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Im looking to buy new drum mics, but I'm new to buying them. Does anyone have any opinions on how i should buy, or what should i look for?
i dont want to spend a lot of money on quality i couldve gotten for a cheaper price.

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dvdhawk Thu, 02/24/2011 - 23:48

Hi welcome to RO,

Audix sells a couple complete kits that are an excellent value.

[="http://www.fullcompass.com/product/275482.html"]Sennheiser THREEPACK604P 3 E604 Microphones with 3 Carrying Pouches | Full Compass[/]="http://www.fullcomp…"]Sennheiser THREEPACK604P 3 E604 Microphones with 3 Carrying Pouches | Full Compass[/] e604's come in a 3-pack which is a great value for a very useful tom mic ( but a little dark for my taste to use on a snare ).

[[url=http://="http://www.electrov…"]E-V[/]="http://www.electrov…"]E-V[/] has a decent drum pack.

You can't go wrong with [[url=http://[/URL]="http://www.shure.co…"]Shure SM57[/]="http://www.shure.co…"]Shure SM57[/]'s if you can avoid hitting them and knocking the grill off. The beta series cures that problem with a metal windscreen, but doesn't quite have the same sonic character to me.

I recently worked with a guy who wanted to use his CAD drum pack (I didn't care for it). So if you're looking at these see if you can try them first - it might suit your set-up just fine.

None of these are exactly cheap, but they are a good value. There's a certain price-point that if you're below it, you're almost throwing your money away. And naturally that's all based on a well-tuned drum kit and a PA or recording system that can let good mics sound good.

BobRogers Fri, 02/25/2011 - 05:52

What kind of music do you record? Are you new to recording drums or just new to buying mics? How tight is the budget?

I'm always wary of package deals of any kind - mics, kitchen knives, tools. It only takes one or two pieces of gear that you don't like to make it a bad deal.

I'd start building your drum mic collection around four mics: a matched pair of condensers for overheads, snare top, kick. Those and the stands and clamps will set you back a pretty penny. If you don't have much experience I'd suggest stopping there and working to get the most out of those four mics.

The choice of condensers depends on your room and the other application you have for the mics. My room is OK, but nothing to write home about - I use a pair of Shure SM81s. Cheaper version of that would be the Rode NT5s. But John's suggestion of a pair of LDCs would work perfectly well. [Edit: Oops, I didn't read John's post closely enough. I thought he said AT 4050s. Those, AKG 441s, etc would be great.] I hear a pair of U87s works OK.

I use an SM57 for snare top. There are other options, but if you don't have an SM57 you probably should.

There are several long threads on kick mics, so I won't comment further. Do a search.

dannymorreale Sat, 02/26/2011 - 01:24

Price will not really be a problem unless its a 3000 drum mic kit. The people that have been coming to me to record are very different in genres. Genres- reggae, metal, indie-rock . basically what we have been doing, since im still a bit new at recording drums, i have two overheads. One overhead pretty much above center of the kit, and the other overhead is placed closer to where the hi hat is. We were using an AT4050, and a MXL condenser. and as for separate drum micing.. i have a samson drum mic kit. They are def not amazing quality, but they do for now.
but thats pretty much what im working with, i just want a much more crisper sound.
so , a shure kit is a pretty decent investment?
or the audio technicas?

Davedog Sat, 02/26/2011 - 02:36

You still didnt specify things like number of channels you want to record at one time, what you're recording to........

Side note: When Bob suggested that a pair of U87's were reputed to 'works OK' I almost spit out my coffee!! The ONLY set-up I've ever heard better than a pair of 87's as over heads is a pair of U67's..........!

The 4050 is a GREAT drum mic. You need another one of these. Since the budget isnt a big problem heres what you should shoot for.

1. DrumDial. Really.

2. Well-treated drum area. (No, Really!)

3. Beyer 201 for snare top.

4. Beyer 201/422 for snare bottom.

5. Second AT4050 for overheads.

6.Sennheiser 421's for all toms.

7. ATM25 for inside kick.

8. Yamaha (or home built) Sub-kick

9. Avantone CR-14 ribbon mic for room

10. API 3124 mic pre for snare top, kick and overheads

11. John Hardy mic pres for everything else.

So this is WAY more than 3K....but its plug and play. AND, its THAT drum sound.

All the mics are less than you'd think, so thats a good place to start.

You can substitute Audix D series for the Sennheisers...or simply buy a bunch of Beyer 201's....OR, you can use SM57's on everything....

The real value with great sound approach is going to be the Beyer on snare top, the second 4050 and the ATM25 inside the kick. If you combine these four mics with the API pre, you will find that special huge drum sound in a decent room with a well-tuned and played kit.