I imagine a line going from the centre of the snare through the centre of the kick, and place the mic's either side of that line, making sure that each mic is the same distance from the snare. This makes sure that the snare is in the centre of the overheads.
But I've been told the best way is on an angle. What do you guys do?
That would be this:I imagine a line going from the centre of the snare through the centre of the kick, and place the mic's either side of that line, making sure that each mic is the same distance from the snare. This makes sure that the snare is in the centre of the overheads.
Wouldn't the 3:1 rule always be in effect when using the above method? I mean all the close mics are gonna be far enough away from each other and the OHs should be as well.This in combination with the 3:1 rule will work like a charm![]()
Before the Dawn uses the same setup live and apparently its Tuomas' (the guitarist) idea as he used the same technique on his clinics where he played drums. LDC overheads REALLY high and pointing straight down:
![]()
That picture is from FME and the mics were adjusted by the stage crew. Our FOH guy didn't have anything to do with the positioning of the OH mics. And I can assure you that Tuomas knows nothing about micing and doesn't care about how the microphones are =)
that's like someone telling you which position is best to fuck in
I imagine a line going from the centre of the snare through the centre of the kick, and place the mic's either side of that line, making sure that each mic is the same distance from the snare. This makes sure that the snare is in the centre of the overheads.
I've also used a coincident pair of SDC's before and really liked the phase coherency when the mix goes to mono.
I know most guys like SDC's here, but to be honest on my last drum recording I felt that they sounded really thin (AKG C391B's) compared to when I've used LDC's in the past (C414, AT4050. even Red 5 RV8's) Anyone else had this experience?
not if she's a fattie