Best Sounding Snare Sound EVER
-
- buyin' a studio
- Posts: 980
- Joined: Sat Jun 03, 2006 10:38 am
-
- zen recordist
- Posts: 6671
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 11:15 am
thanks man. i really like the idea of having some weird/crappy/tuned funny/whatever drums exactly for that sorta live drummer hip hop thing. but yunno, playing that monstrosity yesterday confirmed that i just cannot deal with playing a big kit at all. i feel like the more pieces i add, the worse my ideas get.
-
- zen recordist
- Posts: 10890
- Joined: Mon Jun 16, 2003 1:26 am
- Location: Charlotte, NC
- Contact:
I'd love some Soul Coughing stories. I was actually at Sunset when they were working on El Oso. Very cool setup to see. Nothing too weird about the drumkit at the time, though. Pretty normal Tchad Blake stuff.
By the way, guys, I just got a master back from More Space Echo done in his new room and let me say that the man KNOWS what he's doing. This is one of those rare times when I've been really EXCITED about the mastering job on a particular record, not just happy. Scott's mastered a few things for me in the past and they've always been great, but he NAILED the daylights out of this one. I pretty much felt the same way when I ogt back from Abbey Road or got my first Greg Calbi master back.
Nice work, sir!
Chris Garges
Charlotte, NC
By the way, guys, I just got a master back from More Space Echo done in his new room and let me say that the man KNOWS what he's doing. This is one of those rare times when I've been really EXCITED about the mastering job on a particular record, not just happy. Scott's mastered a few things for me in the past and they've always been great, but he NAILED the daylights out of this one. I pretty much felt the same way when I ogt back from Abbey Road or got my first Greg Calbi master back.
Nice work, sir!
Chris Garges
Charlotte, NC
- trodden
- on a wing and a prayer
- Posts: 5651
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 8:21 am
- Location: C-attle
- Contact:
Great to hear! Over the years I've gotten to know scott and lucky enough to hang out with him while in town awhile back. I trust his many answers to my many many questions over the years and hope to eventually use him as a mastering resource as well.cgarges wrote:I'd love some Soul Coughing stories. I was actually at Sunset when they were working on El Oso. Very cool setup to see. Nothing too weird about the drumkit at the time, though. Pretty normal Tchad Blake stuff.
By the way, guys, I just got a master back from More Space Echo done in his new room and let me say that the man KNOWS what he's doing. This is one of those rare times when I've been really EXCITED about the mastering job on a particular record, not just happy. Scott's mastered a few things for me in the past and they've always been great, but he NAILED the daylights out of this one. I pretty much felt the same way when I ogt back from Abbey Road or got my first Greg Calbi master back.
Nice work, sir!
Chris Garges
Charlotte, NC
-
- zen recordist
- Posts: 6671
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 11:15 am
-
- suffering 'studio suck'
- Posts: 410
- Joined: Sun Jan 13, 2008 3:25 pm
- Location: Richmond VA
- Contact:
triumph!MoreSpaceEcho wrote:jim seems to be ignoring our requests for soul coughing stories. so here's this in the meanwhile:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2XeUvSmxhE
every snare in the house, plus a few extra toms, a hat and a resonant kick for good measure. and a cowbell.
made my day, thanks man.
the tape is rolling, the ones and zeros are... um... ones and zeroing.
http://www.davewatkinsmusic.com
http://www.davewatkinsmusic.com
- Neal
- gettin' sounds
- Posts: 105
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2010 7:00 am
- Location: Fargo,ND/Moorhead,MN
- Contact:
Their microphones are even better than their ice cream. Point a Breyerdynamic ribbon into a bowl of fudge twirl and fire a .50 cal. Sharps buffalo rifle in a 3 story stairway. Then use another Breyerdynamic vanilla fudge twirl to capture the sound of the bullet hitting the buffalo which is positioned on the second floor for a fat slapback. This is how they got the drum sound for When The Levee Breaks. You can then take the skin of the buffalo you killed and make a head for your snare drum. Fill the snare partially with buffalo meat and use that to trigger a sample of the drummer farting. The fart has to be recorded with a C12 or this won't work. Reamp the fart through a Fuzz Face (germanium, not silicon) into a JTM45. This can then be recorded with a mic made out of the ear of the buffalo, or an SM57, whichever is handier. Monitor this through your monitors, then mic the monitors and record that onto 2" tape, using all 16 inputs for this one source. Then, presto! Quick and easy great snare sound if you don't have a bunch of snare drums to throw at a Slingerland like Morespaceecho (who totally wins btw).Gentleman Jim wrote:I like ice cream. Breyer's Vanilla Fudge Twirl is my favorite.
- Gregg Juke
- cryogenically thawing
- Posts: 3544
- Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2010 10:35 pm
- Location: Buffalo, NY, USA
- Contact:
In any given calendar year, the best snare sound comes from using a bass drum instead. Mike it with as many microphones as possible, but run it through the pre-amp in a Crosley CR72-OA Stack-O-Matic ( see here--http://www.sortprice.com/search-MC-WalM ... eo_Systems ; scroll to middle of page).
But don't actually track those mikes (that's just for vibe, and to psyche-up the drummer). Use an orange traffic cone to funnel the sound directly into a mono hand-held digital recorder (available from Walgreen's for about $59.99). Tranfer this via the on-board speaker into a Panasonic cassette player. Only record a 60-second sample.
Open the cassette tape on a work table, and use a butter knife to carefully cut out the section that has the best "snare" sample. Use duct-tape to affix this directly onto an old IBM computer punch-card. If you don't have duct-tape or punch-cards, you can make your own using the back of a cereal box and some molasses mixed with Elmer's glue.
This is without a doubt the best way to do it. Everything will sound warmer this way.
GJ
But don't actually track those mikes (that's just for vibe, and to psyche-up the drummer). Use an orange traffic cone to funnel the sound directly into a mono hand-held digital recorder (available from Walgreen's for about $59.99). Tranfer this via the on-board speaker into a Panasonic cassette player. Only record a 60-second sample.
Open the cassette tape on a work table, and use a butter knife to carefully cut out the section that has the best "snare" sample. Use duct-tape to affix this directly onto an old IBM computer punch-card. If you don't have duct-tape or punch-cards, you can make your own using the back of a cereal box and some molasses mixed with Elmer's glue.
This is without a doubt the best way to do it. Everything will sound warmer this way.
GJ
-
- zen recordist
- Posts: 6671
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 11:15 am
- Gregg Juke
- cryogenically thawing
- Posts: 3544
- Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2010 10:35 pm
- Location: Buffalo, NY, USA
- Contact:
-
- zen recordist
- Posts: 6671
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 11:15 am
neal does get points for "breyerdynamic".
also, let the record show that gentleman jim still has yet to pony up any soul coughing stories for us.
and being rarely serious for a moment here, i just mastered a record for drew waters ('drewbass' on here) that might indeed have the best sounding snare ever. garges' bands' new record is chock full of awesome snares too, but i dunno if i'm allowed to talk about that yet.
also, let the record show that gentleman jim still has yet to pony up any soul coughing stories for us.
and being rarely serious for a moment here, i just mastered a record for drew waters ('drewbass' on here) that might indeed have the best sounding snare ever. garges' bands' new record is chock full of awesome snares too, but i dunno if i'm allowed to talk about that yet.
- Gregg Juke
- cryogenically thawing
- Posts: 3544
- Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2010 10:35 pm
- Location: Buffalo, NY, USA
- Contact:
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 54 guests