Skip to main content

Mainly looking for tips/suggestion on mic placement, I'll be using 2 or 3 sm57's, a ksm 27, possibly some other mics...not exactly positive atm. The goal for the outcome is along the lines of For Today, I Declare War, Elysia, In The Midst Of Lions, etc..Anyone care to share their experience?

Topic Tags

Comments

HaHallur Wed, 06/16/2010 - 11:53

If you don´t have alot of experience with recording... I'd use only one mic because of phase issues.

When I record metal riffs I start by finding a good sound from the amp and then use closed headphones to place the mic until it sounds good.
Then I go back to the head and further adjust the amp to my liking.

Then start recording ....
I record the first guitar and hard pan L.... then do it again hard pan R
Then for thicker sound I do it all over again with a different guitar, different mic placement or different amp settings.

That gives me a tight sound... but remember that each recording has to be pretty much flawless or else you'll wind up with a strange muddy delay sounding stuff (don´t know how to describe)

anonymous Mon, 07/05/2010 - 10:15

I'm still a little under a year fresh in the studio environment, but I get a really good sound from the guitar by using a 57, or a Beta 58 aimed towards the bottom left corner of one of the amps speaker cones. Of all the techniques I have experimented with, this one seems to work the best without having to mess with a bunch of over-mixing. Make sure they don't pile on the distortion too much. It's not necessary.

anonymous Sat, 07/10/2010 - 12:34

HaHallur, post: 350352 wrote: If you don´t have alot of experience with recording... I'd use only one mic because of phase issues.

When I record metal riffs I start by finding a good sound from the amp and then use closed headphones to place the mic until it sounds good.
Then I go back to the head and further adjust the amp to my liking.

Then start recording ....
I record the first guitar and hard pan L.... then do it again hard pan R
Then for thicker sound I do it all over again with a different guitar, different mic placement or different amp settings.

That gives me a tight sound... but remember that each recording has to be pretty much flawless or else you'll wind up with a strange muddy delay sounding stuff (don´t know how to describe)

When you do your takes over with a different mic placement/guitar/amp settings do you already have one in mind or do you just take a shot in the dark and hope it compliments the first track?

HaHallur Sat, 07/10/2010 - 13:18

I listen to how my original take was and listen to how it sounds EQ wise, usually it has alot of high end, then for my double tracking I try to force more mid range into the mix.
So its kinda one guitar is for high mids and the other focuses on the mids only.
The mid guitar doesn't sound as fun while recording but when you combine the two it sounds big and tight.

I use a different guitar, I always do that.
I use the same mic, but change the position as well as the amps settings, (usually I reduce high and add more mid).