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xy wrote:
not true at all. what if you want to have a big reverb on the snare, but the kick completely dry? what if you want to have the toms do a dramatic stereo pan during a fill, with the hi toms gated, the low toms open, and have the snare with huge reverb and be able to eq the kick differently, apply compression to the kick, and have the kick be completely dry? Then you need to build a time-machine because you are trapped in the eighties. Just kidding...because the truth is that more mics give you more mixing options. that's not always what you need. but when you need it, there is no substitute for the discrete mixing options that a multi-miced setup will give you. I actually like the really tight mic'ing of the 70s in certain songs. it's a nice thought to think that a singe cubic inch spot with a mono or stereo mic can capture whatever you want depending on where you place the mic. but it has nothing to do with reality. unless your reality consists entirely of easy-listening and old big band music. No way. You can go way beyond those types of music. But it still comes down to the reality that I rarely get to record in a good enough situation where I caould put just one mic on the kit. Rob R. |
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