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Posted to rec.audio.pro,rec.audio.tubes
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![]() Soundhaspriority wrote: Bob, thank you for your cordial tone. I understand your point of view with respect to personal experience. Here's mine. Unlike a working professional, the number of hours, and the number of different experiences I have in this field are comparatively limited. I don't live in an environment with access to ongoing sessions. I can't kibbutz with mikes and performers moving in and out. They simply don't exist in my environment. To do what I do, I either backpack the equipment or drive it 99 miles to NY, hunt for a parking space, schlep the stuff into a nearly dark bar, and fumble while cursing the darkness for at least an hour and a half before I get to check a level. Then all too soon, the musicians pack up. Today I had a really bad day. This is how it went: 1. Three hours to pack up the selected gear into a couple cases, as well as all the other prep for going to another city. 2. Drive up the Jersey Turnpike in heavy rain during the rush hour: 3 hours. 3. Gridlock around the Holland Tunnel. 4. Get a spot right outside! The only good thing. 5. Work my fingers to the bone hooking up, but missed all but the last 20 minutes of the first group. 6. The second group, who I adore, managed to pack fifty minutes of music into a two hour spot. I got 35 minutes of it. 7. While carrying some stands back to the car, slipped on the sidewalk greased by garbage and rain. Crushed my cellphone. Took me two hours to clear out in the dark, and two more hours to get home in the rain. The upshot is, it took me 13 hours and $40, + the $200 to repair the broken PDA phone, to get 55 minutes of recorded performance. Sometimes it's easier. On Sunday, I backpacked in, and got 84 minutes in only nine hours of travel and setup. My request was for specific recommendations of mikes good for ORTF. I made this request because I do not have easy access to performers in order to test microphones. When I get to NYC, I have so little time, bought at the cost of wearing and expensive travel, I have to get the performances. This is why I asked this forum for specific advice, not general recording philosophy. And by the way, while some of the advice given here is good, and all the specific advice in this particular thread is good advice, there are also many worthless answers, given by people who are just so-so at this field, who manage to get by because today's equipment is so good. I did graduate work in physics, with a specialty in hydrodynamics, which is about fluids, of which air happens to be one. .....SNIP Well, as this does not appear to be a forgery, yet is cross-posted to rec.audio.tubes, I will try to answer without being too critical. WITH the understanding that I am not by any means an audio pro, but with some practical observations. First, William of Occam, something over 700 years ago suggested that one should not multiply entities needlessly. That should be your watchword when you do this sort of thing. If the environment is "hostile" for any number of reasons: Lack of cooperation from patrons, ownership, musicians whatever. Poor Acoustics All of the above Something else Then it seems necessary that a recordist do what is necessary to overcome these elements. That would be either by gaining the proper cooperation of relevant parties, arriving at the venue sufficiently in advance to set up without disturbing users/patrons/musicians too much, or vastly simplifying the set-up process, or whatever other permutation or combination of time and effort works. Determine the level of results required or desired: If the goal is to show the musicians how they generally sound in that venue, that should be a relatively simple task to accomplish what with modern equipment and specialized microphones. If the goal is a "professional" quality recording fit for publication, that is an entirely different extreme and requires as noted above: A non-hostile environment. Enough time to set up, even to test the set-up. Full cooperation of patrons, ownership and musicians. Not so much a suggestion to lower your standards as to manage your expectations such that you have a legitimate chance to accomplish something of value rather than expecting the impossible. And you don't carry insurance on your PDA/phone? Sheesh... for $16/year, you are out over 12 year's worth. Peter Wieck Wyncote, PA |
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