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Just a short note on that: I don't own much gear, but I periodically get to know a lot because I make a modest living partly from writing test reviews for musician magazines (in Swedish, mostly). As for my own music making I can't afford to keep much gear around and I also prefer to work with as little gear as possible in order to getting better at what I'm doing. Per ;-) On Jan 27, 2008 1:31 PM, Chris Sewell <lunamusic@mac.com> wrote: > I am convinced that Per has every piece of gear known to (looping) > man. :) > > > > > On Jan 27, 2008, at 6:07 AM, Per Boysen wrote: > > > l'm also pleased with the LF response of the Zoom H4. Just don't go > > too close up to the sound source. When recording live sets I typical > > put the stereo mic set two or three meters from the two stereo > > speakers in a "sweet spot" position. This gave fully acceptable > > results for carrying out live recordings (as posted at > > http://www.jamendo.com/en/album/5370). > > > > Per > > > > > > On Jan 27, 2008 1:37 AM, rithma <rithma@rithma.org> wrote: > >> My old Zoom H4 is REALLY good at picking up the low lows, as long as > >> they arent too hot. > >> take that thing into the club and it sounds like youre there! > >> Im curious how the new zoom handheld sounds with its pseudo surround > >> sound and 4 mics... > >> > >> > >> > >> On Jan 1, 2008, at 5:32 PM, Qua Veda wrote: > >> > >>> For found-sound recording of low-frequency material, your mics and > >>> record/storage(wav, mp3)/playback and the entire audio chain would > >>> need to > >>> do a good job at these frequencies. > >>> > >>> The spec on my Edirol R-09 handheld recorder says 20 Hz to 22 kHz, > >>> but I > >>> wonder ... I'm not set up to test it right now . Anyone have > >>> experience > >>> recording low-freq sounds? What kinds LF sources have you tried to > >>> record? > >>> trick/tips for this kind of recording? > >>> > >>> -Qua