| Favorite
microphones?
By Fletcher
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Dear Fletcher:
I was wondering if you would share what some of your personal
favorite microphones are? Preamp? All in one type boxes? And
what are some of your personal favorite microphone, preamplifier
combinations for vocals, or any particular instruments?
The Anonymous Newbie
This is really pretty easy. My favorite microphone ever made
is the Shure SM57.
It's rarely ever "genius" but it never ever totally
sucks. You can point one in the general direction of a sound
and you'll get a pretty decent representation of that sound
that can be recorded and pounded to death later.
Everything else is pretty much open to negotiation. I do mostly
unsigned artists which often means that the "A List"
gear isn't an option.
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Above and beyond that there is always a ton of stuff I'm checking
out for Mercenary so it's not all that uncommon for me to be in
the position where I'm working on a project with nothing but tools
I've never seen before.
So, I'll be in the studio trying to define uses (or reasons why
I'll never use them again) for stuff that is a total and complete
mystery to me.
A lot of times I'll hit on piece of gear that I absolutely think
is the balls only to get to the mix or mastering and find that it
wasn't all that great so then I'll have a self-imposed problem I
have to try to work out of.
The only things I really stress about in terms of the whole recording
process are the sounds I'm recording. You can have all the $10,000
mics in the world but if the sound you're recording is shit, the
recording is going to come out like shit. If the emotion from the
performer isn't there, then you're going to come out with a pile
of crap.
If you have great sounds with great performances and can use whatever
tools you have at your disposal to capture those sounds and those
performances in a manner that compliments the musical statement,
then you're sitting in a damn good chair.
Having access to some of the hardware I have access to will often
make the job a hell of a lot easier. It can often make the product
maintain the emotional content that was the artist's vision of how
the product should be presented. But, it's never a means to an end.
The whole goal is to be consistently "upper mediocre."
Nobody is a genius everyday, nobody sucks every day -- OK, some
do suck everyday but they're destined for failure in anything they
do. The idea is really to be a little better than average everyday,
and genius when you can, and try to avoid being totally shitty always.
In real life, I'm a mechanic by hobby while many of the people that
might read this are "recording engineers" by hobby. When
I go to a custom motorcycle shop and see the tools they have at
their disposal, I drool.
We have a moderately well set up shop that we play in on weekends.
I'm like the little intern. We have some pretty cool shit. A lot
of the tools here run on compressed air, we have lifts and bead
blasters and some specialty tools. We can build a scoot pretty much
from the ground up but we don't have the CNC stuff that a lot of
the "real" shops have and we never will because it's a
hobby and not a profession.
By the same token, I like some of the stuff we build in our shop
way more than some of these customs that sell for $50,000. If you're
drawing the parallel, it's all about making the best product you
can with the tools at your disposal whether you're building motorcycles
or recording music.
After building a few motors, I've learned some tricks to make it
easier to build motors and I've learned some tricks that make the
motors come out better. After approximately 30 years of being an
audio engineer I have a pretty good grasp of theory and a repetoire
of techniques from which I can draw that will pretty much insure
a good translation of the artist's intention.
At the end of the day it ain't how you got to the finishing line,
it's that you got there at all. I don't think there are a dozen
things I've done in my career as an engineer that I've sat back
and listened to and said, "Holy shit! That's good." I'm
the same way with a bike. I've never owned one that's been "finished."
There is always something I'd like to change.
There is always something where I feel I could have done better.
There is always something I wish I'd done differently. I just take
that to the next gig, and the gig after that and so on.
Recording is a medium because it's oh so rare that it's ever well
done.
Peace,
Fletcher
Join Fletcher in his
PSW Rec Pit Forum for lively discussion.
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