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Author Topic: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?  (Read 15270 times)

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Offline randelph

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #15 on: July 26, 2012, 12:37:40 AM »
I've been listening to audio demos of the Zoom H2n and it sounds better, for capturing live sound (rehearsals, gigs), from the internal mics, than anything I've heard so far. 

@gutbucket: I know the binaurals are optimized for headphone use, but I would think they would be better even over regular speakers than any of the internal speakers. 

What kind of external microphone setup does it take to capture that, "This is what it sounded like" sound quality?  It'd be great if there was a 1-point stereo mic that did a great job.

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Offline Gutbucket

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #17 on: July 26, 2012, 02:45:07 AM »
Not a popular opinion here, but of the internal mics I've heard on inexpenive recorders, of jamming band practice in a house type stuff, the H2n has been one of the better ones.  I haven't really heard that many of them though.

Binaural recording technique means putting the mics IN your ears.  It is highly personalized to your 'ear-print' and often only sounds 'spine-tinglinly-real!' to you and often souns wierd to everyone else with different shaped ear folds- sort of like wearing someone elses perscription glasses. To get it really right you need to compesate for the response of the microphones and  headphones you use as well.  To do it scientifically right you go even farther and use special mic extension probes that rest next to your ear-drums.  Technically that's the closest way to re-create the 'you are there' aural experince in the sense of recreating the same soundfield that entered your ears when the recording was made.  :o

What are commonly called Binarual mics are simply miniature omnis which can be used for any omni recording technique including simple binaural recording with the mics in your outer ear.  Not many here record music binaurally, more wear them outside their ears often called HRTF method around here (less personalized to you, usually better sounding to everyone else and over speakers).  But you can also space them wide or medium distances (A-B), mount absorbant baffles between them, or boundary mount them on hard surfaces.  Lots of options.  None of them very good too far back in reverberant rooms.

Unfortunately there is no one mic or one that works everywhere, everytime.  Or maybe that's fortunate, it makes figuring out how to do it more interesting if you enjoy that kind of fun.
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ilduclo

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #18 on: July 26, 2012, 08:17:47 AM »
 

I have a d50 and have made a couple of really good recording with the internals, a couple of just Ok ones, too, the unit WILL handle the high spl's FYI
 

Offline acidjack

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #19 on: July 26, 2012, 10:36:55 AM »
OP here.  The recordings several of you posted (thanks) are of the quality that I was speaking of.  It wasn't so much the distortion, frequency characteristics, etc., that I don't like, as much as the overall sound which sounds a bit indistinct and like it's coming from a distance.

Basically what I'd like to know is if some of the fancy mic configurations available today capture what you, the listener are hearing at that place in the room, as compared to being a slightly hollow facsimile like most of my recordings using the internal mics sound like.

I'm intrigued by the Roland R-26, cause you can capture from both the omni and cardiod stereo microphones and mix them together after the fact as desired.  Some of the Zoom recorders feature mid/side recording using the built-in mics, and I'd be curious to know the results of that, as well as some of them use 4 mics at once, supposedly for more of a sound that upon playback sounds like you were sitting right there in the room.

There was mention of battery packs helping recording quality?  I use plug in power whenever possible.

@acidjack: I wouldn't bother to modify an older recorder like the R-09; it's long in the tooth!  I'd rather have a stock unit that sounds good to start with.

I didn't suggest the Church Audio "micsketeer" mod and you won't find me recommending CA products on this board again.

The R-26 would be a huge waste of money.  Having a whole bunch of internal mics doesn't solve your problem at all; it just adds more crappy mics to the mix.  I don't know if you're running openly or not, but if not, your only real option with one of these recorders is in your pocket on your shirt - and unless you are 7ft tall, that means the mics are blocked by people around you. With external mics, you can run them on glasses, in a hat, etc. which will get you closer to ideal placement, height-wise. 

For the price of that R-26 (500 bucks) you could buy a nice, versatile used setup in the Yard Sale on this board, or even new from the Sound Professionals.  I'd consider something like the Audio Technica U853s and a battery box plus the Edirol you already have. http://www.soundprofessionals.com/cgi-bin/gold/item/SP-CMC-4U   

ilduclo makes a good point; the Sony D50 has decent internals.  It still needs to be stand-mounted for optimal placement (horizontal, pointing forward; kind of tough to do in a shirt pocket) and it also costs 400 bucks. For that you could have a better setup that involved external mics.
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Offline randelph

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #20 on: July 27, 2012, 04:32:44 PM »
@ gutbucket:
So, if it makes it too much of a personal thing like prescription glasses with the binaural mics inside your ears, then I would imagine there would be advantage to the Roland CS-10EM, which is large enough that the capsule is actually outside your ear, compared to the nifty SP-TFB-2, which are so small they actually sit in your ear.  If I got binaurals I would experiment with mounting them on a hat as well.

When I go to jam sessions I'm playing a lot of different instruments: sometimes loud drums (djembe), oftentimes flutes and recorders (which can be piercing, at least when I'm trying to be heard in a jam and am unamplified), and keyboards.  I'm looking to capture these fantastic sessions unobtrusively, and at the indoor jam sessions, I would simply get a feed from the board, and run the built-in mics as well (4-track).  But for sessions in the park (which oftentimes has amplified guitars, other instruments, and lots of drums), I want something that I'm wearing and will record from my point of view.  Not totally crazy  about binaurals, cause it means my head is constantly changing the direction of the stereo field, but like you said, they're simply omnis that can be mounted wearever you like.

@ byronsos:
That mic is way out of my price range.  For my purposes and price range, what i'd be looking for is something like
http://www.amazon.com/Sony-ECM-DS70P-Electret-Condenser-Microphone/dp/B00006HOLL/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1343419080&sr=8-1&keywords=mini+stereo+microphone

Basically I want a one-point stereo mic that captures with a good stereo image to be small enough I can mount it on a hat or lapel, and under $200.

@ Acidjack:
I'm probably a bit different than a lot of guys here- I'm constantly taping jams, no stealth recording here, and am less likely to fuss with everything if I've got alot of pieces to deal with, hence my interest in something like the H2n and R26 that could possibly get the job done with the internal mics (together with a board feed).  Those Audio Technica U853s look sweet- I'll research them more, though if I'm going to the extra setup involved with external mics, I prefer one-point mics for the convenience, and because I want something that can be hat mounted or binaurals

Offline bryonsos

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #21 on: July 27, 2012, 04:38:39 PM »
I was being a bit tongue and cheek, it is a great mic. In all seriousness, I've been really impressed with the Countryman B3s. I'm running them > CA-Ugly > M10. You could get a set plus a battery box ~$400.
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Offline acidjack

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #22 on: July 27, 2012, 06:55:09 PM »
@ Acidjack:
I'm probably a bit different than a lot of guys here- I'm constantly taping jams, no stealth recording here, and am less likely to fuss with everything if I've got alot of pieces to deal with, hence my interest in something like the H2n and R26 that could possibly get the job done with the internal mics (together with a board feed).  Those Audio Technica U853s look sweet- I'll research them more, though if I'm going to the extra setup involved with external mics, I prefer one-point mics for the convenience, and because I want something that can be hat mounted or binaurals

If by "jams" you mean like band practices, then yes, you are a little different than some.  Internal mics are "less bad" for that, esp since you can optimally place the recorder.

If you want a one-point mic and size is no object, I'd look into a Studio Projects LSD2 used.  Or even easier, an Audio Technica 825, if you can find one used (they're discontinued), which can run off phantom or batteries, or the newer AT 2022 http://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/AT2022?utm_source=none&utm_medium=PPC&utm_campaign=none&gclid=CI2HqO75urECFUXc4AodnQYATw
« Last Edit: July 27, 2012, 06:56:55 PM by acidjack »
Mics: Schoeps MK4V, MK41V, MK5, MK22> CMC6, KCY 250/5, KC5, NBob; MBHO MBP603/KA200N, AT 3031, DPA 4061 w/ d:vice, Naiant X-X, AT 853c, shotgun, Nak300
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Offline randelph

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #23 on: July 27, 2012, 09:27:10 PM »
@Byronsos:
That's funny, 'cause once upon a time I did recording for motivational speakers and had a couple of Sony ECM-44bs.  They're over $220 now!  Besides having a monsterously long cord, they also had an inline AA battery to power them.  I sold them a year ago, not anticipating this kind of use.

The Countryman B3's are in the ballpark, esp. as they can handle high spl and are small and apparently have a good reputation for good quality sound- I know their tiny headset mics are well spoken of. But in keeping with wanting a minimalist setup that I will actually use, I'd prefer something like the Sony ECM-DS70P I mentioned in the last post, or something that has a binaural mic setup: 2 mics, 1 cord, one input for the recorder.  I also wonder if I'm going to get more realistic results using a cardioid. 

@ Acidjack:
It's the outdoor music jams that I need microphones for, though I have to say that with proper fundage I would love to have any of the mics you listed, esp. the 2022 for the price.  I've got an AT 822 that I've had forever, and unfortunately it's busted at the moment.  I pulled the windscreen off and found 2 out of 6 wires had pulled off their solder joints.  I soldered them back in place, but for some reason the whole mic, which powers off an AA, has pretty low output.  It's beat to shit though- the threads holding the battery sleeve in place are toast, the foam in the windscreen foam is crumbly, and like I said, the output is un-useably low.

Basically in the outdoor drum circles I go to on a regular basis, the volume level goes from super loud drums (including me at times), all the way down in volume to guitarcentric jams (there's some surprisingly good guitar players) playing at moderate levels, with me on my flutes/vox playing into a mic> amp (SM57 >little 10" battery powered crate).

I want a super simple setup for these outdoor jams that would just be a stereo feed for my pocketed recorder, something I could wear in some way- hat, in ear, on jacket, etc., so that as I move around in the jam playing different instruments, I get a good representation of what I'm playing and the whole group. Not having tried this setup, I'm concerned/wondering if it's going to pick-up too much of my flutes/vox/drums relative to the rest of the jam given their proximity.

Another option, riskier in these settings, would be having a 4 track recorder sitting by the amp to record the amp output (which the Crate doesn't have unfortunately), and a small, unobtrusive mic that hopefully wouldn't be seen, to capture the rest of the jam.

Thanks everyone for all your input! 

Offline bryonsos

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #24 on: July 27, 2012, 09:36:45 PM »
You can easily run B3s binaural, or near binaural mounted on your glasses, hat etc. Mine are terminated to a single mini plug, with a 2.2k mod to help with higher SPLs. Any of the resident cable jockeys can do this for you. For the money, you can't do much better IMHO.
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Offline earmonger

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #25 on: July 28, 2012, 07:43:41 PM »
That Sony mic is really for the uninformed. Along with its considerable self-noise, it doesn't pick up bass below 100 Hz--that's around the G at the bottom of the bass clef. I would also doubt that there's much of a stereo image.

Instead, you should go with the best little omnis you can afford. Even something like the Sound Professionals BMC-2--the size of pencil erasers, easily clipped to hat/glasses/shirt collar--will sound much better than the Sony one-point, and cost about the same (actually just a little more if you get them with the clips, which you'll probably need).  They're also smaller than the Sony, and because they are omni they are pretty forgiving if you move around. 

http://www.soundprofessionals.com/cgi-bin/gold/item/SP-BMC-2

Depending on how loud things get, you might have to add a battery box, which would be another $59--but I wouldn't trust the Sony's claims of 110dB maximum anyway. 

Or save up for those itty-bitty B3s...

Offline Red Boink

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #26 on: July 31, 2012, 01:40:16 AM »
Sony pcm d1.

Offline newplanet7

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #27 on: July 31, 2012, 09:30:31 AM »
Sony pcm d1.
He has stated he can't afford the price.
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Offline Red Boink

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #28 on: August 19, 2012, 12:24:48 AM »
Oh, jeez, just answering the question posted.

Offline furburger

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Re: On-board mics: which are best for live recording?
« Reply #29 on: July 23, 2015, 05:35:19 AM »
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