Thanks for the input Chris. My skills are in ambient location recording...mainly field recording of traditional music and sometimes a little film dialog and ambient sound collection.
Though I have been a musician for most of my life, this is my first attempt to deal with my own live sound, in the past I always let the sound man do the job....and, generally speaking, I have rarely been pleased with the results.
The problem is, at least where I live and I'm guessing in many other areas, the sound man has the wrong concept on how congas are played and what they should sound like because they are more familiar with run of the mill rock, blues and jam bands versus Latino music. Therefore, they usually deal with people that don't know how to play congas correctly, limiting the full dynamic range that these instruments have. Usually, when I have heard a recording after the show, all I can hear is my tone and slap and I am missing the palm, tip and muffled strokes in the mix if I am even turned up loud enough in the first place, but that us another story all together.
I would like to share an incredible conga solo for everyone's enjoyment and to demonstrate the dynamic range these instruments have in the right hands:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QjGgc1UkkUNow, regarding your comments:
- You very well might be right about dynamic microphones, but from my experiences, they just did not pick up the little stuff and only picked up the louder hits, perhaps this is because not enough mics were used as they were trying to pick up 3-4 drums further from the heads with only 1 or 2 mics. So, I just though that close miked condensers would solve that issue.
- Yes, I agree, the sound is the important part. I just like (and sometimes need) really small, light, no stand options for tight spaces. Clip on condensers are really light and easily go on the drum with limited hardware and to do take up any extra space on stage.
- Yep, I know all about how things sound different on stage than in the audience, but my comment regarding how things sounded to me were from a show I setup and then heard from the audience as I was not talent that evening, just a hired hand.
Anyhow, I am currently using a variety of microphones and one of them (Opus 87) seems to be working pretty good and I might just get one or 2 more of them..we'll see. It is VERY sensitive and takes almost no gain on my mixer, is hard to clip and the capsule does not overload easily. Like I said, the Beta 98 might also be good (probably better sounding?!?), but the Opus 87 has a super fast easy to use clamp and all the cables are integrated...not the best capsule, but a good design:
http://www.wallofsound.com.au/PA%20&%20DJ%20Hire/Beyer-Opus87.jpgSo, are we in conclusion that the mini AT caps are just too easy to overload in these situations?
I have a cheap Audix (F-90), and it was overloading when angled straight toward the head, but I gave it a major tilt to shoot it across the head and that seemed to do the trick for the time being....
p.s. in 4 out of 5 gigs that I am currently playing, we bring our own PA and run it from the stage as these are small places and they do not supply an engineer or sound equipment....