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by Bob Weston_Archive
The Beta 52 is a perfectly respectable bass drum mic. If you can only afford to have one bass drum mic around, this will work fine. If you are at a studio with a large mic collection, try some different mics on the bass drum.
I find that on some bass drums I like the D112, on others the RE20, on yet others the AT25, M88, 4033, 4047, Beyer TGX50, SM98, D12, 4047, FET47, 414, C12A, NS10, etc. Often a combination of more than one mic, possibly on different heads (batter vs. resonant). It depends on the drum, heads, tuning, full front head vs. no front head vs. front head with hole, beater type, style of music, average speed of songs, style of drummer, room acoustics, blah blah blah.
How do I decide what to use? Which ever one sounds best to me and the band. As you gain experience with the different mics and drum sounds, you'll be able to hone in on which mic(s) will probably get you what you want in each situation. So you won't need to try every available mic every single time.
But, yeah, throw up the Beta 52. It's fine.
Lately, I've been loving my RE20 a lot of the time for the rock bass drum.
best,
bob
PS
Oh yeah. I think the D112 is a D112E.