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Recording Drums, Part I: Overhead Mic Placements Compared

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  • čas přidán 7. 08. 2024
  • Join Justin Colletti and SonicScoop for this in-depth look at overhead mic techniques.
    ► Want more? Learn to mix better than ever before with our FREE workshop, "The Top 5 Habits of Truly Great Mixers": sonicscoop.com/MixHabits ◀
    Filmed at Strange Weather Brooklyn, and using microphones provided by Sennheiser, this video covers how to set up overhead mics using some of the most popular and flexible methods in history, including: XY, ORTF, Spaced Pair, Glyn Johns, and the classic "Mono Overhead" approach.
    Each of the sound clips in this episode consist of no more than 4 mics: A pair of overheads, plus close mics on kick and snare. The overhead mics are a pair of Sennheiser e914s, the kick and snare mics are the e902 and e905, also by Sennheiser.
    All the clips are presented with no EQ, compression, or effects processing of any kind.
    Stay tuned for additional sound clips, plus our upcoming episodes on close mics and room mic techniques!
    For more videos in this series, subscribe below, or sign up for our newsletter at SonicScoop.com
    Watch "Recording Drums, Part II: Close Mic Techniques" here: • Recording Drums, Part ...
    Watch "Recording Drums, Part III: Placing Room Mics" here: • Recording Drums, Part ...
    For more on Sennheiser's Evolution Series microphones, visit: bit.ly/1csnjL5
    This series was shot and edited by Elias Gwinn of Velidoxi.

Komentáře • 314

  • @TheHouseofKushTV
    @TheHouseofKushTV Před 4 lety +72

    Man, Glyn Johns always gets the tone of the snare in a place I love. I think if you skewed your centerline to align with the kick-snare axis you'd get a more focused image on the kick. I'm glad the drummer's qualuuds kicked in for the session, keeps him nicely in the pocket!

    • @SonicScoop
      @SonicScoop  Před 4 lety +7

      Yes, if we were making this video again, we’d definitely show the 45 degree trick for spaced pair. It gives the cymbals less stereo spread, but does center both kick and snare.
      Thanks for the kind words. Means a lot coming from you guys!
      -Justin

    • @sottilario7213
      @sottilario7213 Před 4 lety

      @@SonicScoop That would be awesome to show. Thanks a lot for this one!

  • @jaygroov
    @jaygroov Před 9 lety +48

    Thanks for the video! One quick tip for the next one: When you do a comparison with different techniques, pleas play the clips continuously right next to each other. Always, no exceptions. No fades, no breaks. At least do this at the end of video when everything has been explained already. Any break between different setups makes the listening and difference comparison very difficult for the human brain as the context is immediately lost. Playing the clips continuously helps a ton especially when we're dealing with very subtle differences.

    • @youryella
      @youryella Před 4 lety +3

      You can ask him. Please, will you ask him? Don't appreciate your demands. And yes, I would to see your ideas implemented.

  • @ROCKSTARCRANE
    @ROCKSTARCRANE Před 10 lety +14

    Exellent presentation. As an engineer with 47 years' experience, I can appreciate this. Important to note that the least amount of phase cancellation will be with the X-Y.

  • @D4nNy777
    @D4nNy777 Před 10 lety +70

    Glyn Johns was my fav

  • @harveylopezt
    @harveylopezt Před 8 lety +136

    For more precise comparison:
    XY 3:08
    ORTF 3:20
    Spaced pair 6:22
    Glyn Johns 6:35
    Mono 7:16

    • @chazzhill-hayr6281
      @chazzhill-hayr6281 Před 8 lety

      How do you do that btw? The links to the time in the video? Thanks :-)

    • @rcboffa
      @rcboffa Před 8 lety +3

      All you have to do is put the time in your comment...the rest is magic... 5:10

    • @chazzhill-hayr6281
      @chazzhill-hayr6281 Před 8 lety +3

      hahaha. Oh it's that easy! Damn. lol.

    • @SteveStockmalMusic
      @SteveStockmalMusic Před 6 lety

      Thanks for doing that !!!

  • @Gornagik
    @Gornagik Před 6 lety +2

    I think part of the reason Glyn Johns sounds so good in this video is that it captures the hi-hat more than any other technique. Definitely something to consider

  • @indivisibleman
    @indivisibleman Před rokem +3

    I have made it my mission to aggressively improve my drum recording technique. I loved this. The "instant" comparisons are awesome and let me know "what I like" right away. Thank you! I never knew what to call these options! Thank you

  • @johnreid1234
    @johnreid1234 Před 11 měsíci +6

    3:08 XY
    3:20 ORTF
    6:22 Spaced Pair
    6:35 Glyn Johns
    7:16 Mono

  • @comfortsound713
    @comfortsound713 Před 5 lety +4

    I feel that this video will help everyone who wants to try drum mic'ing. And, as a person who was so impressed, I want to upload and share this video on my channel with Korean translation if it's possible. That's because I want to try studying about the audio recording in more details. I'm planning to translate another videos about recording more and more for Korean, and of course, for me. I wish you will let me that. This is Peter Park from South Korea. Thank You :D

  • @sockysworld8010
    @sockysworld8010 Před 10 lety +16

    Glyn Johns method sounds great especially for rock. Mono sounds more hip hop and R'n'B. Spaced paired would be great for some far out music maybe inspired by the 60's. XY is quite snare heavy i prefer the ORTF which is more balanced and classic Awesome video!!

  • @mrjackieson
    @mrjackieson Před 8 lety +16

    George Massenburg made a series of videos where he talked about centering the kick and the snare between the overheads. That way both kick and snare stay centered in the stereo image and phase is kept at a minimum. This can be used with spaced pair or XY. It doesn't make sense to space the pair directly in front of the kit - the snare ends up off to the side in the overheads and centered on the close mic, smearing your stereo image. Check out his video on micing drums. He invented the parametric EQ, he's pretty smart. I've tried this technique many times and it's much better sounding than centering in front of kit. Stand in front of the kit and move until the kick and snare are directly in line: that's your center point. Space your overheads equidistant from this point.

    • @donpakka
      @donpakka Před 4 lety

      I've been doing that ever since I watched the video and it's so much cleaner than any of the above techniques. I do minimal miking these days . A stereo pair aligned according to the G.M. technique, a kick drum mic and a ribbon pointing into the snare that captures both the top and bottom and combines them.

    • @JeserNoob
      @JeserNoob Před 3 lety

      Is this a copypasta?

    • @sl3102
      @sl3102 Před rokem +1

      The Recorder Man technique is similar to Glyn Johns but takes both kick and snare in consideration, and it does a pretty good job. It sounds tighter and is less sensitive to bad rooms.

  • @samchoate1719
    @samchoate1719 Před rokem +2

    What a gem of a video. I've always done a spaced pair since getting enough inputs for everything, but before that I did glyn johns and had a lot of fun with it! Dug out my garage sale stereo bar and am gonna try ORTF now. Thank you!

  • @tgtech570
    @tgtech570 Před 10 lety +4

    as both a drummer and a recording engineer this is a great detailed video! thank you so much!

  • @jacobsmith1877
    @jacobsmith1877 Před 3 lety +2

    Recorderman technique will center your kick and snare. You can also use the Recorderman triangular measurement technique to find great placement options for all overhead mic setups including spaced pair, ORTF; even XY can benefit from being placed on a Recorderman-style triangulated axis

  • @VictorOrlandoNieto
    @VictorOrlandoNieto Před 10 lety +2

    Superb three-video series. Thanks for putting material like this.

  • @MrJvandal
    @MrJvandal Před 10 lety +2

    This is a great video. Detailed, clear and great sound quality. Big up SonicScoopVideo !

  • @mccloysong
    @mccloysong Před 8 lety +2

    Brilliant. Very informative. I always did the wide spacing overheads and panned them 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock to start, adjusting input levels until the snare was centered. Since the kick had its own mic, I could pan it microscopically to compensate for whatever off center the O/H's made it. The reason I always go with the wide panning kit is that straight-up-the-middle can interfere with the vocal. Only the bass, kick and vocal get center panning

  • @ricksalt6860
    @ricksalt6860 Před 9 lety +5

    Good sounding room , kinda puts the High Ceiling a Must theory to bed . Really nice touch Parker ,
    probably sound good playing any kit . Great video , top quality audio .

  • @ManoGiba
    @ManoGiba Před 8 lety +2

    Best OH tips I`ve seen here in CZcams !
    Thanks a lot ! Cheers.

  • @horstbucholtz
    @horstbucholtz Před 7 měsíci

    Great videos! They are easy to understand and offer a lot of great information. Thanks.

  • @Choinsta
    @Choinsta Před 9 lety +1

    great tute.. I just had a session the other week with just ribbon mics.. using ortf and over the shoulder and about 6 more lol... sounded dope... Loved your classic set ups... thank you
    Ivan K

  • @Tc558
    @Tc558 Před 9 lety +2

    Great video thanks, I love that the drummer seems to be looking at you from the sofa with 'what is this guy doing' face

  • @dsrecs
    @dsrecs Před 9 lety +78

    For Comparison;
    XY 3:07
    ORTF 3:19
    Spaced pair 6:20
    Glyn Johns 6:34

    • @galgogergo
      @galgogergo Před 9 lety +2

      dsrecs this should be the top comment!

    • @harveylopezt
      @harveylopezt Před 9 lety +8

      dsrecs There is always a good youtuber. Thanks man.

    • @Honeythebeebee
      @Honeythebeebee Před 9 lety +4

      dsrecs you forgot the mono one! 7:16

    • @BraveMusicOficial
      @BraveMusicOficial Před 6 lety

      Nobody likes the mono one Lol! Just kidding!

  • @trac6
    @trac6 Před 10 lety +2

    These video's have helped me a lot. Thanks for sharing some of your techniques, man.

  • @TheSoundConnoisseur
    @TheSoundConnoisseur Před 5 lety

    One of my favorite videos out here. I find myself coming back to it every now and then

  • @billyg.7032
    @billyg.7032 Před 2 lety

    Awesome how well you can notice the stereo, kind of panning sound across the drums!. Very nice video.

  • @magicdjinn
    @magicdjinn Před 9 lety +1

    Awesome vid!! didn't know about the Glyn Johns and I really liked it, I'm trying it tomorrow!

  • @Trig242
    @Trig242 Před 10 lety

    This looks to be a great series of videos. Thanks very much!

  • @SoundweaversRecording
    @SoundweaversRecording Před 10 lety +1

    awesome sounding kit!

  • @dramado
    @dramado Před 7 lety

    I used the Glyn Johns technique that you suggested and it worked out great. Good video!

  • @blueleafstudio
    @blueleafstudio Před 4 lety

    These are some of my favourite videos of yours I've seen Justin :) They really cut the chat and get to the point!

    • @SonicScoop
      @SonicScoop  Před 4 lety

      Thanks! We like to keep them tight and sweet when we do tutorial videos.
      The podcast is another story :) That's where we go deep and try to hammer home new and better habits.

  • @busyboxst7
    @busyboxst7 Před 10 lety +2

    One of the few how-to videos where the sounds actually sound good / mixable and not all overly "studio" / "produced". Great job! The Glyn brought a nice sweetness to the snare wires and hats that wasn't there as much on the others, more of that airy "action" sound, kinda cloudy / puffy. That and the mono setup were my faves.

  • @pepe7drum
    @pepe7drum Před 10 lety +2

    i like that guy! he is awesome and he put it so simple! thank you so much i would defenetly try all those techniques

  • @garymould912
    @garymould912 Před 2 lety

    We had a 7 mic setup in our drum booth. It sounded poor due to comb filtering/phase issues. We tried the X-Y pattern with overhead condensers. Mixing that with just a kick mic and a snare mic, the sound is clear, natural and in phase. The live drums now sound perfect in the house mix. Thank you!

  • @elliek6415
    @elliek6415 Před 10 lety

    Great video. Please keep these coming.

  • @EmilianoMarcle
    @EmilianoMarcle Před 10 lety +2

    the best video on youtube about drum recording!

  • @fuzzylightning
    @fuzzylightning Před 7 lety

    That kit sounds AMAZING!

  • @BillBrolse
    @BillBrolse Před 7 lety +14

    The Glyn Johns method made that snare sound great. Could an additional overhead help with the width?

  • @djscorpie
    @djscorpie Před 10 lety +1

    thanks for sharing!! amazing video !!

  • @verttigoficial
    @verttigoficial Před 4 lety +1

    This video is so awesome!

  • @itsricksnowden
    @itsricksnowden Před 10 lety +1

    this is a really great video. thank you

  • @timmyg4295
    @timmyg4295 Před 10 lety +1

    Great video!

  • @musicbySTIX
    @musicbySTIX Před 9 lety

    Thank you very much for this video! It was extremely well done! Very thorough! It really helped a lot! =D

  • @BrianMagnan
    @BrianMagnan Před 9 lety

    Been looking for something just like the Glyn Johns approach, I'm gonna try it out today!

  • @diwattos
    @diwattos Před 2 lety +1

    Glyn John is my favorite thank you

  • @skeetabomb
    @skeetabomb Před 4 měsíci

    Great video. Thanks! Very interesting the Glyn Johns method. With IEMs, the difference is quite obvious. I will play around with these on my 13 piece.... 8P

  • @snjert8406
    @snjert8406 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank goodness. I needed to know this.

  • @declanmurray
    @declanmurray Před 10 lety +1

    Thanks man great video!

  • @avasound
    @avasound Před 10 lety +1

    Amazing video!

  • @RiotHomeRecording
    @RiotHomeRecording Před 6 lety

    I like that drum kit!

  • @jamiedonnelly2029
    @jamiedonnelly2029 Před 7 lety

    Great video, we carry out similar experiments during our Recording Studio Sound Engineering module with first years. Expectation Bias always leaves me pleasantly surprised with a Mono overhead!
    I always find Glyn Johns to be a little unbalanced due to the spatialisation difference between the Floor Tom and Rack Tom, however, it sounded really well balanced in the room in this video!

  • @SonicScoop
    @SonicScoop  Před 7 lety

    Hi all! If you're liking Justin's instructional videos here on SonicScoop, you might like his new video course on mixing, called "Mixing Breakthroughs". Check it out at mixingbreakthroughs.com/

  • @jesse9999999
    @jesse9999999 Před 10 lety +1

    Another nice option is to do a mid-side with a nice condenser for your figure of 8 mic, it gives you a nice "stereo width" control for your kit without having to use a cheesy plugin.

  • @tn707149
    @tn707149 Před 3 lety

    Good introduction.thx

  • @JacobColemandrums
    @JacobColemandrums Před 9 lety +4

    Sooooo needed this! Been recording drum covers for two years and didn't know these technique names. Amazing studio going there! We have a small drum room padded top to bottom with low ceilings. What is a good general height to put the over heads above the snare in a paired placement? (or above the cymbals height?)

  • @jrileyhill
    @jrileyhill Před 5 lety

    always fun to see micing techniques for drums.

  • @demevfilms
    @demevfilms Před 2 lety +1

    This just helped me do my homework! 💪🏽

  • @jeffreymiddelveld4421
    @jeffreymiddelveld4421 Před 9 lety +1

    Especially the crash on the drummers left side is panned significantly more to the outside. The ride a bit less, but the change in dimension is pretty obvious. I would choose the X-Y. Pretty stereo image, but not panned too wide. Good demo, thanks :)

  • @rundown306
    @rundown306 Před 10 lety +1

    Thank you!

  • @SuperIamsmart
    @SuperIamsmart Před 7 lety +1

    thank you actually going to class confident this really helped

  • @theroll666
    @theroll666 Před 7 lety +3

    thank you!

  • @customdrumtracksonlinedrum4960

    Great video,.. nice job,

  • @dlsdrums
    @dlsdrums Před 8 lety

    Good stuff , thanks ♫

  • @sartoriusrock
    @sartoriusrock Před 6 lety

    When "centering" the mic placement for spaced pair, I often try to center both kick and snare! I'll use a mic cable to measure an imaginary plane between the center of the snare and the center of the kick, and then use that plane as my center reference.

  • @jeroenfigee
    @jeroenfigee Před 8 lety +1

    Great tutorial !
    I enjoyed it and will be watching this a few times to learn the techniques.
    | Thnax4posting

  • @SybrenRoefs
    @SybrenRoefs Před 7 lety +3

    Awesome video, thanks so much!
    Are the session files available for download? I'd love to analyse them in greater detail in Pro Tools.

  • @Dazzer1234567
    @Dazzer1234567 Před 5 lety

    Another vote here for Mr Johns, gonna give that a try tomorrow.

  • @claudiofussei9112
    @claudiofussei9112 Před 10 lety +1

    Hi Justin… this is one of the best tutorial I ever seen!!! So, can you explain how to pan channels in these techniques? Thanks a lot...

    • @JustinColletti
      @JustinColletti Před 10 lety

      Thanks Claudio. For most of these patterns, I usually go hard left and right, but it's all to taste in the end.
      For Glyn Johns, most folks will pan the tom side overhead all the way out, but only pan the snare side overhead halfway out to help center the image a bit.

  • @dcp10200
    @dcp10200 Před 10 lety

    I exclusively use Glyn Johns when I overhead mic drums. Generally I'll use a ribbon mic that points over the floor tom and an omni-directional small diaphragm condenser centered over the snare to really get the height in the overhead.

  • @ZackMester
    @ZackMester Před 10 lety

    Perhaps thin was not the best word but the Glyn Johns just had a certain presence and darkness to the drums I didnt hear in spaced pair. The cymbal spread was excellent but the drums sounded a little too bright for my taste.
    Great video btw! It is the most thorough and concise drum mic overhead placement video Ive seen yet. I only have four mics so I'll be sure to test out all of these methods. Its exciting to be able to hear these slight nuances and be able to discuss them as well. Subscribed!

  • @DeathAndLament
    @DeathAndLament Před 10 lety

    For me it's always been record specific. I've been doing mostly space-pair now, with an additional single overhead mic for room (or the mic is placed even further in the room to get that uniform sound). All in all it's the drummer who seals the deal. Everything else is secondary. As for phase...that's what flipping it is for, so you can check the relationship between all of the tracks and fix any of those issues.

  • @crestiferj2689
    @crestiferj2689 Před 4 lety +1

    mono overhead and stereo rooms is how i almost always do drums. just sounds right to me. i keep a solid center image but with a little stereo spread from the room mics adding width as well as depth. i also like the glyn johns approach, it works well when you have a drummer who can balance themselves well. often don't even need tom mics.

    • @polyopuk4179
      @polyopuk4179 Před 4 lety +1

      Nice! had some good results with this recently, except used mid-side config instead of a mono overhead. How far back i the room do you tend to put the room mic's when you do it this way? In the corners?

    • @crestiferj2689
      @crestiferj2689 Před 4 lety +1

      @@polyopuk4179 totally depended on the room and if i had other instruments going live with the drumkit. generally i have a pair of mics, usually ribbons on either side of the kit maybe 3-6 ft out..and i move them depending on what i want to hear for the song. also, a stereo royer or aea r88 ribbon, i'll often have right in front of the kit looking down at it, m aybe 1-2ft from the front of the kick drum. that can sound really cool too.

    • @polyopuk4179
      @polyopuk4179 Před 4 lety

      @@crestiferj2689 Thanks for sharing, definitely going to try this out in the next drum tracking session!

  • @superfly3438
    @superfly3438 Před 4 měsíci +1

    There is a video out there of Glyn Johns placing his over heads and it's all on approximation of the position. He pretty much says it's simple to do with little thought. when asked if he ever measured the distance of his microphones. he replies. "No. It's bullshit." .. look it up, very entertaining .

  • @GlitchComputer
    @GlitchComputer Před 10 lety

    that Glenn John is so new to me..have to try it out!

  • @AllenMichael
    @AllenMichael Před 2 lety +1

    I like the spaced pair! In a mix this would be wide

  • @ChurroWaffles
    @ChurroWaffles Před 7 lety

    I was hearing this on a potato and noticed the Glyn Johns better than all other types. Will be taking note of thay my good sir.

  • @LuisHouses
    @LuisHouses Před 10 lety +3

    great video

  • @nivinraphael
    @nivinraphael Před 3 lety +1

    Sonicscoop is da best!

  • @tomjandoeven
    @tomjandoeven Před 10 lety +3

    I prefer to center the snare, because the kick has much lower frequenties, so the soundwaves are much longer. Because the soundwaves are long at the kick, and short at the snare (the snare has high frequenties), you notice the difference of the distance from the spaced pair better when you center the snare, and not the kick.

    • @tomjandoeven
      @tomjandoeven Před 10 lety +2

      CBGaudio It certainly is, but the goal of overheads is not that the kick and the snare both are centered, the goal is to record cymballs and shit. You must not forget that. Its possible and pretty simple to center one of them, but the most important thing is that it sounds good.

    • @JustinColletti
      @JustinColletti Před 10 lety

      CBGaudio It's true - you can rotate the overheads 45 degrees to try and center the kick and snare both. It's a much less "classic" approach, changes the sound of the spread significantly.
      (There's also some potential to cause additional mono compatibility issues on kick and snare, depending on distance. That can be avoided though.)
      You may like it. It's not a bad way to go at all.
      Perhaps we could mention that, and some additional advanced overhead techniques, in a follow-up video. There's only so much you can fit into a 7-minute clip!

  • @nelsonsanchez3670
    @nelsonsanchez3670 Před 9 lety

    Hi. At the time of recording, once we've placed the pics for the overheads, what should we do in the mixer?? I usually route one Mic into a Channel in the mixer, and pan that mic LEFT completely, and the other one RIGHT, is that correct??

  • @dockbandwidth7045
    @dockbandwidth7045 Před 10 lety

    Great video and thanks for the info. One detail though that I always wonder about which seems to be left out is how far do you pan each of the channels on the mixer? For instance do you hard pan the Right & Left channels? Do you pan them 50% each way (3 oclock and 9 oclock)? Do you change the panning for each different technique. Would be interesting to know but thanks again. I use the Glynn-John all the time with no snare drum mic - just 2 overheads and a bass drum mic - works great!

  • @seanlowrie8883
    @seanlowrie8883 Před 8 lety +1

    OT: Nice to see the M400 hanging about in the background. I'd assume it gets much love from everyone who walks in there?

  • @JustinColletti
    @JustinColletti Před 10 lety

    That's right Dock -- We panned these from the audience's perspective to match up with the images on screen.

  • @audionmusic3628
    @audionmusic3628 Před 4 lety

    Mic phase issues can be resolved by having the drummer hit the kick/snare alone at the start of the take. Use a delay to slow the channel that is early until it matches up with the other channel.

  • @JulienXuereb
    @JulienXuereb Před 7 lety

    Quick question about spaced pair: I learned that the wider the mics are placed from each other the smaller the stereo image is. Why would the spaced pair give an exaggerated stereo spread?

  • @DannySHodges
    @DannySHodges Před 7 lety

    tks

  • @marcojazzdrum
    @marcojazzdrum Před 10 lety +1

    thank you!!!!! =)

  • @chaimewhhuguinssh2771
    @chaimewhhuguinssh2771 Před 5 lety

    Superficially, spaced & GJ methods sound nice and wide. But when I focus on the sound of the crash cymbals, the phase cancellations turn everything into a blurry mess. x/y and ortf suffer much less from this problem and give me a clean stereo image.

  • @matiascabero8740
    @matiascabero8740 Před 5 lety

    great video! , thaanks. We are listening only the OH? without process? , or are with eq and with the close mics? thanks :)

  • @SteveStockmalMusic
    @SteveStockmalMusic Před 5 lety +1

    So... great video, fantastic explanations. Suggestion: Since we’re trying to hear a stereo sound, let’s play a measure of a cheesy beat, then do two soft and two loud 16ths on each drum, followed by right crash half note (without, then with kick), same on the left, end with a cheesy Ride beat for a measure. And as someone else mentioned... PLEASE put them back to back for a real comparison.
    I really appreciate how much time and effort it took to do this, and we all got a lot out of it. But it’s CZcams so we all get to sit back and say “I could do that better” (how many drummers does it take to screw in a lightbulb? 7...one to do it and 6 to say “I could do that better”). Lol
    Thanks again, Steve

  • @daneeehhhh
    @daneeehhhh Před 6 lety

    On spaced pair, do you pan the snare mics to the side of the overhead that captures the earlier signal? Do you time align/phase align overheads with snare mics? Thanks

  • @StreetJazz84
    @StreetJazz84 Před 8 lety +126

    Is it just me or does the drummer look like he dies a little every time he ends the fill?
    Great video! Or "tute" as they say.

    • @chameleonedm
      @chameleonedm Před 8 lety +3

      It's almost as if he just hates to stop playing

    • @SteveStockmalMusic
      @SteveStockmalMusic Před 6 lety +3

      No he’s like... “oh man, here comes those damn roadies again, wish they’d just leave my bloody mics alone”
      Lolololol
      Oooorrr... perhaps he just got the punchline to that drummer joke he heard 5 years ago.
      Oooohhhhhhh

    • @johnmdoll
      @johnmdoll Před 5 lety +1

      haha, I thought the exact same thing when I watched this before reading your comment.

    • @jakubowskij
      @jakubowskij Před 4 lety +1

      That drummer played with Jeff Buckley. Incredible drummer

    • @mdoyleproductions9358
      @mdoyleproductions9358 Před 4 lety +2

      I can't stop laughing at this, lol.

  • @reeblesnarfle5443
    @reeblesnarfle5443 Před 4 lety

    Ah,.... takes me back to the Atlanta Institue of Art Music Studio..... great stuff, thx!

  • @shaihulud4515
    @shaihulud4515 Před 3 lety

    I tried the Glyn Johns method and was pretty amazed by the overall sound. But: my kick drum was clearly audible on the left channel. I put an NT5 right above the center of the snare, and a second NT5 about 10 to 15 cm away , and about 8 cm above from the floor tom, pointing to the snare center. Both NT5 were equal distance from the snare center. I belive, this is how it's supposed to be set up? How come my kick was so prominent in the left channel, while here it seems so well balanced?

  • @SteveCournane
    @SteveCournane Před 10 lety +1

    By the way great tutorial

  • @markowalski1
    @markowalski1 Před 9 lety +6

    Holy shit that kit sounds amazing.

  • @carranen
    @carranen Před 7 lety

    when comparing takes, did you mix the near microphones with? (I think so) it would be interesting to hear just the overheads mics too.

  • @retribution1423
    @retribution1423 Před 10 lety

    My opinion on centering the snare over the kick (in the spaced pair) is that I tend to high pass overhead mic's fairly brutally whilst keeping the snare panned center. Therefore retaining the snare in the middle makes most sense as barely any of the kick is going to be left in the OH tracks. I guess if your intending to pan the snare off center and not high pass the OH tracks to make the kit sound more "real" then I can see the sense. Then again I doubt taking one approach over the other makes that much of a difference to the end mix anyway!

  • @SteveStockmalMusic
    @SteveStockmalMusic Před 2 lety

    Super informative, thank you.
    Next time I would love it if your drum master would play more than two notes on the floor tom.
    For example maybe play the beat for 2 or 3 bars, and then 16ths on each drum (and end up with a measure of 3/4? Lol) so we can really get a feel for where it sits in the stereo field.
    Not a criticism at all, just a helpful thought from “we who sit out here and wonder” !
    😊😊😊😊

  • @tiagoagfaria
    @tiagoagfaria Před 8 lety +3

    I really liked how Glyn jones sounded, would you recommend me using it in a live performance?
    At the moment I have been using the spaced pair technique, what is your opinion regarding OH mics for live act?
    Thanks, great videos!

    • @IsawUupThere
      @IsawUupThere Před 7 lety

      No, because it's high maintenance. When you do it right and can work really well, but it can also sound worse than any other setup if it goes wrong. Spaced is the most common and is pretty hard to screw up. ortf and xy are kinda meh but they are impossible to screw up. These are qualities, if you don't appreciate them now, you will some day.