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| | #1 |
| Gear interested Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 7
| I'm helping get a studio up and running and need advice on mic purchases. The studio will be used almost entirely for recording jazz ensembles - trios, quartets, and quintets (i.e. piano, drums, vocal, electric guitar, string bass, trombone/sax/trumpet). The budget is not fixed and I was asked to recommend a list of mics to use assuming they could all be afforded. That being said, I still want the prices to be reasonable (I'm trying to stay away from $3,000 microphones). I've read lots of posts regarding string bass mic options, but what about jazz drum overhead choices and a mic for the electric guitar (clean/warm jazz tone)? Is anybody out there having consistently good results with particular instrument/mic combinations? |
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| | #2 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: istanbul TR
Posts: 537
| I had good results with earthworks on drum OH for jazz setups and very close acoustic bass micing. They also sound very good on piano. Easy on the pocket too. My other favorites for piano are AKG C414 and neumann km84. DPA have nice omnis but they are very expensive. Ribbons might be good for horns and strings. I set my eyes on a pair of cascade fatheads. For electric guitar I say good old sm57. good luck |
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| | #3 |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Cleveland, Ohio
Posts: 980
| I'm not sure this will be much help, but a major jazz producer (he has like 4 Grammys) is swinging by the studio all next week to produce a session and the gear he wanted at the session included: Telefunken Elam-250 4 Royer 121's 2 AKG C12's 4 Sennheiser 441 1 Neumann M149 2 Neumann U87 2 Millennia HV-3D-8 preamps
__________________ http://www.myspace.com/jamesmeekerproductions |
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| | #4 |
| Gear Head Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Switzerland
Posts: 63
| I use most DPA 4006, M149 and 414 but I find SE electronics Mic really good cheap mics. SE3a and Gemini are really cheap for the quality... Try it. Best cheap mics for acoustic. |
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| | #5 |
| Gear maniac Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: SF Bay Area
Posts: 216
| I'd say try to find out a budget first as that will really determine which mics you can realistically consider. Also, over in the Remote Possibilities forum they discuss jazz a lot more often. Check there for suggestions. For jazz drum overheads, I've had good luck with Beyer MC930s and Shure KSM141s. I would heartily recommend either. I also tend to like the AT4047 out in front of the kit. Piano can really vary depending on the piano and player. C414s can work, but I'm not too fond of the current XLS versions. I like Shure KSM44s better, or I also like a pair of AKG C460B with CK-1 caps. Try ribbons for horns and/or guitar cabinet. Many of the current inexpensive models will do fine, but you could also look into the Beyer M160. You'll need some dynamics as well, like the SM57 or perhaps Audix i5. I've heard good things about the Heils, but I have no experience with them myself. You may have this sussed out already, but, on upright bass, I like AT4047 or KSM44, especially if you have some isolation. An SM7 can work there, too. For a really budget conscious mic, the CAD m179 is a good sounding, flexible, all around utility mic. It could work on any traditional jazz instrument, including voice, with passable results. At current competitive pricing, you can get half a dozen of them for under a grand. |
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| | #6 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 3,587
| Quote:
__________________ http://www.myspace.com/learstevens | |
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| | #7 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: nyc
Posts: 356
| The one that makes cats swing really hard.
__________________ "Dung beetles with ostentatious horns tend to have smaller testicles" source unknown, as read in Harpers Findings, Dec. 2006. |
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| | #8 |
| Gear maniac Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: Lala Land
Posts: 163
| DPA 4011s. |
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| | #9 |
| Gear Head Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 48
| The mentions (as usual) of cheap, crappy Chinese mics would worry me... I understand the problems of budget, but realize that jazz is one of the bastions of actual good recording quality (something that generally doesn't go hand-in-hand with SE Electronics mics, or whatever crap they're pushing these days). It's not quite as audiophile as classical, but it's not, on average, all that far behind. (The point being, if it's intended that anyone actually listen to these recordings, or - perhaps even purchase them, they will expect a certain level of quality. Are these recordings for a label? Demos? It would be inadvisable to outfit a studio with "budget" mics only to lose all their business, or have to sell and replace them within a short time span). You will see Neumanns (vintage and current, like the U87, M149), Ribbons (RCA, Royer, Coles), DPA/B&Ks, as well as standards like 414s (preferably not the current crappy ones), RE20s, etc, in good jazz studios. Of course, you don't mention what the mics will be plugged in to - the console / pres or recording format. |
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| | #10 |
| Gear maniac Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Canada
Posts: 271
| The best tenor sax sound I have ever recorded was with a peluso r14. This was live off the floor using a baffle between the drum kit and the sax. the r14 has insane side rejection. I came out with pure sax tone and almost no bleed from other instruments. Pre was an old 1073. That same session I did the drums with a u87 on kick and M149 as a single OH. Some m160's were involved in the kit as well, but only the two neumanns were necesarry for sound we were after when we mixed it. I remember experimenting with royers in that session, but they were n't particularly suited to that recording. Cheers |
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| | #11 |
| Lives for Jesus Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: orange county ca.
Posts: 2,938
| Some of my favorites EW QTC 40 piano, drums, overheads, vibes, some vocals, ect....... :)) DPA 4011 AEA R84 vocals, room,electric guitar,acc gtrs, trombone/sax/trumpet, uprite bass Pearlmans TM1, TM2 vocals, room, accoustic gtrs, uprite bass, horns beyer m500 trombone/sax/trumpet and the usaual suspects royer121 U87 vocals, up bass, ect... 57 snare, elect gtr 421 toms, horns PL20 kick, horns 414 up bass, acc gtrs, ect... these are some of my favorites, for under 3000$ ![]()
__________________ Steve Perkins Creation Recording Studios .com Take a Kid Fishing Outreach John 3:16 |
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| | #12 |
| Gear maniac Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 212
| Ribbons! 4038 121 Maybe AEA or RCA (god willing!)
__________________ "Quick Nibbles, chew through my ball sack." |
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| | #13 |
| Gear nut Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: Washington D.C.
Posts: 77
| For what it's worth...even though this thread is really old;considering the budget... Kick- Neumann BCM 705 Snare Top- Audix i5 Snare Bottom- SM57 Hi Hat- Apex 205 w/ Michael Joly Mod Overheads- (2) Apex 205 w/Michael Joly mods Toms- Sennheiser 421 Acoustic Bass- KSM 44 Piano- Shure KSM 44 AND Apex 205 w/Michael Joly mod Sax/horns- Neumann TLM170, if that is not affordable go with the TLM49 Keeping in mind that for Jazz you will want the most transparent pre amps you can get your hands on. API is the pre of choice for most Branford Marsalis recordings........I would start there. Other great choices are John Hardy M-1, Gorden and Martech. With all that said, if the musicians are good enough, the best Straigh-Ahead Jazz recordings are done with 4-6 mics total............. In Jazz, Rob |
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| | #14 | |
| Gear addict | Quote:
The Coles or AEA are good for guitar amps as well as brass, bass, woodwinds and even piano.
__________________ www.andyfarber.com | |
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| | #15 |
| Gear nut Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 93
| Probably a bit late on this one but if your doing jazz acoustic etc Call RAL Audio Services and Rick can recommend some mics and or Mic mods that would suit you fine Also contact Michael Joly at OktavaMod - Affordable Boutique Microphones he mods Oktava mics and they sound wonderful on vocals and acoustic instruments. |
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| | #16 | |
| Gear interested Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 7
| Quote:
Two weeks ago we took four days and tracked the record at Pachyderm Studios in Cannon Falls, MN. Other notable names that have recorded there include: The Bad Plus (Prog, plus their most recent unreleased record), Nirvana (In Utero), Live (Throwing Copper) The studio has a great live room, but I'm somewhat of a novice at recording jazz, so we'll see what comes of it. Here are the mics we used. Vocal: AKG C-12 (original tube mic) Piano: Blue Blueberry (x2) Upright Bass: SM7, AKG C-28 (tube, figure-8), DI Overheads: Oktava MK-012 w/ Red capsules (tried an AKG C-24 stereo tube mic too, but the Oktavas won) Kick Out: U47 FET Kick In: AKG D112 (probably won't use this) Snare Top: Neumann U64 Snare Top: B&K 4004 omni (for brush work) Snare Bottom: AKG 451B Hi Hat: Shure SM81 Toms: Sennheiser 421 Electric Guitar: Blue Baby Bottle Hammond B3: AKG 414 (x2), Audio Technica 4047 (on bottom) Rhodes: DI (will be reamped later) Vibes: Oktava MK-012 (original capsules) Trumpet: Rode NT1000 (tried the Royer R122 but didn't like the sound as much) | |
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| | #17 |
| Gear interested Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 7
| Forgot to mention that I had telephone call with Wynton Marsalis' sound engineer for Jazz at Lincoln Center. The purpose of the call was mainly to discuss upright bass recording techniques for when drums and bass are recorded in the same room. He's been having good luck using the AEA R84 (ribbon mic) in conjunction with a DPA 4011. Anybody tried either of those mics? |
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| | #18 |
| Gear interested Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Tucson, AZ
Posts: 7
| I work for Pro Audio Heaven (a recording studio/vintage mic restoration shop) as the house engineer and sometime lackey, so I get to use a lot of the ribbon mics that Steve Sank works on- tons of RCA mics, and some magically modded Shure and Beyer mics. I'm particularly fond of RCA SK-46s for drum overheads, and the RCA Varacoustic (kind of a precursor to the 77dx) absolutely kills on horns. However, ihf you're looking for something super solid at a good price, I'd suggest the RCA ribbon modded Beyer M160s and M260s, as well as the Shure 315/300/330s. You can call Rodger, the sales guy, at 1-888-321-MICS. He's super nice, and will bend over backwards to make sure you're happy with your mics! |
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| | #19 | |
| Gear nut Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 87
| Quote:
mp
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| | #20 | |
| Gear addict | Quote:
__________________ www.andyfarber.com | |
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| | #21 | |
| Gear interested Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 7
| Quote:
Considering the bass and drums are in the same room, I would definitely try the Beyer m88 for its hyper-cardiod characteristic. I would worry that the RE20 would get too much bleed. | |
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| | #22 | |
| Gear addict | Quote:
__________________ www.andyfarber.com | |
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