So after several years of recording exclusively with CSBs, I got tired of audience-noise-heavy recordings at outdoor shows and room-echo-heavy recordings at venues like the Bell House, and decided I needed some decent cardioids. Since I wasn't crazy about the Core Sound cards, and everyone hear raves about Chris Church's stuff, I ordered a couple of CA-14 cards in his most recent sale.
They arrived promptly (thanks, Chris!) and I've tried them out for two shows, one a small-venue gig at Hank's Saloon featuring Sue Garner and Rick Brown's Two Mule Team and my friends Jesse Jarnow and Ariella Stok's band Sloppy Heads, the other the first of a two-night Superchunk run at the Bowery Ballroom. For each night I ran both the CA-14s (aimed at the stacks) and the binaurals (aimed straight L/R with a buffer in between), each to their own iRiver 320. At Hank's I was about 10-12 feet back of the stage, dead center; at the Bowery I was in the left balcony, maybe 20 feet back from the left speaker stack.
Here's a sample of Two Mule Team:
CSBs:
http://demause.net/ts/TMT-CSB.mp3CA-14s:
http://demause.net/ts/TMT-CA.mp3MTX:
http://demause.net/ts/TMT-mtx.mp3And here's a sample of Superchunk:
CSBs:
http://demause.net/ts/Superchunk-CSB.mp3CA-14s:
http://demause.net/ts/Superchunk-CA.mp3MTX:
http://demause.net/ts/Superchunk-mtx.mp3As you can hear, the results are just as you'd expect: The CA-14 cards are crisper and more direct, while the CSBs are warmer and have better stereo separation and room ambience. I love the sound of mixing the two, especially for the Hank's show. (For Superchunk I found that a little CA-14 went a long way, likely because of my position in the room; I'm sure it would have been different on the floor.)
As far as comparing the sound of the two mics in isolation, though, I find that I strongly prefer the CSBs. The CA-14 cards have a decent bass response, certainly compared to my old Core Sound cards, but there's still something harsh and almost tinny about the high end to my ears. It's almost like listening to a straight SBD - I like what they add to a mix, but if given the choice between listening to one of the straight CA-14 card recordings or one of the straight CSB recordings, I'd take the CSBs every time so far, room echo and crowd noise be damned.
Of course, it's possible I'm missing something I could be doing, either in mic positioning or post-processing EQ, that would make the CA-14s sound incredible on their own. Or maybe I just don't like the sound of cards (at least, not cards in my price range), in which case I'm probably going to need to start reading that "Recommend me a cheap 4-track recorder" thread more seriously.
Any thoughts/advice?