Rhetro
Joined: 12/09/09
Posts: 26
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best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
#986953 - 11/05/12 09:26 PM
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Hello.
I was wondering if anyone could give me a list of some popular mic pres
for recording 9 channels of acoustic drums. I have good mics but am missing the front end.
I'm using a Presonus Studio Live 16.0.2 board which is ok, but missing the clarity and
definition that I'm looking for.
What are drummers using?
Thanks!
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Jack Ruston
Joined: 21/12/05
Posts: 4089
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rhetro]
#986996 - 12/05/12 07:49 AM
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Presonus know a thing or two about mic amps. I'd be very surprised if the mic amps in that
board are causing a lack of clarity. I suspect that you might need to experiment with
heads and tuning and be aware that close mics almost always need a good dose of eq if you
want them to sound 'crisp'. You could get an eight channel DAV on demo and see if it
changes things. But as I say I'd be surprised if it makes a night and day difference.
Indeed some high end mic amps, like 1073s would make the sound more distorted with less
clarity.
-------------------- www.jackruston.com
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Tomás Mulcahy
active member
Joined: 25/04/01
Posts: 2828
Loc: Cork, Ireland.
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rhetro]
#987009 - 12/05/12 09:37 AM
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+1. It's more than likely not the mic pres. Ignore the mics and computer and listen
to the kit in the room. Do you hear the same problem? I'm guessing that your ears/ heart
are telling you something is wrong, but your logic is flawed. It's a human thing!
Apart from what Jack has suggested (all good), the most common cause of this problem is
mic positioning. What's your methodology?
-------------------- madtheory creations
Synths and pianos for Kontakt
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Rhetro
Joined: 12/09/09
Posts: 26
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Tomás Mulcahy]
#987072 - 12/05/12 06:54 PM
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Sorry,
For the snare top, and racks: I close-mike about 1.5" above the head,
.5" inside the rim, and about 45 degrees angled at the center of the head
For
the bass: The screen portion of the D112 inside the front head port aimed at the beater
head offset about 15 degrees
Snare bottom: Dead center on the snare wires about
2" away at a 45 degree angle.
Hi hat: mic pointed down about 1" away from the
top cymbal, angled about 10 degrees or so, and 1" inside the edge.
Overheads:
about 4' above the kit x-y configuration
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Jack Ruston
Joined: 21/12/05
Posts: 4089
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rhetro]
#987074 - 12/05/12 07:06 PM
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Well sadly it's not that easy. Each drum and each mic, in each room, will be slightly
different. So you can't say that the positioning is right just because it's x distance at
y angle. But just to reiterate...If you're doing rock stuff, you'll probably need to boost
some high frequencies. On the last rock mixes I did I was adding something like 8-10dB to
the top of the kick, snare and toms. Not saying that's what you should do, but the point
is that there are natural drum sounds, and then there are 'hifi'drum sounds. And they do
involve eq. J
-------------------- www.jackruston.com
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Rhetro
Joined: 12/09/09
Posts: 26
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rhetro]
#987076 - 12/05/12 07:25 PM
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Thanks.
I do realize this. The drum sound that I got came from experimenting.
It's the best sound that I could get with what I have.
The room -to give you a
broader picture- is a carpeted 10' x 15' living area (yes, it's not a bonafide studio)
with a vaulted 12' ceiling. It's by far the best room in the house to put the drums in for
sure. Not a bad kit either I might add: Tama Starclassic Maple.
When I'm
at the kit it just sounds amazing from where I'm sitting. Other -non musician, yet music
fans) tell me it sounds amazing from where they're standing (which could be anywhere in
the living area) which could be an irrelevant opinion, but better than them telling me it
sounds horrible. My band mates seem to love the sound of it. Aside from 'hiring' a pro to
come and evaluate 'my drum sound', I really don't know what else to do. You start
with a sound you like, tweak it, get it sounding better; and go from there. Then it's just
a matter of capturing it, with 1s and 0s in this case (preamps, ADCs, etc) -which is the
point of this inquiry. My style is more of the aggressive type as you accurately
determined! (rock/progressive rock/ jazz with some latin influences) I'm definitely NOT
just sitting around keeping the beat! I'm all over the place! But don't necessarily want
my captured drum tracks that way! I hope I'm making sense. And I know, that one of
the good things about my mixer is all those knobs! I guess my question comes more from the
'optimal front end' for the computer. If I need to tweak yet again, then back to the old
drawing board, right?
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Tomás Mulcahy
active member
Joined: 25/04/01
Posts: 2828
Loc: Cork, Ireland.
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rhetro]
#987082 - 12/05/12 07:43 PM
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We'd really need to hear an example of the "problem". There's no way to tell how it
sounds from the info you've provided.
Quote
Rhetro:
When I'm at the kit it just sounds amazing from where I'm
sitting.
Put a stereo pair there
so!
Quote Rhetro:
Then it's
just a matter of capturing it, with 1s and 0s in this case (preamps, ADCs, etc) -which is
the point of this inquiry.
What
does that mean? 1s?
-------------------- madtheory creations
Synths and pianos for Kontakt
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Rhetro
Joined: 12/09/09
Posts: 26
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Tomás Mulcahy]
#987093 - 12/05/12 09:11 PM
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Sorry Tomas,
I'm not intending to confuse anyone -but I'm sure that I am!
What I'm hearing live is not what I'm hearing played back -this goes without
saying but I thought I'd say it anyway. I'm not sure why this is the case, it just is. I
realize that I could send people samples of what I'm doing, and failing at explaining
myself properly, I just may do this!
What I meant by 1s and 0s is the digital
realm; and no longer plugging into the warmth of an analog board going to tape -Sorry but
my pun should have been more descriptive. The ADC is yet another factor in the signal
chain that can hurt or help the signal -and I'm not sure where I stand on what I have.
Everyone is boasting 44 and 192kHz, but to stay away from this brand with the same specs.
Can you really hear the difference? Overwhelmed here.
My original question was
what studios use to capture acoustic drums, preamp wise. I asked this because I feared
that the pres that I have in my board might be contributing to a flat, sterile sound,
that seems to lack punch, warmth etc. I want to be able to solve this by tweaking,
and not having to buy another piece of gear -i.e., a 16 channel preamp that drummers swear
by.
Just trying to get an idea of the stalwart drummer's preamp.
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Bob Bickerton
active member
Joined: 20/12/02
Posts: 2546
Loc: Nelson, New Zealand
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rhetro]
#987094 - 12/05/12 09:54 PM
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Room acoustics can be confusing. What sounds good to our ears after our brains have
psycho-acoustically processed the sound can be very different to recording reality. The preamps on the Presonus are pretty clean and swapping them out with expensive
boutique preamps may make an small difference, but your discussion implies you are not
even near, which perhaps indicates room issues. Best to hire in some preamps
before purchasing, if that doesn't do the trick then it's to do with room, mic, mic
positioning or post production. Bob
-------------------- www.bickerton.co.nz
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Rhetro
Joined: 12/09/09
Posts: 26
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Bob Bickerton]
#987096 - 12/05/12 11:48 PM
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Thanks Bob.
This makes sense; all you guys here make sense !
I was
thinking on having the room 'shot' and then treated anyway. Like you said, this may make
all the difference!
thanks again!
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Tomás Mulcahy
active member
Joined: 25/04/01
Posts: 2828
Loc: Cork, Ireland.
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rhetro]
#987147 - 13/05/12 12:18 PM
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Rhetro, try putting a stereo pair right where it sounds amazing to you. You might need to
experiment to find which stereo technique works best for you. XY, DIN and ORTF are what I
would try first.
Your explanation is actually fine, the problem is that old
unattributed truism "talking about music is like dancing about architecture".
-------------------- madtheory creations
Synths and pianos for Kontakt
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Rhetro
Joined: 12/09/09
Posts: 26
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Tomás Mulcahy]
#987158 - 13/05/12 01:21 PM
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Thanks Tomas.
You're right: I think it's a matter of more experimentation -and
patience! x-y seemed to work best, but I think I need to revisit the other stereo
techniques.
Dancing amidst the architecture -Love it!!!
Thanks for
the help !
cheers!
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Beat Poet
Joined: 21/01/12
Posts: 154
Loc: Hertfordshire, UK
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rhetro]
#987246 - 13/05/12 11:56 PM
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Yeah I can't believe that a Presonus Studio Live 16.0.2 wouldn't give a good result. I
haven't used one, but I bet it can do a damn fine job with that price tag!
-------------------- Do you need real drum tracks? http://www.drumtracksdirect.co.uk/
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Rockdrummerzero
Joined: 18/12/05
Posts: 72
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rhetro]
#987274 - 14/05/12 08:38 AM
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Quote Rhetro:
Hello.
I
was wondering if anyone could give me a list of some popular mic pres for recording 9
channels of acoustic drums. I have good mics but am missing the front end. I'm using a
Presonus Studio Live 16.0.2 board which is ok, but missing the clarity and definition that
I'm looking for.
What are drummers using?
Thanks!
I use 5 Trident S20's for mine, would never
change....
-------------------- www.thespell.co.uk
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Pinestreet
member
Joined: 21/05/03
Posts: 118
Loc: Sweden
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rockdrummerzero]
#987595 - 15/05/12 02:54 PM
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I take it this isn't just a simple case of hearing the drums in the room with the natural
room reverberation and then listening to the recorded drums without reverb and/or eq ??
Makes a heap of difference !
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Tomás Mulcahy
active member
Joined: 25/04/01
Posts: 2828
Loc: Cork, Ireland.
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Re: best preamp for close-miking 9 channels of acoustic drums
[Re: Rhetro]
#987719 - 16/05/12 07:51 AM
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I think it probably is, which is why I suggested using some kind of stereo pair at the
spot where it sounds good.
-------------------- madtheory creations
Synths and pianos for Kontakt
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