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#1
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Hey guys,
As someone wanting to better their level of professionalism when it comes to recorded sound, I have a question now regarding mic placement with acoustic guitar. I have been experimenting with where to place a condenser mic on acoustics for a few years now and have found a spot I can't seem to beat no matter what I try. My method although might sound perfect to me, could still be improved and I could do with a few more pointers on where I can try positioning the mic. I place the mic right up against the 12th fret (almost touching) with the capsule aiming away from the neck 90 degrees and facing the fingers of the guitarist. This I assume avoids the boom that directly comes from the sound hole but gains the beautiful plucking/strumming sound of the pick on the strings. I get a more upfront acoustic sound that needs no high frequency eq. I seem to get a very distant and muffled sounding recording if I aim the mic anywhere else. Does anybody else record acoustic this way? If not then please share your favorite mic positions. dave. |
#2
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I have had the opeertunity to record a lot of acoustic guitar recently.
A good player and a good intrument being very vital. (i have the latter, the prior is only soso). after a lot of experimenting this position yeilded the best guitar sound so far : in stereo. Mic 1 by the players left year, facing a portion between the bridge and the soundhole. Mic 2 at the same height, between the 13-16th fret, facing the neck, almost prependicular (slight angle). It got me a very nice, crisp sound. The mics were not exactly an AB pair. The distances were almost reversed. I also find spaced AB to deliver a stereo image that seems unreal (on a guitar). I like XY though, at bout the 14 fret, bout 8-12 inches from the guitar. . But im still learning. The player was made to experiment with a lot of strumming styles, from very soft to medium. Please note that so far, i have had the oppertuninty to experiment extensively with only one player and two guitars. Im sure a different player will require something different. I find putting the mics close to the neck leads to a very closed sound. And jarry. But i will try your style tommorow. Sidhu |
#3
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#4
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In article , David
wrote: As someone wanting to better their level of professionalism when it comes to recorded sound, I have a question now regarding mic placement with acoustic guitar. I have been experimenting with where to place a condenser mic on acoustics for a few years now and have found a spot I can't seem to beat no matter what I try. My method although might sound perfect to me, could still be improved and I could do with a few more pointers on where I can try positioning the mic. I place the mic right up against the 12th fret (almost touching) with the capsule aiming away from the neck 90 degrees and facing the fingers of the guitarist. This I assume avoids the boom that directly comes from the sound hole but gains the beautiful plucking/strumming sound of the pick on the strings. I get a more upfront acoustic sound that needs no high frequency eq. I seem to get a very distant and muffled sounding recording if I aim the mic anywhere else. Does anybody else record acoustic this way? If not then please share your favorite mic positions. dave. If you ain't adding any top end, I wouldn't call it a bright guitar sound. I had to get what I call a Tom Petty bright acoustic track today and you shoulda seen the eq on it. Dropped into the track wonderfully. Congrats if you are happy with the sound you are getting. My tip to ya would be to continue to play with other mics. You don't want only one acoustic guitar sound. I use a whole buncha different mics on acoustic guitars. Since I am always recording different guitars I never know ahead of time which ones will sound best. I *never* set up just one mic, even if I want to record it on one track, which I only do it the song is already chock fulla stuff. Since you like what you got so far, add a second mic and make that guitar bigger. You'll also get to learn about phase. David Correia Celebration Sound Warren, Rhode Island www.CelebrationSound.com |
#5
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They say the SM57 can be quite usefull on an acoustic. I have tried it
a few times. All I got was a yuk sound. (I am of course, driving it into Behringer UB pres). In fact, I have yet to make good use of the SM57 or the Beta57A that i got a while back. Sidhu |
#6
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David wrote:
I place the mic right up against the 12th fret (almost touching) with the capsule aiming away from the neck 90 degrees and facing the fingers of the guitarist. That sounds awfully close to the instrument. How do you keep the guitarist from whacking the mic? What pattern? What mic, for that matter, and how does the room sound? |
#7
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The only time I've gotten a good guitar sound by putting the mic that
close was with a small omni. Al On Tue, 18 Jan 2005 09:51:29 -0800, Kurt Albershardt wrote: David wrote: I place the mic right up against the 12th fret (almost touching) with the capsule aiming away from the neck 90 degrees and facing the fingers of the guitarist. That sounds awfully close to the instrument. How do you keep the guitarist from whacking the mic? What pattern? What mic, for that matter, and how does the room sound? |
#8
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"Sidhu" wrote in message
oups.com... They say the SM57 can be quite usefull on an acoustic. I have tried it a few times. All I got was a yuk sound. (I am of course, driving it into Behringer UB pres). In fact, I have yet to make good use of the SM57 or the Beta57A that i got a while back. The SM57 with Mackie XDR's was one of the most horrid sounds I've ever gotten. The two are great with other things; they just don't work well together. |
#9
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x-no archive: yes
Sugarite wrote: It doesn't get the vertical motion of the strings at all There you go again. Just think about what you wrote. -- ha |
#10
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Sugarite wrote:
I place the mic right up against the 12th fret (almost touching) with the capsule aiming away from the neck 90 degrees and facing the fingers of the guitarist. Impractical, but I could see the appeal. First thing that I find ruins an acoustic guitar sound is to lose symmetry with the string axis. You've got that going for you, but not much else. It doesn't get the vertical motion of the strings at all, and is mono. Sound travels via compression waves. They're roughly spherical in wavefront, and all a microphone diaphragm does is react to 'em. That they are spherical means that radial position doesn't matter, unless there's interference or reflection or something. The "vertical motion of the strings" will be reflected in the spherical wavefronts - and besides, if you look at how guitar strings vibrate, they kinda go in an oval shape, with the direction of the long side of the oval being more or less random. For any given instrument, there's no "visual" way to accurately predict where a good mic spot'll be. You gotta hook up and try. snip -- Les cargill |
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