Support |
[miked recording at y2k7 vs directly from board at y2k5/6] > Yes, it was a lot easier to record live with two microphones > in the back of the room, rather than running two very long > stereo cables from each stage board, into an smaller board, > and then sub-mixing each one, and with each performance. I understand, so this had in part to do with the extraordinary situation that the main festival uses two PAs? > With the mic setup, I was able to use a more consistent level > for all the performances, and walk away from the recorder for > long period of time. I couldn't do this with the direct > recording system. Levels were too erratic. So using a) a FOH engineer who would give you more or less consistent levels on a subgroup and/or b) using a limiter/compressor/normalizer/whatever in you signal chain would help? > Based on my own experience, and especially for this type of > music where there a lot of folks doing some intricate stereo > imaging. The stereo mics just don't capture that well. Have you tried a) placing the microphones more to the front (e.g. stage lid) (for a X/Y setup) and b) working with M/S signals in postprocessing to increase the S part? > The dynamic range of the soundboard recordings is much better > too. I can hear freqencies on direct recordings that just > don't come across clear in live mic recording....despite the > fact that the mics claim an appopriate frequency response. This may also have to do with PA and room properties. > The whole proximity effects with mics, just as air acting as > a natural compressor, also reduces frequency response. In the frequency range that matters most, microphones used for such applications (recording a room instead of close-miking) are optimized in their frequency response to somehow battle the proximity effect. However, below, say, 50Hz, you're at a loss. Solution: use A/B miking with omnis. Summarizing: I believe that the negative effects of the musician out->FOH board->PA->room->recording microphones->recorder signal chain as opposed to your directly from laptop to harddisk mostly happen in the PA->room and to some extent also in the microphone placement part. My experience shows that for recording small acoustic ensembles, a setup with a small-diaphragm condenser pair as X/Y or ORTF direct to recorder works outstandingly in capturing what the audience hears. This is different when recording amplified sources - for that, you'd normally want a combination of direct, FOH sum and room mikes. Finally, experimenting with microphone placement can also change a lot (for the better or for the worse). Rainer