So, I'm not sure if this has ever been discussed or considered or anything, but I'm wondering how to perhaps "optimize" omni mics in a small-venue club setting where crowd noise may be a signficant problem.
I seem to be able to tape an above-average number of rock bands that allow taping lately (and plenty of them are nice if you just ask), but almost all of the shows I see are in small venues where the crowd noise is significant, and often times I'm stuck in a specific spot if I'm clamping or using a stand. It's getting to the point that I seriously am frustrated with a lot of my recordings when two people get together and start talking near my stand and they're louder than the music but I can't manage to shut them up.
I'd like to in some way "isolate" the mics, so that they pick up more sound of the band, than the sounds "below" them. Understandably with omni's this is not the "natural" setup, but my mics are DPA 4061's until I get a lot more money to buy a set of open cards and a preamp. It's probably not going to happen any time soon, so I'd like to try and maximize the results of the mics I have, rather than hear suggestions on "you should be using cardioid mics if you want to avoid the crowd noise".
Now, with all that out of the way, has anyone even attempted to baffle or otherwise "directionalize" omni mics by in some way reducing the sound coming from a particular direction? With miniature mics the size of the DPA's, is there any sort of suggestion on the size of such a contraption? Ideally, I'd like to (assuming this makes any sense to anyone but me) reduce the volume of the sounds coming from below and behind the mic stand, but let everything above and in front come in loud and clear. Essentially turning the 360 degree pattern of an omni mic, into something more of a 180 degree but not entirely blocking out the sound altogether.
I'm using a j-disc right now, and I definitely notice a distinct sound difference. Would the same sort of baffle underneath the mics cause a similar sort of restriction of sound? My half-assed idea at the moment is to chop a tennis ball in half, fill it with foam and mount the mics on the tennis balls, and attach the tennis balls to the j-disc. I'm thinking unfortinately that this may be too insignificant of a barrier to noise.
Am i wasting my time here, or is this worth perhaps messing around with some materials and seeing if I can get any significant results?