Re: Shure SM57: Pro and Cons?
Thank you all.

However, could you guys please clarify the importance of a mic preamp?
My sound card has a built-in preamp (Sound Blaster X-Fi series) but I presume it's been done with those little microphones for Skype and stuff in mind. What am I missing with
not having a proper preamp for the Shure? Is it really fundamental or just something nice to have but that I could live without and still record and sound OK?
Also another thing... let's say the preamp is indeed a must, and that I buy the preamp and the 57. I've got the guitar, the amp can definitely do it... Is there any other fundamental gear missing in the link for proper, at least decent recordings? Thanks again.
Chilean Guy, I think you are right about your Sound Blaster preamp. Those are a consumer product, not a studio recording preamp. And they're not a studio recording audio interface either.
These days, a lot of audio interfaces from makers like M Audio, MOTU, Presonus and others have mic preamps built into them. They are fair quality, and lightyears ahead of Junk Blaster. Some of the M Audio interface/preamps are very budget priced. Some have high impedance inputs so you can record guitar direct if you prefer to do that instead of mic'ing your amp.
My setup consists of separate mic preamps from focusrite, Joe Meek, Trident, TL Audio and Presonus, which I connect to MOTU 2408 mk3 and 1296 interfaces. That's a fairly well-equipped home studio setup, and I got enough stuff to be able to mic a whole drum set. More than what you probably need now and more than I coudl afford when I was your age.
Do you have a Mackie or similar mixer? The mic preamps in the mixer could be used, and you'd just have to add a recording interface.
As for the SM57, I will agree that it is a must have mic. However, a lot of articles I've read recommend combining a close mic like the SM 57 with a condenser mic set up further back. That does introduce phase problems, but with modern recording software, you can correct those.
I did this on the demo my band recently recorded. I noticed that the SM57 sounded bright and edgy, which helped the guitar cut through, but the SM57's lower mids and bottom were very thin. The second mic really filled out the lower midrange, giving distorted guitars a nice beefy tone that was missing from the tracks done with the SM57. When mixing you can pan the track from one mic left and th eother right, or position them in the same spot, but watch out for phase problems. I was actually able to slide one track forward or back slightly so they lined up and the phase problems went away. Modern DAW's are wonderful!
I also experimented with combining the SM 57 with the large diaphragm dynamic mic that I have, the Stedman N90. I got excellent results!! The N90 has a warm high end, where the SM57 is bright and edgy. And the N90 has a beefy, full low end, where the SM57 sounds thin. The N90 really added the chunk factor while the SM57's added the sizzle. They complimented each other very well and because I set them both up as close mics, I had no phase problems to even worry about.
I heartily second the recommendation to try the Heil PR30 mic. From what I've read about it, it sounds like it should do the same thing the N90 and the Groove Tubes condenser mic that I used did for me - beef up and fatten the guitar tone. When my budget allows, I wanna try the Heil mic myself. I also don't have the budget for a Royer ribbon mic, but with these mics that I have I can get great results.
I also have a pair of Sennheiser e609's and I was able to compare them to my SM57's. My e609's are the old black ones, not the newer silver ones. From what guys in this thread have said, it sounds like the silver ones (I assume that's what they're using since they're more common) suck. Between my black face e609's and the SM57's I really don't hear a difference. They sound very alike. Bright and edgy but thin.
On some tracks I did end up using just the SM57. Certain clean tracks where I wanted a sparkly sound without a full low end sounded great with just an SM57 or an e609. Some of the distorted parts where there were multiple guitars and I needed them each to take up a smaller sonic space rather than all sounding huge and getting in each others way worked better with just an SM57 or e609.
Good luck CG and have fun experimenting!
And read up on how to set up your home studio before you go just buying gear that you might not need. Find out what you need, and what is out there that best suits your needs.