T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1020.1 | | SRFSUP::MORRIS | | Sun Nov 22 1987 18:57 | 14 |
| there is no one solution for your problem, but here are some make-dos
1) try a cheap radio shack pzm mic in various locations near the
guitar
2) get a barcus berry transducer installed
3) aim the mic at the bridge
4) use 4 (or several) microphone locations and mix them down to
one track
I usually do 1 and 4 above, and get a good clean full sound.
toodles
Ashley
|
1020.2 | At last! Something I can do.. | HEART::MACHIN | | Mon Nov 23 1987 03:53 | 7 |
| Aoustic gittars and rototoms (remember them?) are hard to record.
But I agree with .-1 - mix a mic in a few feet away from the body
of the guitar, otherwise half of that expensive sound seems to
go straight past the close mic.
Richard.
|
1020.3 | How about EQ? | AKOV75::EATOND | | Mon Nov 23 1987 08:54 | 11 |
| Good idea for a topic!
How much can a good EQ help? I'd be interested in knowing this as
well. For a while, I was training my wife to run the mixing board for me for
playing out live. I gave her a 6-band guitar EQ stomp-box and told her to
just freely experiment. She worked and worked with it until she came up with
what sounded the best to her ears. I looked at it and it was the strangest
curve I'd ever seen on a graphic EQ. Admittedly, she is quite new to EQ'ing,
as I am also.
Dan
|
1020.4 | Here's What I Do At Home | AQUA::ROST | You've been living on solid air | Mon Nov 23 1987 09:49 | 23 |
|
The thing about EQ is that if you play with it long enough everything
you try sounds good, but you forget what it is *supposed * to sound
like!!! 8^) 8^)
For acoustic guitars, particularly close-miked:
I like to see a rolloff at around 150 Hz to get rid of boominess,
decrease that until the bass sounds full but not muddy. Also cut
around 50 or 75 Hz, just as much. If bass and drums will be in
the mix, cut a little more than if it will be just guitar.
Boost around 1.5 to 3 KHz for that "halo" effect you hear on a lot
of recordings. Gives a good sheen to the sound. Hard to describe
what this does.....
Boost or cut around 8 KHz and above to suit your taste for high
end harmonics.
The above works well with my setup. I have a noisy house so I usually
avoid ambient miking. The above EQ solves much of the close-miking
problems. I place the mike near the bridge, about four inches away.
|
1020.5 | | SALSA::MOELLER | | Mon Nov 23 1987 12:00 | 9 |
| re .4, various EQ settings:
If I recall correctly, the various settings you describe (cut @75-150,
boost @1.5-3K) just about match the built-in curve for a good vocal
mic. The bass cut avoids boominess and the midrange boost gives
presence to vocals.. so by extension a vocal mic is a very good
choice for acoustic guitar.
karl
|
1020.6 | ex | 4TRACK::LAQUERRE | | Mon Nov 23 1987 12:21 | 16 |
|
I've found that keeping the mike as far way from the mike as possible
helps. To to this, I have to raise the recording level kind of
high, but my Fostex X-15 4-track seems to handle it pretty well.
I believe when the mike is too close, it picks up only the sound
coming from directly in front of the guitar and doesn't pick up
the natural resonance coming from the whole body of the guitar.
Even when I follow that advice, however, I still run into problems
depending on what key I play in! When ever a song I write is in
the key of A major for example, the bottom end on the A chords always
sounds boomy when I record. It must be something about the room
play in or possible something about my guitar...
Peter
|
1020.7 | electric acoustic | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | Not so famous rock star | Mon Nov 23 1987 12:44 | 3 |
| Shucks I just go direct on mine....I miss all the exciting problems
|
1020.8 | | MENTOR::REG | My new suit is wet | Mon Nov 23 1987 14:02 | 5 |
| re .6 Could be something about your guitar. Is it "dreadnaught"
sized ?
Reg
|
1020.9 | Two Good Methods... | COMET::MESSAGE | I'm only sleeping... | Mon Nov 23 1987 15:12 | 8 |
| Two suggestions that have worked well for me -
1) Use a "lapel mike", clipped to the treble side of the
soundhole of the top.
2) Use a GOOD mike, ABOVE the guitar, not in front of the guitar.
Bill Message
|
1020.10 | Lend me your ear | DARTS::OPER | | Tue Nov 24 1987 11:11 | 14 |
|
I have had trouble with the low A string. It can resonate if
the wall sizes are mulitples of themselves or some such thing.
Like there is more resonance in an 6X8 room as in a 5X8 room ????
I record a Guild Maderia with bronze strings in my bedroom (the
bed and dressers break up some of the resonance) using a Shure SM58.
I have the mike beside either my left or right ear pointing down
toward the guitar. I've gotten the best results with this method.
I sometimes us some EQ depending on what other instruments I'll
be recording. My deck is a porta-one.
Guy Novello
|
1020.11 | Another Maderia Owner | 4TRACK::LAQUERRE | | Tue Nov 24 1987 11:57 | 7 |
|
I also have a Guild Maderia! Mine's a cutaway design so I can reach a
little higher on the neck. It's interesting you have the same trouble
with the A string. I'll have to try that technique of placing mike up
above the guitar.
Peter
|