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How to Mic an Electric Guitar
With modern music (especially
pop/rock music) production demands are greater than ever.
The average listener expects the recording quality of your
music to be the equivalent of those amazing productions you
often hear on the radio. Since this discussion could take
weeks and weeks and page after page, I've decided to narrow
the focus of this guide to recording the electric guitar.
With any recording, getting the source right is 99% of the
ballgame. This means that a great singer with great tone will
sound good through pretty much any microphone. This means
that a great sounding violinist with a great sounding violin
in a great sounding room will sound this way through any functional
microphone. Granted, some microphones will impart their character
onto the source (for better or worse), but with any operating
microphone a great musician will still sound great.
So with the guitar (and anything else you intend to record),
it's important to get the instrument doing exactly what you
want before you even bother putting a mic in front of it.
You should walk around the room the amp is setup in to hear
exactly what is going on. You might find sweet spots in the
room. You may try actually moving the amp in a few different
places in the room.
In my first recording room (which happened to be very small
and very unideal for recordings), I noticed that moving an
amp just a few inches had a dramatic effect on the low end
coming out of the amplifier. I later learned that this was
quite normal for small rooms with no acoustic treatment. (Just
a side note, if you are planning on doing treatments for your
room, skip the foam stuff. It probably won't help. In many
instances, it will make the problem worse. Try a search for
"bass trap" or visiting www.recordingreview.com). So exeriment
greatly with the amp before you get serious about microphones.
In fact, I recommend that you mess with the tone quite a bit
just to see. You could always settle for the tone already
on the amp, or you could push the highs up too high to see
where they end up. You could pull the highs down too far to
see where the tone ends up. Eventually, you'll find a middle
ground that keeps your perspective out of the way.
The type of guitar you use makes a big difference on how the
amp will sound. This is no secret. However, many people get
in a rush when recording and think that adding some sort of
effect or plugin on the computer will get them what they are
looking for. If you find that you are not happy with a given
guitar, maybe you should try plugging in a different guitar
just to see. Try doing something off the wall or downright
wrong. You'd be amazed at what kind of recordings you could
get with a Telecaster through a Mesa Boogie Rectifier. I've
heard success stories of acoustic guitars running through
cranked Rectifiers.
When you have a tone that you are pretty confident about,
it's time to pull out the mics. There are a few methods to
trying out mics. You could slap every mic you own on the amp
to see it it's happening for you. The problem with this approach
is mic placement. Did you take the time with each mic to make
sure you found the best sounding spot on the amp? You could
do this with each mic, but the spot that just sings for each
microphone will probably be in a different spot for each mic.
I tihnk your time could be spent better.
If you are just starting out and have no idea what mic would
be best for a given job, start with an SM 57. They are cheap
and everyone has one. If you don't have at least one, get
one used off of Ebay or something. In the meantime, grab whatever
dynamic you have and give it a try. There are a number of
SM 57 clones that are essentially the same microphone. Even
if they are not the same mic, try them. You never know.
One trick to help choose the best spot to place the mic I
read in a forum years ago. It said to unplug the instrument
cable from the guitar amp, crank the amp up to very high levels,
and put the SM 57 (or whatever mic you are using) in front
of the speaker. Next, run the mic through some loud heaphones
with good isolation. Then, with the headphones on, start moving
the mic in front of the speaker. You will be amazed at what
you are hearing. You will hear all sorts of changes in the
tone simply from moving the mic around. The users of the forum
recommended putting the mic on the brightest spot. I have
not had much luck with putting a mic exactly at the brigthest
spot because it can get a little bit too fizzy at times, but
feel free to try it and see what works. The brightest spot
may be perfect with a darker sounding amp.
My favorite trick when recording guitar amps is to use two
different microphones on one speaker. You have to be aware
of phase cancellation. (If you are not familiar with phase
cancellation, check out my website, www.recordingreview.com.)
However, when you get the mics in phase, you will have much
more control off your recordings. I find that what I'm looking
for when mixing is much different when I'm tracking. Sometimes
I wish I could go back and change something on a tone. One
rememedy for this is recording the two mics from one speaker
to two seperate tracks that will allow you to blend them differently
to create different tones on the recording.
I start out by placing one SM 57 on the cone. This means I
put the mic in the dead center of the speaker. This sound
is almost always fizzy and thin. With very few exceptions,
I've found it to be a crappy guitar sound. As crazy as it
may sound, that's exactly what we want. We want a track in
the mix that is bright, thin crap that we can use as much
or as little as we feel the mood for.
The second mic should sound the opposite. We want it to be
big, meaty, and full of chunky low end. This mic ends up in
different places with every amp that I use, but most of the
time it can be found 2"-3" from the first mic in any direction.
Sometimes angling the mic towards the edge of the speaker
helps, too. This mic should sound a little dull by itself.
Now record both mics and see what you get. Listen to each
mic by itself first. Then listen to both of them together.
Assuming you like the sound that each mic makes (Remember,
you want one to be too bright and the other to be too dull)
you will experience one of three things.
1) The sound will be extremely thin sounding as if you rolled
off all the low end with a parametric equalizer. This means
the mics are almost totally out of phase. The solution is
to push the phase button on your preamp or mixing software.
This is what you want. You want the combined sound of the
mics to be so thin that it isn't usable. Then when you push
the phase button on one track, the tone comes to life. This
is what I always go for.
2) The sound will be big and full. This sound almost means
good things. If you push the phase button, it should sound
like what you may have experienced in #1. If the tone totally
dissapears and all you can hear is some fizz, you've got the
tone down. Push the phase button back to your big guitars
again.
3) The sound is weird. You are not sure what it sounds like.
It's not bad, but it's not right either. Pushing the phase
button only changes the tone in the mids and does not have
make a big impact on the low end. In this case, some other
frequency is out of phase and the low end is in tact. You
need to use your ears on this one. I usually don't like to
leave the mics like this. I go for #1 or #2. However, many
great engineers use phase cancellation as a way of eq'ing
the amps. This is highly advanced engineering, and not for
the faint of heart However, if you stumble on a sound that
you really like, by all means, go with it.
Well that gives you food for thought. You'll notice that we
didn't talk about different microphones. The truth is if you
master the techniques above, you won't have too much need
for more mics. If you want to expand your mic collection,
go ahead. There are a number of mics that work great for electric
guitar amps. Check out my website for details.
About the author:
Brandon Drury has been recording for years. Check out http://www.recordingreview.com
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