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Ok, what do you guys do to turn that “nice” natural sounding tom, with overtones and everything, into something that would fit right into a Nirvana or STP record?

And let’s not drift off into mic placement, tuning, heads, etc. The drummers gone home and it’s time to mix!

:w:

Comments

Ang1970 Wed, 11/14/2001 - 03:38

Sure I'm serious. Try it before you shoot it down. BTW, keep the overheads somewhat flat... the low will carry thru those, while the close mics provide basically only the "thwack".

Of course, MMV. I don't have the track bassmac is working on. Maybe my suggestion would work, maybe it wouldn't. Who knows?

regisfunk Fri, 11/16/2001 - 09:46

Originally posted by Ang1970:
[QB]Sure I'm serious. Try it before you shoot it down. BTW, keep the overheads somewhat flat... the low will carry thru those, while the close mics provide basically only the "thwack".
QB]

It never hurts to try, but I'd say, unless you have a really good sounding room, well placed decent overhead mics and a really usable sound already on the o/h tracks, do just the oppossite: keep the toms flat (or scoop out some low-middle) and use that HPF on the overheads. There is little you can do if the tom track itself has no punch to it. Yeah, you can try compression, but in general, I haven't had a great deal of success with compressing toms more than a little bit. The decay starts getting wierd, and the compression freaks out if you have any flams on the toms. There is a cool little compressor from SPL called a transient designer that might save your hiney. But it means spending more money, and possibly not getting the results you are after. Sadly, the drum itself (and heads) and the mic and mic placement are very key in a thwacky tom sound. I realize you didn't want us to say these things at this stage.

CS