STRATDELUXER97
Stratoblaster Tone Meister
I'll imagine the SM 57 is a no brainer,but what other mic's......Condenser mic with a SM 57 etc? For recording onto tape here at home?
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the guy who invented fire said:for playing live shows I always...ALWAYS use a 57 and always have
GoMano said:Try all kinds of dynamic mic's that you have, right up against the grill and experiment with axis placement (but you're right, the SM57 is the de-facto standard, and nothing really sounds as good.) Simultaneously grab an FET or tube condenser and set it up a few feet away from the cabinet and blend the two mic's together. Move it around until you get the sound you want. It can make for some hugely fat tones! If you don't have a nice condenser, you can still achieve the desired effect with another dynamic mic, like an SM58, which almost sound like condensers anyway, or even Sennheiser 421's & 441's, although a bit beefy. Just try anything! A sorta-famous guitar player friend of mine actually once recorded a guitar track using a speaker for a microphone (it's a long story - in principal they do the same thing - but regardless, it worked)!
PS: If you play waaay loud and your condenser mic has a -10db switch...use it![]()
STRATDELUXER97 said:Thanks GM....Actually I don't currently own any mics unless I borrow from my drummer etc...I'd like to buy my own and I'm basically asking what to buy? I was leaning towards an SM 57 and a condenser mic...Probably not sure on the condenser mic basically?