astrozombie
KatyPerryologist
Ive been using a shure sm57 for recording guitars, but i hate that weird frequency that sounds in the background, its... the sound of nothing! :laugh2:
how can i get rid of it?
how can i get rid of it?
Record nothing at all and look at a spectral analyzer (sounds more technical than it is, these are built in to a lot of software) to see what frequencies are present.
You can attenuate these frequencies with an equalizer.
Try removing air vent heads to reduce the velocity of air moving in the room.
Turn off anything with a silicon controlled rectifier (a dimmer :laughingor anything electronic. GSM cell phones are a culprit here too. Even with balanced audio transmission, you'll get noise induced in your cable between your guitar and amp.
Cross cables at right angles.
I put my 1X12 cabinet in a box along with a mic pointing at the speaker, put some padding in there as well, close the box up......no "room noise" what so ever.
It's about as lame of a setup as you can get but the end result is pretty good.
thats a good idea, DIY iso.
That's the noise?
Wow.
Only got a sec. here while doing email...
That's broadband... not a bad cable.
Dodgy cables can add some...
Dimmers create line noise as well... coming in the AC side and generating 'hash' that can show up in lots of places...
Not so much the case here.
That's mostly "electronic" noise... guess you have the gain on the micamp turned waaaaaaaaaay up?
SM57, or any dynamic mic really isn't the best thing for recording acoustic guitar & vocals in even a quiet room, let alone the average house...
What's the 57 plugged into and how?
I don't know what the Guitar Ports about... is it an XLR "mic level" input?
Dimmers tend to throw out noise that single coil pickups love... But if your recording gear is on the same circuit as the lighting then anything lower then "full on" will generate the hash... a light sizzle that changes pitch depending on where the dimmer is at.
Computers can throw noise back into recording... Firewire is esp. prone to that if the interface is buss powered. More hash... sizzle & buzz with pops.
I also maintain a hardcore rule of "no cell phones" near recording gear while tracking. Gotta be AT LEAST 10-15 feet away... Cingular/AT&T seems to be the worst, it's about frequency & bandwith... but that's a really obvious noise and sparse... not consistent.
It IS possible to break a 57... but when that happens usually the bottom end drops out and it sounds thin & scratchy, or you get nothing at all.