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by eliya_Archive
twelvepoint wrote:Apart from the compression in overheads I mentioned the mixing was mainly balancing, except I put some additive shelf EQ on the boundary mic, both on bass and treble. This sounds good! However, I think that if you put this in the context of a rock band, the drums will lose focus. The first contributor to that is that your balance is more on the roomy side. Dial down those room mics. Beyond the loss of focus, the more roomy you make it, the more you can hear that this is a regular room and not a treated room. However, I will say that this room sounds alright.The other issue is that the kick is not massive enough. It sounds good like this, but if you add thick bass and distorted guitar on top, you will struggle to place the kick. Get the stupidest, thickest, most massive kick sound you can get. You can always dial it down later, but you won't really be able to make it bigger with EQ or compression. If your kick sounds massive, it'll always cut through and center the drums.I don't usually compress overheads unless I have a rowdy snare I'm trying to control, then I will use a compressor that will blink every time the snare hits (got that from FM steve). I treat overheads almost like close mics for cymbals. I get them just high enough where the cymbals don't sound stupid, and where they capture a bit of the attack of the drums (that is also a variation on something Steve taught me). If you get them high up (and they look like they're up there from the picture, but maybe it's just the angle), they will start crossing into room mic territory, and in your case you already have a dedicated ambiance microphone. So keep the OHs low and focused. Anyway, the point of this is that if you set your overheads high, and you compress them (not jus to get the snare out), they'll sound even roomier and you will lose focus.Use the room mics like an effect. Aim for the main drum sound to come from the close mics and overheads, and bring up the ambiance microphones to add flavor.Lately I really like using a front of the kit microphone. Usually a large diaphragm condenser. I keep it maybe 2-3ft away from the kick, and a few inches above the rim of the kick. It takes some experimentation to find the right spot. That microphone alone gives me the most focused drum sound. Add a little bit of the kick and snare and boom, it sounds great. The only issue with that positioning is that it has a very narrow sweet spot in the mix where it meshes well with the overheads. Angling it down a bit might help with that, now that I think of it. Anyway, you might want to try the Rode in that position and see what it sounds like! I know I wrote a lot, but I do think this recording sounds good. These points are just what I thought might make it sound even better. The toms are ace. The drums are balanced. Your drumming is great!twelvepoint wrote:And on a related note, do we have a thread here for general recording/tracking/mixing questions?I think there are multiple threads.