Re: Tom mic suggestions.
Hm. That's what usually I tell THEM before I even open the mic case :scratchch
All good advices here in this thread. I can totally agree:
- If the drummer doens't know how to tune the drums properly: you lose;
- If the drummer doesn't beat the crap out of the drumset: you lose;
- If the drummer doesn't keep the beat, you're in an editing hell: you lose;
- If even you don't know how to tune up that boompsy: you lose double times;
- If the drummer is a nitpicking axxhole: you lose.
I run a budget studio with few but okay equipment. If the drummer keeps telling D-shings (drummer Dr-All-Know sh.tty things), I start to attach my ddrum trigger set instead of mics and place just two overheads... Usually, they stop telling D-shings immediately.
Hm. D-shings are far more common than G-shings, B-shings or S-shings. Bass players are the easiest to deal with.
I usually like to keep it natural, with the least possible number of mics. I usually break it down to 8 (depends on the number of toms).
- SM57 for toms (not the best, but they are dependable and usually deliver good results)
- Beta57, SM57 or I5 on the snare (depends), I tend to use one
- Beta52 for kick
- Different condensers, from $40 noname budget stuff that sometimes work to higher class BPM, Rode, AKG and AT - all my condensers are borrowed. We share a lot of equipment with other guys here. Why should I buy the pie when buddies have all the slices?
