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#1
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I am miking a jazz band and I took and clipped a AKG C419 to the
"sound plate" of a 7' grand piano. The mic sounds great. It's just the the mid range sounds a little dull. I'm not the best with EQing, so does anyone have any suggestions for what EQ setting to set for this mic? I'm mixing with a Mackie SR40-8. I can either use the 4 band EQ on the specific board channel, or i have a Rane ME60 that i can run the signal through. -Luther |
#2
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"Luther Bell" wrote in message
om... I am miking a jazz band and I took and clipped a AKG C419 to the "sound plate" of a 7' grand piano. The mic sounds great. It's just the the mid range sounds a little dull. I'm not the best with EQing, so does anyone have any suggestions for what EQ setting to set for this mic? I'm mixing with a Mackie SR40-8. I can either use the 4 band EQ on the specific board channel, or i have a Rane ME60 that i can run the signal through. -Luther ______________________ Hey L Difficult question, you need to experiment a lot. Mic, position of mic is critical, as is room ambience. I'd pull a bit of bottom off so that the level could be stronger, then trim off some out about 250, then push a bit at 5-7K while monitoring loudly on headphones. Playing it loud as part of a check is important, shows you some of what needs doing, as it highlights the 'objectionable.' Once you get it up hot on the meters and playback volume, tweaking is in order. Then at 'normal' volumes, tweak more. At very quiet volumes it's good to be able to at least hear the lead a touch. I'd go for as elaborate an eq unit at hand, a bit of compression, and a stereo signal fer starters fer shur. Here's a bit of stuff.... EQ Basics 12K air 8-10 K Upper Mids, Edge 5-7 K Articulation Zone 1.6-4K Hurtin' Zone 500-1.6 Mids 200-450 Lower Mid, Warmth, Mud Zone, only one lives here commonly cut a lot 200 Moo Zone 100 Pop Zone, Warmth 50 Thud Zone ______________________________________ -bg- www.thelittlecanadaheadphoneband.ca www.lchb.ca |
#3
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"Luther Bell" wrote in message
om... I am miking a jazz band and I took and clipped a AKG C419 to the "sound plate" of a 7' grand piano. The mic sounds great. It's just the the mid range sounds a little dull. I'm not the best with EQing, so does anyone have any suggestions for what EQ setting to set for this mic? I'm mixing with a Mackie SR40-8. I can either use the 4 band EQ on the specific board channel, or i have a Rane ME60 that i can run the signal through. -Luther ______________________ Hey L Difficult question, you need to experiment a lot. Mic, position of mic is critical, as is room ambience. I'd pull a bit of bottom off so that the level could be stronger, then trim off some out about 250, then push a bit at 5-7K while monitoring loudly on headphones. Playing it loud as part of a check is important, shows you some of what needs doing, as it highlights the 'objectionable.' Once you get it up hot on the meters and playback volume, tweaking is in order. Then at 'normal' volumes, tweak more. At very quiet volumes it's good to be able to at least hear the lead a touch. I'd go for as elaborate an eq unit at hand, a bit of compression, and a stereo signal fer starters fer shur. Here's a bit of stuff.... EQ Basics 12K air 8-10 K Upper Mids, Edge 5-7 K Articulation Zone 1.6-4K Hurtin' Zone 500-1.6 Mids 200-450 Lower Mid, Warmth, Mud Zone, only one lives here commonly cut a lot 200 Moo Zone 100 Pop Zone, Warmth 50 Thud Zone ______________________________________ -bg- www.thelittlecanadaheadphoneband.ca www.lchb.ca |
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