Thank you for the feedback on the previous recording.
I have the opportunity to record this same band (Ed Lister Group, not the Big Band) this Friday at the same venue. The only difference in instruments will that there will also be a keyboard which I am assuming will be amplified directly as there was nothing going through a PA at the previous show other than a SM58 for stage announcements.
My last recording was from the front row, in a large padded chair that went up above my head height drastically reducing the audience from directly behind me. The only crowd noise I had was from the other side of the room parallel to the stage from my seating position, which was only noticeable during the quiet passages.
In case you are interested as a frame of reference, and didn't hear those samples, please find 2 tracks below. These are different tracks than shared last time but the recording.
https://samply.app/p/Ga5WbtzNargjM4rqsvTDI
believe it is possible to scroll down and stream lossless but not sure as this is my first samply share. It is definitely possible to download them lossless.
I have gotten permission in advance to record on Friday and am looking to take my recording up a level.
What I liked about my previous recording was:- Very good sense of immersion and soundstage with headphones (in particular the audience behind me vs. the band in front and all instruments seemed to be in the "correct" placement relative to my experience at the show
Solid bass extension, mix was a little bass light at the show, and overall tonality. I do listen with a bass boost on certain headphones to fill in the bass and midrange a bit which I find sits beneath the highs with the 4060s with (small) grills.
What I'm hoping to improve with the recording this week is:More full lower midrange
Increased direct to reverberant (and audience) sound
Better imaging on stereo speakers. I recognize/expect this will come at the expense of the headphone imaging.
I have reviewed the on stage thread again and would like to take my first step towards that style of recording by going to stage lip.
My current plan is to:Set the (table top) mic stand
just off stage such that the mic capsules themselves would be
just over the stage lip ~8-12" above the stage surface, angled upwards (I will use the snare as an approximate height target). I may also be able to clamp to stage lip but not sure based on the lip itself being rounded.
My thinking is either a modified NOS or modified ORTF, dependent on the stereo angle I establish when I get there, with mk22s as I really like the sound of these up close. I tend to change the spacing slightly to optimize the SRA based on the fixed angle using an SRS mount for either of the two standard mic configurations.
I am not planning on adding additional mics this time as I want to be able to mount this all on a single stand, F3 clamped to the stand's base, so I can move it into and out of position before/between sets. This is a tiny space and cramped stage and I am very conscious not be in the musician's, or audience's, way. It is my goal, however, to add DPA 4060s mounted to the stage once the boundaries I ordered arrive in ~1-2 months. At that point I would switch the centre mics to hypers in X/Y but, again, that's next time out.
I will also probably record with the binauralish configuration with my 4060s and R07, as used last time, to have the option for a headphone mix should I have the same seating opportunity again and to mitigate risk (drums overloading analog inputs, though I suspect this is unlikely given the nature of the gig).
I have two questions that I am hoping to get perspective on.
1) Is there a minimum distance from the stage I need these capsules to be located to avoid any issues with reflection and
2) Are there any other considerations that could significantly influence the success of my approach that I may not have thought of here.
Thank you as always for any advice.