Sennheiser MD421
- I'm Painting Again
- zen recordist
- Posts: 7086
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 2:15 am
- Location: New York, New York
- Contact:
- A.David.MacKinnon
- ears didn't survive the freeze
- Posts: 3836
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 5:57 am
- Location: Hamilton ON, Canada
- Contact:
The 602 is a funny one for me. I don't have tons of experience with it but there's one at a studio I've been working out of recently and I've given it a go a few times when I have drum sessions. It seems to me that the closer it is to the drum (like the traditional, partly in the hole placement) the more fake and ridiculous it sounds. The lows are insanely exaggerated and the mids seem non existent. As soon as I back it up a foot or more it sounds great and sits beautifully in the mix. I know this can happen to a degree with any mic but I've never heard it to this extreme.
I'm not complaining, once it's backed up a bit it sounds fantastic but it's a little weird. Any one else experienced this?
I'm not complaining, once it's backed up a bit it sounds fantastic but it's a little weird. Any one else experienced this?
- markjazzbassist
- tinnitus
- Posts: 1052
- Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2011 11:33 am
- Location: Cleveland
- I'm Painting Again
- zen recordist
- Posts: 7086
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 2:15 am
- Location: New York, New York
- Contact:
that's generally my experience as well - I keep it a foot back off a non-ported resonant head - i've never had much luck (in my space/ w my drum) with the popular kick mic in or near the little port situation - it comes down to how / why you record yr drums in a certain way - I need a booming kick with added attack and specific muffling for my kit's kick in my room for my methods to sound correct in the final drum mixA.David.MacKinnon wrote:The 602 is a funny one for me. I don't have tons of experience with it but there's one at a studio I've been working out of recently and I've given it a go a few times when I have drum sessions. It seems to me that the closer it is to the drum (like the traditional, partly in the hole placement) the more fake and ridiculous it sounds. The lows are insanely exaggerated and the mids seem non existent. As soon as I back it up a foot or more it sounds great and sits beautifully in the mix. I know this can happen to a degree with any mic but I've never heard it to this extreme.
I'm not complaining, once it's backed up a bit it sounds fantastic but it's a little weird. Any one else experienced this?
that said I've heard the close kick mic thing work wonderfully in other recording situations or with other drums
the game is listen and adjust what you have to work with to get the appropriate sound
what works here will not automatically work there
so choose yr mic based on what your sound needs and not particularly what mic is better in a vacuum
- A.David.MacKinnon
- ears didn't survive the freeze
- Posts: 3836
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 5:57 am
- Location: Hamilton ON, Canada
- Contact:
yeah. I never expect one size to fit all. My main point was that I've never really experienced such a drastic tonal change from a mic based on positioning. I always expect some changes from any mic based on proximity and placement but usually the mic retains it's fundamental character. With the 602 it's night and day. Moving it 6" makes it sound like a whole other mic.I'm Painting Again wrote:that's generally my experience as well - I keep it a foot back off a non-ported resonant head - i've never had much luck (in my space/ w my drum) with the popular kick mic in or near the little port situation - it comes down to how / why you record yr drums in a certain way - I need a booming kick with added attack and specific muffling for my kit's kick in my room for my methods to sound correct in the final drum mixA.David.MacKinnon wrote:The 602 is a funny one for me. I don't have tons of experience with it but there's one at a studio I've been working out of recently and I've given it a go a few times when I have drum sessions. It seems to me that the closer it is to the drum (like the traditional, partly in the hole placement) the more fake and ridiculous it sounds. The lows are insanely exaggerated and the mids seem non existent. As soon as I back it up a foot or more it sounds great and sits beautifully in the mix. I know this can happen to a degree with any mic but I've never heard it to this extreme.
I'm not complaining, once it's backed up a bit it sounds fantastic but it's a little weird. Any one else experienced this?
that said I've heard the close kick mic thing work wonderfully in other recording situations or with other drums
the game is listen and adjust what you have to work with to get the appropriate sound
what works here will not automatically work there
so choose yr mic based on what your sound needs and not particularly what mic is better in a vacuum
- I'm Painting Again
- zen recordist
- Posts: 7086
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 2:15 am
- Location: New York, New York
- Contact:
yes for sure !
my posting style is for general reference to all users of the forum and I'm often reminded that it can read as overstating the obvious or missing the point of an individual
My feeling about this mic is that it is indeed prone to change sound with proximity but not amazingly unique in that respect. A node in the room or timbre of the instrument could also easily be contributing factors here.
i agree it sounds different at different distances for sure
for reference I'm using the e602 version 1
my posting style is for general reference to all users of the forum and I'm often reminded that it can read as overstating the obvious or missing the point of an individual
My feeling about this mic is that it is indeed prone to change sound with proximity but not amazingly unique in that respect. A node in the room or timbre of the instrument could also easily be contributing factors here.
i agree it sounds different at different distances for sure
for reference I'm using the e602 version 1
- A.David.MacKinnon
- ears didn't survive the freeze
- Posts: 3836
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 5:57 am
- Location: Hamilton ON, Canada
- Contact:
- I'm Painting Again
- zen recordist
- Posts: 7086
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 2:15 am
- Location: New York, New York
- Contact:
- I'm Painting Again
- zen recordist
- Posts: 7086
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 2:15 am
- Location: New York, New York
- Contact:
of course participating in this thread got me wanting to compare the ported head in my pre-setup for today's drum session. Yep..still can't stand the sound of that mic in the port hole.. it's basketball city and i guess it's because of the way the front head is set up (penny taped to beater impact point).. I'm actually using the ported head on the front this time as it's a brand new technique i've cobbled together for today. The e602 is about a foot off the front head pointed at the center..amped by a VT-2 ..the sound of the instrument is pretty comparable to non ported clear head with a blanket muffling it..just don't need the blanket
this with a wurst mic above the kick shell pointed at the snare (e 609 silver) - to altec 1566a - redeye - space echo - orban 418a then sm57 512c snare top / beyer m160 mono OH amped w VT-2 - mk012 (hyper caps& pad) on the bottom toms (512c's) and U195 on the back wall (also 512c) into a distressor at the ratio under nuke (12:1?) is giving me a very cool sound..they want a ringo later lennon type thing .. the little slap tape echo on the wurst being crushed by the orban and the hair from the altec is just magnifiqu? for reconstructing that vibe
this with a wurst mic above the kick shell pointed at the snare (e 609 silver) - to altec 1566a - redeye - space echo - orban 418a then sm57 512c snare top / beyer m160 mono OH amped w VT-2 - mk012 (hyper caps& pad) on the bottom toms (512c's) and U195 on the back wall (also 512c) into a distressor at the ratio under nuke (12:1?) is giving me a very cool sound..they want a ringo later lennon type thing .. the little slap tape echo on the wurst being crushed by the orban and the hair from the altec is just magnifiqu? for reconstructing that vibe
- Randyman...
- takin' a dinner break
- Posts: 186
- Joined: Sun Mar 04, 2012 8:30 pm
I've recently found the "Basketball" sound is more attributable to the bare wood shell inside the drum (think about the frequencies that it is reinforcing being a cylinder and highly reflective).I'm Painting Again wrote: Yep..still can't stand the sound of that mic in the port hole.. it's basketball city and i guess it's because of the way the front head is set up (penny taped to beater impact point)..
Had a very nice Pork Pie kit in here a few months ago. Was tuned well with light damping built into the batter head, but had the basketball thing happening in a really bad way (even just the acoustic sound in the room had lots of it happening). I simply put a small couch arm cushion inside the shell (not even touching the heads) and BAM - basketball sound GONE! Impact and attack fully retained and even more present with that basketball sound gone.
Almost like lightly treating the reflections in a wood-paneled cylindrical room - lol. The quarter/penny on the beater thing will only accentuate that basketball quality - and the small cushion trick will retain the player's desired beater "chick" and kill a lot of the pingy basketball sound.
That is all
Randy V.
Audio-Dude / Musician / PC Guru / Crazy Guy
Audio-Dude / Musician / PC Guru / Crazy Guy
- I'm Painting Again
- zen recordist
- Posts: 7086
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 2:15 am
- Location: New York, New York
- Contact:
Awesome ! that makes sense..will try it out in the near future.. Thanks for the tip !Randyman... wrote:I've recently found the "Basketball" sound is more attributable to the bare wood shell inside the drum (think about the frequencies that it is reinforcing being a cylinder and highly reflective).I'm Painting Again wrote: Yep..still can't stand the sound of that mic in the port hole.. it's basketball city and i guess it's because of the way the front head is set up (penny taped to beater impact point)..
Had a very nice Pork Pie kit in here a few months ago. Was tuned well with light damping built into the batter head, but had the basketball thing happening in a really bad way (even just the acoustic sound in the room had lots of it happening). I simply put a small couch arm cushion inside the shell (not even touching the heads) and BAM - basketball sound GONE! Impact and attack fully retained and even more present with that basketball sound gone.
Almost like lightly treating the reflections in a wood-paneled cylindrical room - lol. The quarter/penny on the beater thing will only accentuate that basketball quality - and the small cushion trick will retain the player's desired beater "chick" and kill a lot of the pingy basketball sound.
That is all
- I'm Painting Again
- zen recordist
- Posts: 7086
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 2:15 am
- Location: New York, New York
- Contact:
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 103 guests