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I think that much of the separation you hear in those recordings might be
the result of really good miking techniques and good engineering and mixing. The use of supercardiod microphones and noise gates helps with bleed-in when spot-miking, and good use of EQ and compression during mixing integrates everything so that each instrument is visible in the mix but the kit also works naturally as a single instrument. In other instances it's the result of triggering, where the drummer plays a real kit but what is recorded are impulses from triggers attached to those drums -- those impulses are used to trigger samples in a drum machine or in the computer. Then the overhead mics are mixed in with the triggered sounds to add the cymbals and room sound. OFten triggering is employed in addition to miking the individual drums and the triggered and acoustic sounds are blended together. This is done a lot in metal music where each drum hit is supposed to kick you in the head but it still can't sound like a drum machine. There are also some pretty impressive velocity-sensitive multisampled drum kits out there that can be sequenced -- you can get great results out of them if you know learn how to use them and how to work within the limitations of the technology. Tim "David" wrote in message m... I hear in many modern-day recordings songs sounding like the drums are so isolated but not so much that they're programmed. They still sound live and all but the cymbals are so big and in your face without sounding like there's any snare in the overheads. The snare sounds different every time it hits but no cymbal bleed behind it in the centre. Overall, the drums sound like they are all live but so polished that there's no way gating or anything like that could get it to sound so punchy and seperated. My question is, could this be the result of the drummer recording the snare, kick and cymbals seperately? Such a technique makes sense to me in my head but since I've never tried it I wouldn't know how realistic the resulting sound would be. Any comments are welcome. Thanks, Dave |
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