- Oct 31, 2012
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Hey this is my latest production, I've engineered, mixed and mastered this song. Tell me what you think! 

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Oh you did? Damn. My email is pretty filled day in and day out so my apologies for that... if you ever need someone to get you some Slate drums, I can do that for you. I understand shelling out 100 or 200 bones isn't incredibly appealing unless you plan on using it all the damn time. I've got SSD 3.5 and 4, both platinum versions. If I were you I'd save up for another NT1A, use those as your OH mics for drums. As far as OH placement goes, I often use a trick that I picked up about 5 years ago on the Gearslutz forum.
"1. Sit on the drummer's throne/stool.
2. Hold both drum sticks end-to-end so that you have a measuring device ( aprox. 16"...give or take).
3. Place the tip of one end of your new double- length-drums-stick-measuring-device in the center of the snare with the "drum sticks" held vertically.
4. The other end will now (depending on how tall you are) be a little above and in front of your forehead.
5. Place a mic here. I've been aiming it down at the snare...
6. With the tip of the "drum sticks" still in the center of the snare, angle the "stick back and down, so that's it's to the right of your right shoulder ( about a 45 degreee angle)
7. Use a mic cable. Measure the distance of the over the snare mic to the center of the kick drum. Check that the "right shoulder" mic is also the same distance.
8. Double check the snare distance again.
9. As far as where to face them...experiment. I like the extra snare reinforcement, so as of late I've been facing them both at the snare. facing them at the rack and floor toms also produces good results.
10. one last thing to check. with headphones on, both "OH" mics in your cue mix (only them) .fine tune the placement (i.e. adjust their orientation...usualliy just moving the shoulder one) untill the kick is in the center of your "image"
11. When you're done you'll notice that at first glance, this looks very weird and unsymmetrical. Yet it is very symmetrical in it's result. A. Rack toms are higher off the floor than floor toms, so this arrangement actually follows the contour of the toms as they really are. Standard OH micing doesn't take this into account, and as such are usually no more than "cymbal mics". Most of them time you see mixers pulling the OH's down to -10 or more in the mix because of the over abundance of cymbals and badly phased snare/kick/toms in the OH's."