So I finally got around to getting my 5150 Mk II (original, woo!) stack out of storage and setting up for some recording again. I have some new mics and a new cab I'm not used to, been trying out various approaches to see what's going to be usable for the room I'm working in. I like how the amp sounds in the room (a lot!) but I'm still toying with mic positioning. I made up a cheesy metalcore riff to test with, but I think I'm getting too much proximity effect from miking right on the grille (< 1cm), seems to be woofing hard centered around 132Hz. I tried dropping the post and resonance a bit but the tone just wimped out instead of not woofing.
I haven't gone through the steps to re-place the mics farther back, and the room treatment is unfortunately minimal at present, so the less room bleed the better is my thinking. Anyhow, I can easily just cut out the woof and it cleans up fairly nice, but I can't help feeling that's not the best approach; I'd rather the dry signal right off the mic(s) be awesome(r). Maybe one of you guys can recognize immediately what I should focus on tweaking first, so I don't spin my wheels with false starts if they're unnecessary.
So, clips:
Dry mix off the mic's, simple hard panning, zero EQ or processing
MC Dry 1.0
And a cut version with some comp and limiting for a quick compare
MC EQ+Comp 1.0
Any feedback would be appreciated, even if you just want to tell me metalcore sucks (I mostly play thrash and death metal, so I'd be inclined to agree with you if you did
)
EDIT: Also, in the dry track, there's a slight fuzz in the tone that sounds like reverb.... am I correct in assuming that's exactly what it is, due to not having my cab in a closet under blankets or such, getting room sound bleeding back in the mics? It's definitely not something the reflection path emphasizes when I'm playing the cab in the room -- but then a microphone isn't an ear, so hey.
I haven't gone through the steps to re-place the mics farther back, and the room treatment is unfortunately minimal at present, so the less room bleed the better is my thinking. Anyhow, I can easily just cut out the woof and it cleans up fairly nice, but I can't help feeling that's not the best approach; I'd rather the dry signal right off the mic(s) be awesome(r). Maybe one of you guys can recognize immediately what I should focus on tweaking first, so I don't spin my wheels with false starts if they're unnecessary.
So, clips:
Dry mix off the mic's, simple hard panning, zero EQ or processing
MC Dry 1.0
And a cut version with some comp and limiting for a quick compare
MC EQ+Comp 1.0
Any feedback would be appreciated, even if you just want to tell me metalcore sucks (I mostly play thrash and death metal, so I'd be inclined to agree with you if you did

EDIT: Also, in the dry track, there's a slight fuzz in the tone that sounds like reverb.... am I correct in assuming that's exactly what it is, due to not having my cab in a closet under blankets or such, getting room sound bleeding back in the mics? It's definitely not something the reflection path emphasizes when I'm playing the cab in the room -- but then a microphone isn't an ear, so hey.