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Hi All,

was wondering, what is the best way to eq o/h drum mic track.
If you are taking out a certain frequency on the snares close mic, does this mean you should take it out on the o/h signal?

Thanks,

Sammyg

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Comments

anonymous Tue, 11/22/2005 - 18:15

personally, i try to leave them as flat as possible and get my "kit" sound from the kick + OHs. The close-mic'd drums are brought up afterwards to add punch & power.

When i DO eq the OHs, it's generally using a HP filter to get rid of some of the mud in the low-end and occasionally, to notch out an annoying freq. (Ride-bell anybody? ugh!) that just won't sit in the mix. More often than not, a gentle compression on the OHs will smooth out the 'harshness' of bad cymbals

iznogood Tue, 11/22/2005 - 23:45

i don't highpass oh's

but sometimes i take out some "boxyness" in the snare to let the close mic have the punch... and sometimes some of the nasty frequencies in the cymbals.... and a gentle comp to smooth things out...

but some times i put in some 2.5k to add grunge.... combined with a comp set to do some hard pumping.....

it depends

anonymous Wed, 11/23/2005 - 03:45

No rules apply to OHs,

Although depending on what you want to achieve you could us EQ to add 'air' on the cymbal with a Hi shelf at 16K I find that works really well with a spaced pair confiq on jazz or ballad stuff.

But sure bad cymbals can be a real problem thats why your better off making sure that your kit sounds good before you even begin wondering how your going to get it to tape.