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Reasonable Mic Selection, Choosing a mic priced to match your gear |
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Tue 23 Aug 2005, 17:18
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 20
Joined: 17-Aug 05
From: Montreal - CA
Member No.: 68,864
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I've been looking at the mic postings and I've seen some names bandied about - Behringer B1, Studio Project B1 and C1, Rode NT-1, and of course Shure SM57 and 58 (which I understand aren't condenser mics, but I'm including them anyway), among others. I also realize that many believe that one mic shouldn't be used for everything. That having been said, I am looking for a mic that does everything, particularly (from quietest to loudest) acoustic guitar, vocals and horns. I will be using an imac g5 with a presonus firebox.
My question is, with my setup, is it worth it to purchase something like a rode given the quality of the preamp, or should I just stick with something cheaper, such as the studio project or even the behringer? I have seen it proposed to get a really good mic and then upgrade the rest of the gear later, and my funds aren't THAT limited. Any advice? Or any other product recommendations?
Thanks
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Sat 27 Aug 2005, 21:53
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 8
Joined: 12-Mar 05
From: Portland - US
Member No.: 62,268
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When buying microphones, consider that your audio can never be better than the mic it comes in through. The useful lifetime of microphone is decades at minimum, in a recording studio, and "a pretty long time" on stage.
Because of this long life and being the limiting factor for acoustic audio capture, I will go out on a limb and say that spending a months pay on a microphone will begin to get you a model that you will want to keep for the rest of your life. If you do decide to sell a high-quality model in 5 years, you will get somewhere between 50-200% of your money back, depending on condition (and the deal you made to get it). A 5 year old computer is worth how much? A 5 year old car is worth what?
There's nothing "wrong" with an SM57/58, but it's at the bottom of the acceptable-quality range, not the top (and a good value, imho). The next step up is a good textbook on microphones, like one by John Eargle.
Summary: spend as much on microphone as on your pre-amp/mixer or recorder. Don't let the microphone be something of an afterthough in the budget.
Cheers.
Karl Keefer Portland Oregon
PS: I have had a few of my microphones since I was 12 years old (25 years!). The little old AKG's and Shure SM-61 still work fine.
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