Recording Drums 9 - Creating Natural Space
Recording Drums, Percussion - & Dealing with People Who Like to Hit Things 9.
Here at The Coolest Recording Studio In London Town - we got ways & means - & we got magic trix up our sleeves !!Drums - are generally close mic'd - this gives producers the opportunity to manipulate the audio with precision - in case the room mics sounded bad, or there was bleed from other sound sources - or if the space was different sounding to what the audio now requires - i.e. - production ideas have changed.
Plate or boundary mics are great for picking up / recording ambient spaces - either creatively (put one behind a piano or guitar amp - or on the ceiling) - or as a strait resource - 6 feet in front of a guitar amp facing up - or as a drum overhead.
In this picture - we have all thr drums close mic'd - but there is also a mic behind the drummers head, and another 6 feet in front facing the kit.
These two mics will be out of phase with each other - but once put in phase & eq'd / compressed a tad - they will give you an amazing sense of front to back or depth in your recording.
Try it on guitars & vocals - see what you can come up with - & never be afraid to experiment - who knows what you may discover!
You can see the studio Here:
Comments
Post a Comment