| tbirdsp | 01-28-2013 10:35 PM | Quote:
Originally Posted by Codger
(Post 13789671)
I used a Roland R-09 placed about a dozen feet in front of the stage, placed closer to the ceiling than the floor. I was surprised at the clarity actually.
Speakers are a pair of EAWs on stands, probably 500W per side. They support only vocals and some drum - one drum snare mic that picks up some tom and cymbals, and a mic for a bit of kick. Bass is 200W or so (single 15), guitar is a 27W Conrad Blues Jammer. Compared to many we are not a loud group but to me the vocals sounded stupid loud compared to the rhythm section. Listening to the recording I could hear it was at the edge of feedback. | Some things to consider: The speakers on the stands were probably picked up better than the instruments/amps on stage. No matter how good they are, IMHO those small mics can't pick up low freqs well. I think it's still possible the actual mix in the room was OK.
I did a direct board out stereo L/R recording with my Tascam DR-05 and the result was exactly as modulusman and jaywa posted - vocals were way too loud (as I expected). I had the guitar amp and kick mic'd, and the keys and bass were DI into the board (with amps on stage too). Musician friends of mine said the mix was fine in the room though (my borrowed bass wireless didn't work or I would have checked it out myself - got a new one now). Next time (this Sat, same bar) I'm going to use my subgroups and put the vocals on one side of the recorder inputs and the instruments on the other. Then I can split that into two mono tracks in my DAW software and at least control the level/EQ of the vox and instruments independently. Not as good as truly multitracking everything, but should work OK.
Our singer is awesome, but she is new and doesn't know mic technique, plus she has a huge dynamic range. I'm running the built in one-knob compressor in my Mackie ProFX16 on her, but may have to get a more sophisticated compressor.
I hate to say it, but your average joe may not notice if the vocals are too loud in the mix, but I bet they will notice if they are too quiet. |