shure sm7b on bass drum

4
I second the RE20. BSW has them for 399$. I don't think of it as a kick drum mic. It's a really excellent dynamic. I've had very good results recording vocals, electric bass (with a fet47), electric guitar (with a condenser, probably a u67), floor tom. I even used it for acoustic once.

My problem with this mic is I only have one of them!

This should be the standard dynamic mic (not a fucking smfucking57).

Well, it is huge. In some situations it's just to big to use...

Hope this helps.

Javier Ortiz

shure sm7b on bass drum

5
SM-7s are great on lots of things, especially voices and guitar amps, but I've never used one on a kick, so I can't offer an opinion on that. However, if youve got up to $900 to spend, youve got a lot of good options --

Sennheiser 421 (just a great mic all around, fabulous on kick drum)
AKG D112 (sorta standard -- big snap, bouncing basketball-sound kick)
AKG D12 (they dont make em anymore, but theyre great for that softer, old-school kick sound; lotsa thump)
Shure Beta 52 (lotsa snap, and also lotsa super low end)
Audix D6 (similar to the B52, pretty cheap, big low end)
Beyer M88 (more of the same, with slightly less pronounced upper mid snap than B52 or D112)

And I'm sure you could get a list at least that long from half the people on here, with different mics than the ones I named. Personally, cost-benefit wise, I like the Beta 52; it's also really good on bass amps. Of course, many will disagree with that, the same way that, while I love RE-20s for some voices and guitar and bass amps, Ive always found them to be kinda flat-sounding on kick drum. Could be the lack of proximity effect. Opinions, etc.
"You get a kink in your neck looking up at people or down at people. But when you look straight across, there's no kinks."
--Mike Watt

shure sm7b on bass drum

6
i've been using an akg d3600 on kick of late in preference to my d112. (endofanera, i am so glad someone else has noticed the d112 basketball thing.) i really like the d3600 because it doesn't seem to have that low-mid peak like the d112, and yet has plenty of low-end. they tend to be quite hard to find, possibly because of their versatility (see: http://www.electrical.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=6456 .)

cheers
Toby Baldwin
Soul Ranch Leichhardt

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