Vetteboy
New member
This is a spinoff from a post I made in one of my song threads, but I figured this would be a neat resource.
Who out there has gotten some cool sounds using non-conventional methods? Maybe a cheap piece of gear that works really well, or an odd way of mic'ing something, etc.
Here's one of mine. About 10 years ago, Radio Shack made this weird-looking mic.
There are some older versions of it referred to as their PZM model, which is sort of a cult classic...it was licensed to Radio Shack from Crown. However it was discontinued and replaced by the one in the picture, which was generally regarded as "not as good".
I picked up two of this "not as good" model on clearance at my local Radio Shack for 10 bucks each. I figured they'd be cool for recording live shows and stuff. Curiosity got the best of me and I opened up the little housings to see how they worked, and it turns out the mic element was a small condenser about the size of a watch battery and made by Shure.
At some point in this experiment I lost some pieces to put the mic back together, so I had basically an open mic element attached to a long cable with tiny little wires. I got a piece of heat shrink tubing and put it around the end to protect it. Then I started using the mic this way, and promptly made the same modification to the other one.
10 years later, every single drum track (which is dozens more than what I've got posted on Soundclick), and nearly every acoustic track, piano track, and percussion track I've done has used this pair of microphones. I usually end up hanging them from the ceiling; you can see one over the drums in this pic:
The nylon acoustic on this track was recorded sitting on my drum stool, actually behind the drum set, with the overhead mics lowered down somewhat, panned hard left & right. Bongos were recorded the same way. That was in 2003 and it's not really anything more than a scratch track...but it's a small example of the versatility and response of those little mics.
If those mics ever stop working, I'll probably cry.
Who out there has gotten some cool sounds using non-conventional methods? Maybe a cheap piece of gear that works really well, or an odd way of mic'ing something, etc.
Here's one of mine. About 10 years ago, Radio Shack made this weird-looking mic.
There are some older versions of it referred to as their PZM model, which is sort of a cult classic...it was licensed to Radio Shack from Crown. However it was discontinued and replaced by the one in the picture, which was generally regarded as "not as good".
I picked up two of this "not as good" model on clearance at my local Radio Shack for 10 bucks each. I figured they'd be cool for recording live shows and stuff. Curiosity got the best of me and I opened up the little housings to see how they worked, and it turns out the mic element was a small condenser about the size of a watch battery and made by Shure.
At some point in this experiment I lost some pieces to put the mic back together, so I had basically an open mic element attached to a long cable with tiny little wires. I got a piece of heat shrink tubing and put it around the end to protect it. Then I started using the mic this way, and promptly made the same modification to the other one.
10 years later, every single drum track (which is dozens more than what I've got posted on Soundclick), and nearly every acoustic track, piano track, and percussion track I've done has used this pair of microphones. I usually end up hanging them from the ceiling; you can see one over the drums in this pic:
The nylon acoustic on this track was recorded sitting on my drum stool, actually behind the drum set, with the overhead mics lowered down somewhat, panned hard left & right. Bongos were recorded the same way. That was in 2003 and it's not really anything more than a scratch track...but it's a small example of the versatility and response of those little mics.
If those mics ever stop working, I'll probably cry.