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Mic Recommendations, Mic Recomendations |
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Fri 23 Apr 2004, 16:21
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Member
Group: Members
Posts: 92
Joined: 05-Feb 04
From: Philadelphia - US
Member No.: 35,039
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I am using the Behringer B-1 $99 US. Phantom Powered Condenser Mic works great. No Complaints... I can't recommend anything else because I haven't used any higher end Mics. When I finally save up some cash... I am looking into purchasing a Blue Microphone. They start at about $500.
This post has been edited by sethjacquay: Fri 23 Apr 2004, 16:25
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Ableton Live 4.1 Reason 3 Mac OS 10.3.8 G5 Dual 1.8 Ghz 2 GB RAM 160 HD EzQuest 120 GB 7200 Firewire HD EzQuest 200 GB 7200 Firewire HD - Pro Audio M-Audio Firewire 410 (driver 1.4.3) Behringer B1 Microphone (2x) Behringer HPS3000 Headphones Yamaha DX-11 going through a MidiMate XP (Midi to USB adapter)
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Sat 24 Apr 2004, 12:46
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 22
Joined: 17-Apr 04
From: Melbourne - AU
Member No.: 41,194
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What is phantom power and is that $100 australian
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Sat 24 Apr 2004, 14:56
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 22
Joined: 17-Apr 04
From: Melbourne - AU
Member No.: 41,194
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lmao y is is to cheap and you got anymore details on it lol and is that australian $ cos HELL YEAH im gettin that and how does it compare to 500 doller ones
This post has been edited by Freestyle Rapper: Sat 24 Apr 2004, 15:04
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Sat 1 May 2004, 03:17
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 16
Joined: 24-Jan 04
From: Portland - US
Member No.: 33,943
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Well, the cheap condensers are, um, cheap. If you don't yet know what phantom power is, then you probably have a lot more research to do before you know what mic will work best for you the majority of the time. And no, $60 condensers don't compare to $500.00 ones (which, by the way, don't compare to a Neumann, et al.), no matter what the 'retail price.'
I'm definitely not one to say that you have to have expensive shit to get a good sound, though. If you want a tried and true mic that you won't be throwing your money away on (i.e.- something that will still be immensely useful even when you *could* spend more) pick up a Shure SM57. It's used for recording more than any other mic, and works on drums, guitars, vocals, etc.
BUT- remember that the mic pre is more important than the mic. If you're going through a Mackie with an SM57; well, you're just never going to get the sound that you would with a Neve, Great River, Focusrite red, Avalon, etc. You can definitely get a good, workable sound; but for that *premium* sound you're gonna pay 50 times more than you want.
To cut all the bullshit- I'd recommend everyone own an SM57. Or two.
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Sat 1 May 2004, 05:06
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Moderator In Chief (MIC)
Group: Editors
Posts: 15,189
Joined: 23-Dec 01
From: Paris - FR
Member No.: 2,758
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a good mic/mic pre balance and a good mic I'm sold to Studio project myself (C1 in the house) Freestyle what will be the use? The evident we can guess? Are you bass, baryton, tenor, contralto? well certainly not contralto… have you use some mics already? If so which one and did they sounded ok on your voice or not? Is it for scene or studio? Do you spit? Panopticon, some cheap condenser would surprise you, really. maybe not the Behringer, but studio projet and SE electronics… mamma mia!
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