url=http://[/URL]="http://www.digitalp
This might interest you
[[url=http://[/URL]="http://www.digitalp…"]The Earl of Whirl--Capturing the motion and emotion of the Leslie speaker cabinet.[/]="http://www.digitalp…"]The Earl of Whirl--Capturing the motion and emotion of the Leslie speaker cabinet.[/]
Quote from theatreorgans.com
"How do you record a Leslie speaker? How many microphones are used and where are they placed? Everyone seems to have their favorite technique. Just to give you an idea of the range of methods that have been used, here's an excerpt from " Unearthing the Mysteries of the Leslie Cabinet, " by Clifford A. Henricksen.
As with just about anything, recording a Leslie is a matter of particular taste and purpose. You might want record the best possible recreation of a live Hammond B3/Leslie combination; you might also want to make it sound "better". You migh also want to use it as send and receive device, like an echo unit, with a high level send to the Leslie Amp, and a mono or stereo microphone receive. You could put it in a studio, in a reverb room (or in the bathroom) during the mix, or you might use it live. The possibilities are only limited by your level of creativity and/or insanity. However, the following are some standard techniques and descriptions of behavior.
Mono Recordings. I have recorded Leslies with a single microphone mounted as close as 1 foot from the treble horn, with very pleasing results. If the mike is placed even closer (within several inches) the severe amplitude-modulation effect becomes very annoying, and wind noise from the rotor at high speeds sounds like you have a helicopter in the room. Which is a sound you might want. The same thing happens on the bass rotor, where up close there is also a lot of mechanical noise. A loose scrim will be real noisy; tighten it up. The sound from both rotors is mellower coming out of the louvers. By removing the back panels and miking the Leslie from the rear, the sound is more "direct" and defined.
Stereo And Multi-Mike Recording. Use of two mikes on the top and bottom of the cabinet is a very effective way of getting a good sound, bearing in mind the AM effects of close-miking. The best way I know of recording a Leslie, however, is in stereo. The left and right channels can be recorded with either a top and bottom pair of mixed mikes, or with just single mikes panned between left and right. The stereo image achieved with two pairs panned full left and right is very exciting. Many combinations are possible though, the point being that a Leslie is capable of providing a great deal of spatial information.
I spoke with a few engineers I know about such recording techniques, and here are a few of their preferences:
Jay Mark (Sigma sound, New York) has been pleased with a "tight" or "direct" Leslie sound, when recording organ. His principle reason for this is because the organ is used as background and not a featured instrument; the tight sound is needed so that the organ sound is very clear and unmistakable, even when way down in a mix. Jay has used the following setup with good results: an RCA 77DX ribbon at back of the top rotor cabinet, about 8 inches from the treble horn, with the high-end rolled of to suit. He also uses, at the back of bottom rotor, a U87 with the lows rolled off, and mixed with the top mike to suit. He remembers experimenting with the top and bottom sound panned left and right, and not liking the effect.
Allen Sides (Ocean Way Recording, Hollywood) prefers a pair of tube U67s, located about 5 feet away from the Leslie, aimed midway between top and bottom rotors, and spaced 10 feet apart. The mikes are panned left and right, and recorded on two separate tracks. Allen prefers the U67's natural roll-off on the high-end for de-emphasizing the high-frequency distortion on top. He told me of recording Billy Preston, who played a Fender Rhodes electric piano with stereo vibrato, and sent each channel to two separate Leslies.
Joe McSorely (Veritable Recording, Ardmore, Pennsylvania) likes to use a pair of U87s mounted relatively close in top and bottom cabinets. For a "tight" organ sound, he rolls of the lows from the bottom rotor, but records the top flat. Joe echoes a repeating problem - wind noise up close - and he always uses windscreens on the mikes. He says that most organ Leslie recordings done at Veritable are on one track, but a great "fake stereo" mixdown effect can be achieved by panning the dry track to one side, and using a Harmonizer in the "doubling" mode on a second track panned full opposite. Joe describes the resultant sound as "monstrous"."
The article I believe that JoeH is referring to is Mark Vail Miking The Leslie Cabinet June 99 or some references to 2001 is not readily available on the net. Mark Vail is the author of The Hammond Organ: Beauty in the B.
Seth; there's a lot good ways to mic a leslie cabinet. (Which
Seth; there's a lot good ways to mic a leslie cabinet. (Which one are you using? A 145, 147, 122? 122RV? )
Most of them are the wooden model anyway, with a 12 or 15 in the bottom, and a dual rotating horn (over a single tweeter/driver) up top. Depending on how well they've been kept up, they may or may not have the original wooden covers over the back areas. (Most leslies are used flipped around, with the nice "Furniture" side facing away, with the spinning horns exposed and visible from the audience persepctive.)
There's been a lot written over the years, and I recall Keyboard Magazine did a GREAT issue on this very topic a while back (late 90s?). (I don't get KYBD anymore, but I think they may have their entire past issue collection available online, or at least have articles available in a searchable database. Worth a few moments on their website, to be sure.)
Remember the whole organ leslie combo is a very dynamic, motion-based system, and it really lets the organ breathe, in a way. (There are some older (non-Leslie brand) Hammond cabinets that do NOT spin or move at all, and some older systems used a combination of these two. Hence the many sounds out there available on any given Jazz B3 combo recording.) On a loud rock gig, you may want to isolate it in a road case to get the most out of it. (Again, Keyboard magazine had a whole section on this, including Keith Emerson's custom, foam-lined road case that housed his Leslie 147 with built in mics, cables, etc.)
If you've got the Leslie isolated in a good sounding room, you can play around a LOT with close and distant mic'ing. Or, you can just get in close and work with tight mics and add your reverb and room tone later. You can even take some straight Organ alone (DI'd) and blend the mix to taste.
I prefer the 90 degree mic approach on the top. (Don't make the mistake of putting a mic wide (hard L and R) on each side, that's actually 180 degrees, and it will substantially negate any of the wonderul L-R panning & dopler effect you'll get with the horns moving. The horns are already 180 apart, so you'll want to have your mics at 90 degrees to get the true L/R auto-pan sound most folks want.
I don't have any pictures to show you (Maybe Keyboard mag still does?), but you can easily start with one mic slightly to the right of front/center, and the other one 90degrees to the left, even peaking inside the 4" top opening a bit. (don't get too close, or you'll get a lot of air hitting the mic as well...unless you WANT that effect.) You can also do this OUTSIDE of the entire wooden case itself, but you may be forced to do this on the covered, louvered side. (Which isn't all that bad either, and some would argue is a big part of the sound anyway......)
For the bottom rotor, a single mic (mono) is usually considered enough.
Most of this is low end material anyway, but the spinning drum does help move the sound around a bit. Don't get too close with that one, either..more than air hitting the mic, the big rotor at the bottom can really do some damage (Whack!) if it hits anything while spinning at the high setting.
Believe it or not, a pair of the classic SM57's will usually sound great on the top rotors, and your choice of mic (usually an LD condenser for me) on the bottom, (with a little low-end rolloff?) usually does a great job on the bottom. If the band has a bass player, you may not be needing too much from the low end anyway (unless the organist plays PEDALS, too! Yeah.... ;-)
I keep mentioning the Keyboard mag stuff, because they honestly DID cover this to perfection in their story (I think this was back in the 90's now...can't recall the year.)
And while there are tons and tons of great Jimmy Smith (and others') Jazz and Rock recording out there, I can point you to perhaps (IMHO) the best example of what a good, stereo-mic'd B3(or C3) should sound like in a recording.
Pick up a copy of Emerson, Lake and Palmer's "Brain Salad Surgery" and listen to the very first track with headphones on: The organ opening/intro to "Karn Evil 9, 1st Impression, Part 1". It's essentially a mini-2-part invention (like Bach) but done on a snarly, growly B3 just before the tune really kicks in. As good as it gets, IMHO. (Ditto for most of the rest of that record, but that's another story, another time...)