Great video but I think many would disagree about overheads only being for cymbals
@ChristopherHero2 жыл бұрын
Agreed.
@Boleskinebeatz Жыл бұрын
This…
@postman9699 Жыл бұрын
I totally disagree with what is said about overheads. I have several go to techniques I like depending on the kit configuration.. And that is 40+ years of experience speaking.
@robertbobotkac7914 Жыл бұрын
I never get great snare sound without great overheads… maybe he is just trigger replace everything…
@kashphlinktu Жыл бұрын
Probably a genre/style thing. I put overheads down low and in the center of the kit so they get big Tom sounds and also pick up the tap on the kick drum. But, I’m also an amateur so
@kaiulrich61852 жыл бұрын
About the overheads….I think, no matter where you place them you should still maintain the „same distance from the snare“ rule. The snare will be in it anyway and you don‘t wanna destroy its center image.
@michaelkeene59502 жыл бұрын
Close mics solo’d don’t always sound particularly natural because you don’t listen to drums with your ear 3 inches from the head. So getting your overheads in phase with your snare is without question indispensable. The snare is going to be in the overheads and it’s what is going to blend with the close mics to give your snare a more natural sound.
@mikosoft Жыл бұрын
I usually do this for live. 99% of the time my overheads end up in different heights and look weird but the snare is always centered and without phase issues. I gladly sacrifice the looks fort the sound.
@snapascrew Жыл бұрын
I prefer to have each overhead the same distance away from their perspective crash cymbals, and then I apply a few samples of delay to the close overhead to put it in time with the further overhead (snare as reference). Of course just going equidistant from the snare with the mics and turning up the one that’s further away from its crash is (almost) the same thing just done in a different way. But if you’re going equidistant with the overhead mics (on most kits) and not making a level compensation you’re just cock blocking the stage left crash cymbal. Of course I’m generalizing here and every kit is different. Lucky for me my drummer’s kit is symmetrical thanks to a double kick so I get equidistant from the snares and the cymbals! Easy mode!
@adamdraper5522 Жыл бұрын
all engineers should own a drum dial for drummers who aren't great at tuning before recording
@MitchellSpille Жыл бұрын
yes, or a tune bot @@adamdraper5522
@agmsmith40792 жыл бұрын
One other comment I would make, moving the mic and inch or two is the absolute BEST EQ you can use. 😉. When I was an assistant I remember Al Schmitt looking at me as we were recording horns and saying “hey, do you want to see me EQ this Sax?” And then he moves the mic a couple inches up from the bell towards the mouthpiece. And then he says “see, I just changed the EQ on it!” Lol. Comical, but he was right. Before you reach for an EQ, always try moving the mic around.
@dodo135002 жыл бұрын
Awesome!
@JAEBERT18 ай бұрын
You r so blessed to work for Al !!!tell us more….
@joshuahhodges253216 күн бұрын
Here's what I did on my first multitrack drum session, and I stand by it. 1. kick drum in the hole 2. kick drum e609 3. snare top to rim, 45 angle 4. snare bottom point blank 5. hi tom top to rim, 45 angle 6. hi tom bottom point blank 7-10 lo/flor tom top/bottom blank/45 11 hi hat, 90 angle down to edge 12/13/14 crash/ride/aux point blank under bell 15/16 shotgun stereo pair, 10 feet high, 9:00/3:00 aimed at kick 17 overhead talkback lav, over drumer's head, heavy compression recorded to tape 18/19/20 SM57 glyn jons derivative, 6 feet from and aimed at snare: 18, near floor, 7:00 19, near ceiling, 11:00 20, point blank to aux cymbal edge, 3:00 21/22/23/24: SM58, 4'6" high, four corners aimed at drummer
@Zardox-The-Heretic-Slayer2 жыл бұрын
the last point about the consistent energy - I've run into that before, there was one guy that kept tailing off so much that I tore into him to piss him off so he was constantly pumped up with adrenaline (only a good idea if the drummer can't beat you up in a fight)
@12ealDealOfficial2 жыл бұрын
If you're on a budget, this is what you do: have the drummer hit the cymbals lightly while bashing the hell out of the drums. Self-mixing is what I learned back when I took lessons with Sonny Emory.
@liamfitzdrums2 жыл бұрын
That's pretty much how Bonzo recorded his drums. He also tuned them jazz style so the skins were good and tight. This gave the kit a huge sound and helped with cutting through the mix.
@MoreMeRecording Жыл бұрын
Worked for Bonham! and one of my mentors recorded him back in the day! He said JB had the perfect touch when it came to his cymbals
@bernardoantelo4763 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. You don't play on studio the same way you play live, it really helps a lot.
@ytscksdabig1 Жыл бұрын
@@bernardoantelo4763 I completely disagree. The best drummers play the same in both. Playing like a jackass live just makes it hard to mix, just like it would in the studio.
@ytscksdabig1 Жыл бұрын
All drummers should be self mixing anyway.
@floridapunkarchivist2 жыл бұрын
You may not need to mic the bottom of the toms but if you know what you're doing and mics are good in some cases it can absolutely make the difference between using a sample or not
@michaelkeene59502 жыл бұрын
100% accurate
@bernardoantelo4763 Жыл бұрын
Another great tip that really helps is being careful not to place the hihats too low or too close to the snare. Placing the hihats kinda' high really helps preventing them from sounding too much on the other mics.
@jeffrockit Жыл бұрын
The hats should b e placed by the drummer in the position that he is comfortable playing. The engineer does not get to decide where the drummer's drums are placed. Do you tell a guitar player how to hold the pick? Do you tell a keyboard player how to sit while playing?
@bernardoantelo4763 Жыл бұрын
@@jeffrockit I'm no engineer. I'm a drummer. And in order to sound good in the studio I learned to place the hihats higher. If you don't want to take this advice it's fine, but if you do, I bet your engineer will appreciate it very much.
@JiihaaS Жыл бұрын
As a drummer and an engineer I agree with both of you.
@jspiszak11 ай бұрын
@@jeffrockit well if you want your snare to sound like shit this is a 100% go to method. and when the drummer cant hit hard enough then its a literal hell to get something out of it. if i can improve a recording with my knowledge that i have collected over the years and move the hihat, god even cymbals higher so i dont get a shitty recording, then yes i am totally doing it.
@fredfox38512 жыл бұрын
The drummer, the drums, the room and the engineer are where the money is. Expensive mics, preamps, compressors, etc. (that we all lust after)...not so much. Agreed with all the advice, especially not trying to get a modern, over all, drum sound from the overhead position. One stereo pair in front or behind the drummer is better for that.
@FireFrankMusic Жыл бұрын
Best snare sound comes from the overheads, this is the real snare sound, individual snare mics add attack, definition etc but without overheads the main thing is missing.
@ytscksdabig1 Жыл бұрын
Wow absolutely not. Top + Bottom snare mics are going to be "the" snare sound you're looking for. Overheads SHOULD be used as an overall image of the kit with the close mics pushing the transients, sure, but, yeah no. If you're not using a bottom snare mic, that's why you're saying this.
@igooog10 ай бұрын
kek
@gustavosandessp3 ай бұрын
Hard to say both opinions are right guys. We are talking about music! Best engineering should be able to use science as art, right feeling, adapt to diferent musical textures. All a question of proximity, size, space, presence, weight, phase relations and artistique choice, Thats makes things nice in the business!@@ytscksdabig1
@CraigFlowersMusic Жыл бұрын
I agree with everything except two things here. First of all, a classic mic setup will work and does work, and a blanket statement like "Don't do anything except exactly THIS with your overheads," is wrong on its face. Secondly, some drummers like myself, hit the snare inconsistently on purpose. I'll have a section where I want to hit the rim for a few bars, or I'll accent every fourth 3 beat, or whatever. It's called nuance, and people are WAY too used to samples and unrealistic consistency of hits. I use ALL real sounds, and I play with dynamics and nuance, and furthermore I have fourteen mics on my drums. 3 on the kick. Because sometimes I need whoosh, sometimes I need splat, sometimes I need thud, you name it. Similarly I have stereo room dynamic mics, a mono room large condenser, and a mono hallway dynamic mic. Same reason. Sometimes the stereo room mics are too splashy, so I take them out. Sometimes the condenser room mic is too clicky, so I lower it. Sometimes, theoretically, the hallway mic will be too washy (although I have yet to experience this and lower them, although some people will indeed say my hats have a bit too much wetness). So I guess my whole problem with this, is exactly the same as what I infer to be your problem with Beato's assertions: they do not always apply even though they're being stated as universal. I agree with you not Beato, that toms don't need a reso mic. But I also agree with Beato that . . . why not?! You see? It's all subjective, and you don't seem to acknowledge that from what I can tell. I think blanket statements, as I said before, are (ironically) ALWAYS wrong on their face.
@joshjoyce7537 Жыл бұрын
Strongly disagree about the close overhead mic-ing. Great tips otherwise, but personally, even with modern rock and pop punk (both of which I work with regularly as a full time studio owner) I prefer the higher up, full drum capture, overhead sound much better than the close sound. Sometimes you gotta pull ALOT of low mids out of it, but when its right it sounds incredible along side a great stereo pair of room mics. Of course, in modern music the Snare and Kick (and often the snare and kick samples) are gonna be king and I would never argue otherwise, but the higher overheads give you that window into who the drummer is as a player and I love that most of the time.
@silkroad1201 Жыл бұрын
One mic inside the kick isn't a great tip either. Unless you want it to sound more like a metronome than a kick drum
@J_Stockhausen Жыл бұрын
@@silkroad1201100% gente dependent
@MakesiJosephRiddimRider8 ай бұрын
I think he's right, most drums are not in great rooms and the further away the mics are from the drums the more of the room you hear...
@sevendeep Жыл бұрын
funny enough at :30 those Peavy Radial Pro drums in the pic were overengineered self tensioned instruments, expensive as hell because they were cut out of super thin solid single blocks of maple, never sold well because they were ugly, and were discontinued probably around 2001. They were also one of the most awesome sounding attacky drums I've ever heard when tuned up and put in a half decent room.
@thetonymoore69775 ай бұрын
Yeah! I’m a small time session drummer and I have dozens of kits including a peavey radial pro 1000 kit, and it’s actually one of the absolute best sounding kits you could use. The other advise here is also so disagreeable, I feel like I’m watching advice given by a millennial who’s only tried all the wrong ways of doing something and never the pro ways, and giving us recommendations based on participation awards.
@ethanwilt98964 ай бұрын
I want a Peavy kit!!!!!!
@analogkid45572 жыл бұрын
Good tips. I found this all out by doing it for decades. But, of course, I was poor and had junk drum sets and junk mics. Once I got better equipment, it was obvious I was doing something wrong. The sound wasn't bad, but I wasn't getting the sound I wanted. After experimenting I finally got it.
@Cygnus-X113 күн бұрын
Great video. I really appreciate the work put into this. You have high quality perspectives on the drum recording process, some of which I plan to incorporate myself, especially the idea behind tracking cymbals as a focus for the overheads. Your performance opinions are well-taken, but I personally both provide and look for dynamic performances in drummers. I do at least warn my engineers to expect some fade work, when/where necessary, upon mixing because I am a human drummer who will always play harder or softer as a reaction to the emotions in my bandmates' performances. I feel sorry for drummers who's performances suffer from the pressure to sound like drum machines. There's nothing wrong with striving for consistency as long as it's not at the expense of providing an authentic performance. Thanks again for your post.
@chriszichriszable Жыл бұрын
As a drummer and engineer I want to add: Keep snare drum heads tight during a song performance and use screw locks.. I made this mistake myself a lot. You start playing a song that is aggressive on the snare, the start of the song you have a crispy snare, in the end you have a muddy snare. There are different systems ranging from nylon screws to real locking mechanisms that hold the square screw in place against the rim. Mind the details!
@ytscksdabig1 Жыл бұрын
Just get better equipment if your snare doesn't last a song..
@hotmilkstudio572111 ай бұрын
@@ytscksdabig1No, it has nothing to do with the price of the snare. This only happens when the drummer hits hard: the lugs slip little by little and the tuning changes. I personally use the nylon locks on the snares at my studio, but only for hard-hitting tunes.
@antcall67792 жыл бұрын
I love DW drums because their fast sizes and shells have such a huge tuning range! I switched from remo to evans heads for same reason huge tuning rang from retro dead to wide open. Great as always!
@GabrielXDrums2 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@adee25692 жыл бұрын
Good tips. One thing to note about using the Glyn Johns or recorderman techniques that most people don't understand....If your room is bad, these micing techniques only makes it worse.
@BradsGonnaPlay2 жыл бұрын
GJ is a phenomenal setup IF AND ONLY IF you’re in great rooms with good drummers. My bands have used it a few times now and, being the drummer, it’s a BRUTALLY honest record of your playing.
@KinProductions Жыл бұрын
I've been tracking drums for- God, who knows at this point. Everything I've done was self-taught and to this day I'm still looking for ways to get better. On the point of energy consistency - This is absolutely crucial. It changes *everything*, especially if your drummer is fixing parts and then proceeds to "fix" the part by accidentally hitting half as hard. I respect every point you make and can't tell these to people enough.
@GalliumEnergy Жыл бұрын
Wow cool to see you here, Kin. I love your covers!
@FrightboxRecording2 жыл бұрын
This video is so spot on! I can't stand when people send me tracks using "traditional" overhead placement for cymbals...with a screaming loud hi-hat and quiet crash cymbals 😂
@AudioReplica20232 жыл бұрын
Thats more the drummer than the mic placement. Anybody can tell you the difference between a stage drummer vs a session drummer.
@FrightboxRecording2 жыл бұрын
@@AudioReplica2023 Even with a great drummer, it can be an issue. Especially with busy/technical heavy music where you need maximum clarity.
@AudioReplica20232 жыл бұрын
@@FrightboxRecording Id worked with both , Session and Stage drummers in the past and to my experience session drummers take more consideration and knows how to hit a crash properly when in the studio which it makes the process more enjoyable than a headache. Theres a good reason why those Pro session drummers are constantly getting work from different artists. Thats no just luck you know.
@AudioReplica20232 жыл бұрын
@@FrightboxRecording This video would help you understand what im saying. Simon Phillips drum lesson: recording tips.
@michaelkeene59502 жыл бұрын
It’s the oldest joke in engineering that you can put practically any mic on hats because it’s going to be so low in your drum mix if you even use it at all that it really doesn’t matter if you put a 57 on hats. For good measure I still always use a 451 if there’s some closed hi hat shnazzyness that needs to be boosted here or there, but hats are the loudest cymbals on the kit. If I was going to cut a mic from my normal miking set up, hi hat would be the first mic I’d cut and it usually doesn’t have much to do with overhead placement.
@iengineer_2477 ай бұрын
Thanks for this tip!!!!!! I been finding myself with mainly 6 mics on kit when I record live bands in shows and in studio. Kick Snare Toms Overheads. Sometimes maybe an outside kick mic lol sometimes a hi hat mic and maybe bottom snare but I love 6 mics really. When the drummer tune their drums and know how to balance themselves with playing dynamic wise it makes the recording and mixing more detailed and smooth!!!
@CameronFleury Жыл бұрын
As a session drummer, these are all very great touch points. You rule Jordan! 🤘🙏
@nigelproctor2 жыл бұрын
I had a successful experiment a while back where I did use the WHOLE kit audio from the overhead mics, but I dropped the high end EQ on the individual tom and snare mics. Sounded very cohesive, but not as much attack.
@mikemast411 Жыл бұрын
0:32 You dissing on the Peavey Radial Pros?!?! THE PEAVEY RADIAL PROS?!?!
@luisp.alonso7 ай бұрын
Great video! Pragmatic and direct. I’ve recorded drums for about 8 years now and I totally came up with the same conclusions
@theopinson38512 жыл бұрын
Let’s see what dumb mistakes I made tracking drums on the last song: 1) forgot to turn on phantom power (no overheads!) 2) Snare mic was unclipped and sitting o top of drum rack (basically just recorded hihat) 3)floor tom mic was unplugged 4) at one point one of my Overheads wasn’t even plugged in to the interface. Turned out I was recording my guitar’s pickups the whole time. 😂 This was for a 10 minute song that I was trying to record in a single take. 😭
@callbackdons Жыл бұрын
"I traced the cord back to the wall. No wonder, it was never plugged in at all!"
@glenhagerman31142 жыл бұрын
Dude your the man. You’re one of the few people that I will actually subscribe to. Thank you for personifying keep it simple stupid. You’re awesome
@xytrouble07 Жыл бұрын
I barely found your channel and I know you're mostly talking about studio stuff, but everything you say on your videos can also be applied to live sound. I usually tune drums when different bands comes in and change drum heads from the house kit all the time. (once a week) I sometimes even change the snare if need be AND EVEN USE underheads sometimes because I don't want to capture any of the shells I just want the cymbals to be as isolated as possible. I also saw one of your videos about not removing low mids and 100% agreeee!!! Especially in a live sound environment when the bass player isnt playing on the low E or B(5 string) which results in subs disappearing fairly quickly but keeping the low mids really really help maintain a full mix even without the subs. GREAT STUFF!!
@thealtlife8984 Жыл бұрын
I agree with everything except the over heads! For a long time I only had two inputs. Kick and over head. U can really get a great sound from one nice mic. Now I’m all close miced, with a matched pair of small diaphragm spot mics right above the two cymbals on the left, and two on the right, with one large diaphragm overhead high up to capture the whole kit. Phase align the OH if u want it to be tighter or leave it hang.
@ytscksdabig1 Жыл бұрын
You can do a lot with just three mics, check out the Glyn Johns technique.
@gabritravassos9 ай бұрын
Super super straight and honest guy. rare to see that on internet. thanks
@theopinson38512 жыл бұрын
“It’s going to be impossible to get a good tone!” -sample replacer go brrrrrr
@richarddavis5542 Жыл бұрын
I agree with the technical points in the video, especially the point of not over complicating things with too many mics. I'm not discounting the "old school" (Glynn Johns) miking method/style, if the artist prefers that over the modern metal/ rock sound. Just look at the number of streams from classic Led Zeppelin compared to modern music. The John Bonham sound is still very desirable.
@gatherstudio52197 ай бұрын
It's funny that this video popped up and today I got one of the best sounding drum takes ever ! Using two kicks in and out one snare and two overhead large condensers both 34 in away from center of snare one above and one behind right shoulder . Small room , Amazing sounding drums ( pearl masters , mahogany ) well tuned ! I believe the key was well placed mics
@corknakovastein2 жыл бұрын
This is our Drummer, I have to sample most of his play throughs or to save time I have to re-drum the track myself......Hopefully he never sees this
@callbackdons Жыл бұрын
"to save time I have to re-drum the track myself" lol that's awesome, and your drummer never detects this? You must really go out of your way to try to play just what he was trying to ..unless he's ultra wishy washy and never plays it the same way twice anyway, and wouldn't be in a good position to know. I'm intrigued by this comment though!
@corknakovastein Жыл бұрын
@@callbackdons He never plays it the same, I keep his essence the same while keeping everything clean and in time. I tell him I just sample the fills snare and kick to make sure everything is in time.
@llRoBoBinHoll3 ай бұрын
Small drums tuned in their lower range sound good on close mics, but sound boxy from a greater distance, such as in the overheads. So it makes sense that you favour overheads that don’t capture the drums as much. But, when you have larger drums tuned with relatively tighter heads, they will sound much better in the room and in the overheads. Both totally valid approaches in my opinion.
@senseiofsong2 жыл бұрын
Good video. Good perspective. My drum kit is EZ Drummer VST. Sounds great by default, but split them out individually in the mixer into Cubase, and saved a template that already has the settings I want per drum. Also, drop those hihat sounds out. For me the virtual overhead and room gets enough of the hihat.
@michaelkeene59502 жыл бұрын
The running theme in the comments that we can all seem to agree on is that close miking hi hats is the most dispensable mic if you need to cut a mic. Hats are the loudest cymbals on the kit. They’re going to pick up in the overheads just fine. I’ve actually invested in 2 sets of 13” hats because they’re not as loud and I got Paiste signatures and Sabian AAFusion hats. So they both sound great. Just noticeably lower in volume, making them easier to deal with in a drum mix.
@area51audio6 ай бұрын
Some of the nicest recorded drum sounds I've got have been in a small room. No room treatment except the kit is at a 45, and theres multiple pieces of gear like hammond organ, multiple amps..so there are odd angles everywhere. One mic just inside the port, 2 snare mics and two cheap lg diapragm tube condensers spaced equally at 45s from center of the kit..but low and only a few feet away. Great stereo imaging. I start with room mics first and add just enough of the kick and snare to get the sound and imaging where i want it. Cheap an dirty can be awesome.
@sleepisbutadream2 жыл бұрын
Unless you mean specifically for specific music styles I don’t agree on the big drum sizes thing, I love recording 24/26 inch kicks, they sound massive, I assume you mean more get the appropriate sized kit for the sound you’re going for. QOTSA used 28 inch kicks on their first album and on their third, it’s more about how you mic it and getting the sound you’re after accurately rather than the drums being too big, unless you’re playing jazz or death metal you can definitely use a 24 /26 for rock/heavy rock. Nothing wrong with a big kit for the right style of music. Anywho great content I’ve learnt a few tricks recently just wanted to point that out 👊🏻🤘🏻
@weeschwee2 жыл бұрын
Yes, this video and his channel are pretty much focused on metal or hardcore rock exclusively. His comments on overhead position are more metal specific as well. Although, I've seen other metal productions with the overheads pretty high above the kit. I think it really depends on the sound you are looking for.
@sleepisbutadream2 жыл бұрын
@@weeschwee yeah I mean that’s fair, same with Glenn fricker’s channel, still good to watch it all, always stuff to be learnt regardless. 👊🏻🤘🏻
@weeschwee2 жыл бұрын
@@sleepisbutadream I totally agree. There's lots of good information shared. And even if you disagree with something, you can at least understand the thought behind it and what you might do differently.
@indivisibleman Жыл бұрын
Man, you are doing good work here. Whether you're confirming something I've already learned thru trial & error or introducing something that I always wondered about, it's ALL good information. You're saving people plenty of pain if they would just apply your guidance. Thank you.
@lodougherty2 жыл бұрын
Placing Overheads at the edge of the cymbals, wouldn't that create some wash/phasey sounds? Just curious. I've always placed mine closer to the cymbal but more over the middle to avoid that windy washy sound.
@michaelkeene59502 жыл бұрын
No. If you mic too close to the center or too close in proximity, you’ll get weird low end build ups that you have to do eq surgery to remove. Having a bit of distance from the cymbals and having the mics aimed maybe about 3-4 inches from the edge of the cymbals will give you the best result. Ride is an exception. It’s best to point it toward the bell, but at an angle so that you’re not getting low end build up and weird overtones and also getting the distance right for a natural a clear and clean sound.
@michaelkeene59502 жыл бұрын
@dfasht you can start with the easiest solution. Tight your wing nuts and get felts that when you screw on your wing nuts, you can tighten them to however much tightness gives you the amount of cymbal movement when you hit it. Also though, you won’t get phase issues in your cymbals from normal amounts of movement. It’s not like they’re moving 5 or 6 inches closer and further from your OH’s. Crashes might move about an inch and a half when struck and then residual movement is like millimeters. The only way you’d get phasing issues is if you had your overheads way too close to the cymbals.
@themistero Жыл бұрын
We use 3 cheap mics on crappy drums. One inside the kick, one over the snare, one over head. The heads are old and we never tune them. We run all 3 mics into a mixer and then record the drums as one track. It's not fancy but that's how God likes rock and roll.
@steverok678 ай бұрын
Good stuff. Only objection is saying that trying to capture the whole kit in the overheads will almost always sound bad. I like the recorder-man method for a vibey sound, although the floor tom does always seem to need its own mic. Great channel. Enjoy it.
@robertharker11 ай бұрын
If you are new to recording and have some time to experiment with a patent musician try putting a pair of high isolation headphones and use a mic on a boom pole. Walk around the kit and stick the mic in different places and listen to what the mic is picking up as you move it around. Move the mic around and listen to how the sound changes. How does moving the location of the mic change the snare sound? Have the drummer play just a single drum you are listening to then have them play the entire kit. Listen to what other drums/instruments the mic is picking up. I have read several notable engineers from the 50's and 60's talk about how they would walk around the studio while musicians were setting up and dialing in the sound. They would stand in different places listening to how things sounded.
@PeterFin Жыл бұрын
Very much agree with this, although drummer´s dynamics should be in line with the music. Obviously he is talking from rock and metal point of view but recording jazz for example is different. However, energy in drumming when tracking is more than physical - it´s actually more psychological and mental process. Relaxing and focusing gives best results. However - in any case - drummer should do his or her homework before session.
@alanpassmore25747 ай бұрын
I've always preferred coincident pair as overheads. Get the snare in the centre and gives me a true stereo image with no phase problems. But each to their own.
@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164 Жыл бұрын
Just put triggers on everything and mix it any damn way you want! I was in on a recording session, the button pusher and pot pusher wanted to rig my kit. So it took a few hours until they were happy with the sound they were getting. I get into the chair and they had retuned my kit, arraigned everything (drum angles, cymbal height, etc.) to where the kit was unplayable the way they set it up, but insisted I play it that way because of the mic setup to avoid sympathetic overtones. Pretty hard to play on a Ride cymbal and Hi Hats when they're farther than I could reach and attack. I think some of you guys are FoS, you just love your damn gadgets too much.
@SmokeBreakStudios2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the great video! Looking forward to lowering my overheads and testing the result.
@tacomamusic Жыл бұрын
Not wrong here however, DIY punk hardcore recordings many I have made myself for local bands 10 plus years sometimes have absolute trash drums... Luckily the music source makes it work for those drums because they lack the characteristics of a well tuned and well made drum set. It really is play it by ear for some of these things. Butttt.... you are absolutely correct in the general sense for how it should be done. Meow
@vincesavarino20452 жыл бұрын
How do you handle phase when recording cymbals vs a more standard overhead placement? Are the mics still equidistant from the snare or do you time align them afterwards? Or are they basically high-passed enough where it doesn’t matter?
@ytscksdabig1 Жыл бұрын
X/Y pair, and contrary to whatever this dude has seen before, they're always supposed to be pointed at the cymbals. Time aligning overheads is something you're supposed to go over in Music Engineering class and then never use, ever again. The previous 1,000,000 platinum records produced would beg to differ with you about drum sounds require 'time aligned overheads'.
@dalekay9ine6 ай бұрын
I've always took pride in my ability to tune drums. Came from years of practice and using my ears. If your drums don't sound good to begin with, no amount of money in microphones will make a bad drum sound good.
@ronnyjohnston6039 Жыл бұрын
"You have to have new heads on..." In my experience sure you want new heads, but play on them first. They need a little time to settle and stretch so dont throw em on the day before or of the session.
@keithrichards4296 Жыл бұрын
Agreed 100%! Could I add a thing?? Please, don't clip your A/D inputs!! I see so many people with that 'analog thinking' to record 'hot' and totally destroying the drums sound. Another point: don't föck your transients by overcompressing drums in the recording!! Unless it's a aesthetic/concept thing, of course!
@mlhbrx963 ай бұрын
The Glyn Johns method is a fantastic method. You sound like you're much more into dry modern mic'ing techniques, which is fine. However, that doesn't mean the Zeppelin drum sound doesn't work. Also, you should have talked about phasing. THAT is a much more common issue than overhead placement.
@johnnyt55142 жыл бұрын
I honestly don’t get why it is dumb to get a clean stereo image from the overheads or a pair of room mikes and use this as a basis to build the drum sound. If a cymbal or the ride bell needs to be supported, put a mike on it. Putting the Overhead faders up and getting a washy phasey wired image cymbal sound makes it really hard to get something out of it, because samples won’t help here. If you have too much mikes, just mute them. I agree with the purpose. They shouldn’t be placed randomly hoping the best. Telling the drummer to focus on a consistent snare sound could work with great drummers that would do that anyway, but might destroy the performance of a not so experienced drummer that starts thinking instead of just playing. This is something that is easy to repair with samples, especially those created during sound check for the running session. I agree 100% that a good kit and good tuning are things that are extremely valuable.
@chrisharrison809 Жыл бұрын
Yo… trick I learned. Mix both sides of the Tom and flip the phase of the bottom one. It’s dope
@lankududniteshift Жыл бұрын
Dear Mr Jordon....Do have a video of you showing the best way to mic up the cymbals/ride/hi hats? I have just discovered your channel & have subscribed yr channel.
@erikondrums Жыл бұрын
I got two kits setup at all time in a Mike Portnoy-style(those who remembers the monster kits knows), with one kit with all close mics, 3 mics on the snare, sub kick, the whole nine yards. That’s for the modern rock, pop and metal. Then I got a smaller kit with just mics in kick, snare and two Ribbon mics over heads in a Recorderman configuration. Sometimes I record modern stuff, sometimes it’s more old school. So depending on the situation, it’s all good.
@XenoTravis4 ай бұрын
Gate the snare with a trigger module and use compression on it. Or just use a snare sample. Some do a blend of both a sample and the raw sound. More so on the bass drum. Guys like hannes grossmann will record his bass and blend it with a sample.
Just signed up for the workshop. Looking forward to the mic positioning strategies.
@vieiradrumss18 күн бұрын
Excellent tips!
@dnthrx6 ай бұрын
Do you like to place just one overhead for the ride, or two to get the ride edge, and the bell?
@fredericmailloux6167 Жыл бұрын
I try to do a Glyn Jons + kick/snare/room first. If i need more:: kick in, snare top (sometimes bottom), HH, toms, OH in wide stereo + room. Drum is not snare + kick + hats + ride + toms. It's a whole instrument.
@reddoo8936 Жыл бұрын
Depending upon the snare sound you're after, you might not even need a bottom snare mic. I've gotten some great snare sounds from just the top mic, with the room mics and overheads making up more of the high end. If you want a snappy snare, then put a mic on the bottom. But snares can also sound incredible without one.
@hepphepps8356 Жыл бұрын
Snare bottom is only very rarely needed, IF you place the overheads in a good place and not completely ass backwards as in this con-video.
@ytscksdabig1 Жыл бұрын
You should always have a snare bottom mic if inputs allow for it.
@ytscksdabig1 Жыл бұрын
@@hepphepps8356 Wrong. A snare and bass both require at least two mics. You can get away with one, sure, but two always make it sound better. A kick in and a kick out will ALWAYS sound better than just one of the two. A kick out won't have that thwack attack, a kick in won't have the body and boom. It's the same with the snare. The top gives you the note and the overall tone of the drum, the bottom gives you the actual snare sound and snap. Blended together, you'll never want to use just a top mic again...
@twilightbiscuit Жыл бұрын
3:40 KISS...keep it simple stupid, simple is mostly the best way
@MitchellSpille Жыл бұрын
Lots of good stuff here. The overheads being cymbal mics vs overall mics is very subejctive. I actually prefer the overheads not close to the cymbals so I get the whole kit, and most other engineers I know usually prefer that too (looks like a lot of people in the comments agree on that too). It does depend on the genre and mics you're using. If you're running those Audix adx-51s, those are pre eq-ed to be cymbal mics, so those are going to suck as whole kit mics. But if you're using soyuz 013s, sm81s, earthwork sr15s, and many other industry standard overhead mics, they'll work as cymbal mics or whole kit mics.
@thesvtguy Жыл бұрын
WHY DOES HE HAVE HIS MONITORS ON THEIR SIDES maybe it’s just a background or something but in almost any case this will result in horrible inaccurate mixes that are just horrible. The frequency response will be way off and the equilateral triangle with your ears right between the two speakers will be completely thrown off.
@kyronnewbury11 ай бұрын
The "bad" picture is of one of the best sounding drum kits ever made lol Peavey Radials lol
@rothloaf19802 ай бұрын
I used to record senior recitals of jazz students at NTU. After being spoiled by great drummers with great kits, I scoff at many mic setups because they're geared toward *fixing* a drummer's deficiencies, or a kit that is in bad shape... Hassle.
@consumer3652 жыл бұрын
So we made a kick that's double length, it's sounds pretty amazing in the room. I have some doubts now but it's hard to imagine it sounding bad.
@jonathankessler98532 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video and a lot of great information but it’s also very genre specific.. I record a lot of jazz and folk-ish kind of music and the overheads DEFINE the kit sound for those genres. No Tom mics, just 2 overheads, kick and snare. My big thing is I just disagree on your philosophy for overheads outside of your genres and I’d hope it doesn’t mislead someone new who’s looking to record jazz drums or something more intimate and airy
@hardcoremusicstudio2 жыл бұрын
Fair enough, I definitely am only focusing on rock, punk, metal etc. on my channel!
@jonathankessler98532 жыл бұрын
@@hardcoremusicstudio there’s some great stuff here though! I’ve definitely taken a thing or two from your channel despite working in different styles. I didn’t mean to sound brash if I did just wary of the unsuspecting beginner
@SkiRedMtn8 ай бұрын
Drummer here. Spend $100 bucks or so on a Drum Dial. So worth it. Zero guesswork, and you can tune by the tiniest increments which are (for most people) impossible to hear.
@ernestbuckley8671 Жыл бұрын
Disagree about the OHs… I usually get most of my sound from the OHs, then I tweak the kick and snare tracks for additional clarity. And nothing makes up for a really good player. Some players are so good, they’ll nail tracks in one take. No engineer tricks can make up for great players.
@panplayer6 ай бұрын
Like determining what is good and bad in performance, determining what is good and bad in the recording process is… subjective. Various of what you’ve proposed will work for some, but not all. That being said, there is no ‘best way’ to record. There are different ways. And that is what makes recording an art.
@stevedoesnt Жыл бұрын
Putting a kick mic on the bottom of floor toms is one of the greatest moves I ever started making when micing drums. I like big heavy drums though.
@kelvinsmyth8365 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree with OH just on cymbals
@Folk66111 ай бұрын
Good advice all around if you want to be successful. Somewhat disagree that there in modern music a 3 mic set up won’t work. Maybe this is why modern music often doesn’t work. Because people are afraid to take risks and do something new. To stick with an “odd”sound for fear of “standing out.” You’re right, you need to know the fundamentals, but In reality, you can use a mono drum loop over top of a bombastic 3 mic set up, with a reverb panned to one side and a bit of slap delay on the snare and then you’ve got a “modern” drum sound. As long as there is a good tune you’re in business. Obviously, if the band you’re working with doesn’t want to experiment, then do what they want and churn out the chum for the masses to enjoy so you can clean up and go home.
@NEEDSHES8 ай бұрын
Great video! Btw that picture of Rick Beato, he's actually showing a Glyn Johns technique. But I would not agree with "don't try to capture drum sound with overheads" sorry it's just wrong whatever genre you recording, close mics are close mics, overheads for the image, you can't mess with it 🤷♂️ sorry
@DogBoots77 Жыл бұрын
Strongly disagree with the overheads just being for cymbals. The overheads are where I get the nice snare sound from. A snare close mic never sound great on its own - for me it’s just there to add power and body, while the niceness comes from the overheads and possibly the room mics.
@Doogsay3 ай бұрын
something i was told about recently (as a complete beginner) is that the overheads should be equidistant from the snare. As in, measured with a tape measure. Is that just assumed or is there a reason u didnt mention it?
@kellydonnelly78285 ай бұрын
5 piece kit 13 mics. O.HS are a big part to create the imaging naturally of the kit. I don't need cymbal mics. They get picked up by the O.Hs n the room mics. Also they don'tsound like cymbals when close mic'd. They need distance. I will agree though about just enough mics, proper placement n a decent drum kit.
@iau10 ай бұрын
I'll be the one to agree with the overheads thing. If you go for getting the full drum in the overheads, there's usually not much left to control cymbals in the mix. You end up depending way too much on the drummer's performance and it limits your options. If you have the time, knowledge and perfect drummer, by all means. If you'd rather be on the safer side, focus your OH on getting great sounding cymbals.
@curly_ Жыл бұрын
Yepp realy good one , especialy the Cymbals
@anthonyjm56055 ай бұрын
Would it be worth to sacrifice a room mic to use for the bottom snare mic? Or do you think it’s more important to have a room than a bottom snare?
@grimdrum23962 жыл бұрын
Very good video and very good advice! Thank you!
@danmenez Жыл бұрын
This is PURE GOLD TOO!
@joshuasy107 ай бұрын
You can't polish a turd, but you can certainly roll it in glitter, you can easily put a midi trigger on a recording track and link it to a better sounding drum, and then blend the 2. This is a game changer for recording crap sounding drums, obviously it's only applicable if u have a separate mic for the given drum.
@hardcoremusicstudio2 жыл бұрын
☛ I’m hosting a LIVE virtual workshop on How to Track Drums for Rock & Metal on Thursday October 20, 2022. Find all the details and register here: hardcoremusicstudio.com/drumworkshop/
@agmsmith40792 жыл бұрын
I have to disagree with the multi mic comment. I agree you should know what you are doing and you should know how to use multiple mics but using multiple mics correctly gets the sound without needing to trigger samples IF you know what you are doing and you know how to time align/phase align the mics. If I have time I will come back and post pics and examples.
@toerti95892 жыл бұрын
Great advice! Would you still setup the overhead mics so that they are symetrical to the middle line of the drumkit, so snare and kick are centered and you get a reasonable stereo image, or do you place them to get the same level from every cymbal and don't care about the rest of the kit at all? Thx and kind regards
@hardcoremusicstudio2 жыл бұрын
Only care about the snare being centered in the overheads, not the rest of the kit.
@toerti95892 жыл бұрын
@@hardcoremusicstudio makes sense, thx
@mycreations45275 ай бұрын
I think 2 over heads, a mic on the snare and kick is good enough.. I think over heads are also alright at capturing Toms
@yoyoos2 жыл бұрын
Damn. That was a lot of good points. Ty!!
@artofpretention2 ай бұрын
What are your thoughts on compression do you use it on any of the individual tracks? I know compressing the kit as a whole is probably a bad idea and squishes the Dynamics
@RiotHomeRecording6 ай бұрын
If I could only have one or the other I rather have great overheads capturing the entire kit than close mics on all the individual drums. I could see for metal it’s different due to the samples and drum replacement due to the style.
@jameswallace5967 Жыл бұрын
The first 2 Beatles albums only used 2 mics and the drum sound was very natural.
@jas_bataille2 жыл бұрын
Man... I don't wanna be condescending in any way but a lot of legendary engineers use an XY or ORTF to capture the whole kit with great success. I think my own sound isn't terrible either and I almost always use XY... kzbin.info/www/bejne/sIuaY4Wvd5Kri68 I'm pretty damn proud of this. The room isn't exemplary either, and I'm not *that* good at tracking, although I know I'm a pro.
@jimmiefarmer30222 жыл бұрын
It really depends on the genre. I think XY or ORTF is the best for most things, but when it comes to modern metal what he says is accurate. That's something that should have been mentioned in the video IMHO - context (genre) is important for some of these micing decisions.
@drumsbyjones Жыл бұрын
PRO LEVEL ADVICE right here!!! 👍🥁
@domagojoinky8262 Жыл бұрын
I would mic snare up and down, kick subkick and one in the hole, stereo pair of overheads and a mono room mic.