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I've been drafted to record a rockabilly band next month, but I've never recorded a live upright acoustic bass before. I've been shooting ideas around in my head, but haven't figured a good way to mic it. I want to run it in thirds (mic left panned hard left, mic right panned hard right, mic centered perfect stereo) but not sure what mics to use. I was thinking about using two Neumannn condensers on the outsides and a beta57 in the middle to round out a nice sound, but I'm recording onto two inch tape, then dubbing into Cubase for finalizing. I've already got a crazy idea to do it in a hollow room with some auralex on the walls and corners, but still have a slight echo just to add a little bit of an eery sound to the mix. They sound kinda like Reverend Horton Heat, so anything sounding like that would work. Let me know what you think.

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anonymous Mon, 12/12/2005 - 22:29

if the sound is like horton heat, then there will be a lot of bass slaps from the stings which are an important part of the music, so you will need something like a pencil condesor aimed around the 12th fret(well where it looks like it should be) and are you sure it's acoustic, because most rockabilly upright bases, have 1 to 3 pickups on them.

Calgary Mon, 12/12/2005 - 22:30

Sounds like fun. This might sound very stupid but it would be good to listen to a bunch of top selling rockabilly this week. There are certain trademark sounds people expect, i.e. that little slapback on the guitar, etc. I wouldn't go too hard on the kick, a lot of the top rockabilly drummers used very minimal kits and were very snare oriented. That crisp open snare sound is important though for sure. Just my opinion anyhow. 8-)

Are you micing the upright live or isolated? Does he have a pickup on his bass? Many do... I know that many folks like U87s on uprights or a U87 and pickup combo. I've noticed a lot of upright bassists record by placing a large diaphragm condensor mic right in front of the f-hole (on the g string side). I think that's a safe bet if the guy isn't moving around too much. You can always point a second mic at the finger board if you need more finger noise. Two cents anyhow... 8-)

moonbaby Tue, 12/13/2005 - 10:30

Wrapping a towel around a dynamic mic (I have used a 421, an AT825, and even a '58 ) and stuffing it behind the bridge works very well for that genre, especially if the bass has no pick-up..
BTW, I have recorded a couple of rockabilly acts, and the ONE thing that they all had in common was.....the (upright) bass player moved A LOT! Those dudes like to spin that puppy around! That's why they do the towel thing and/or a pick-up...so that they can dance while they play!

anonymous Fri, 12/16/2005 - 08:36

I do kind of alot of r-billy, and have had good luck like this:

RCA 44 ribbon 1 foot in front - right hand level pointed slightly down-
a little vintage compression to tape. along w/ pick up split to di (for click) and amp (for meat/distortion)

This is how we did the last Stray Cats stuff. For a more vintage feel (like Setzer's new Sun record) RCA 44 all by it's self2 or three inches from the
bottom of the finger board - 6 inches out (of course mnoving the mic around 'till it sounds good is always a good idea)

good luck/have fun - davedarling

anonymous Sat, 12/17/2005 - 09:16

hey Calgary -

Runaway boys is a great record, but I didn't produce it. I produced Mystery Train on "live at Brixton.

We used the pick up/amp /ribbon on Lee's bass.
On "Rockabilly Riot" we used one RCA-44 on Mark Winchester's bass
with everyone in the same room. (Castle studios-Nashville)
and Dwoz is right about the RE-20 (or a d-12) both good choices.

dave darling

Calgary Sun, 12/18/2005 - 14:14

Runaway boys is a great record, but I didn't produce it. I produced Mystery Train on "live at Brixton.

Nice. I think you mean "Rumble In Brixton". If I weren't boycotting big label products I'd go pick it up actually. I heard some tracks off it on University radio when it first came out and I thought it rocked. I remember being pleasantly surprised with the quality and performance.