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atticus

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Everything posted by atticus

  1. Bumping an old thread because this is sitting at $3.81 right now on Amazon with prime shipping. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B015QZDY92/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_0FoAxbP4N2W8P
  2. I was just talking to my wife about how I think SNL has missed a golden opportunity to have LD do a killer Bernie impression this primary season.
  3. I was really excited about the build up for this with all of those animated shorts. I'm a sucker for a good story. It seems like Blizzard spent a whole lot of time building this really cool world with a lot of back story and then dispensed of it pretty much immediately when it comes to gameplay. It's like the team making and gameplay objectives have no correlation to the narrative they built in all of the lead up. I get that it is an amazing multiplayer shooter, just disappointed at what it could have been I guess..
  4. This is a really interesting look into a time capsule
  5. What kind of pricing are you looking at for the comics. Always meant to track those down
  6. Sounds cool. I always appreciate bands that put in the attention to detail like this.
  7. Yea, sounds like maybe just tracking on your 4 track and letting someone else mix your stuff might be your best bet.. I personally like the character a recording has when done on a 4 track cassette. I dig lofi home recordings. In fact all of this back and forth has made me want to search the interwebz for a decent 4 track.
  8. Congrats on the apogee man, that's a great buy! Do yourself a favor and learn how to use reaper. I'm always a fan of diving in and learning hands on, but do take some time to watch a few tutorials to learn the basics. YouTube is (mostly) your friend. The 94 is a very decent mic for acoustic instruments. Try it at about the 12th fret as close as you feel comfortable playing where you won't be bumping it. How are you with a soldiering iron? There is a really simple mod you can do for your 57 by soldiering a resistor across pins 2 and 3 of the male end of an XLR cable that lowers the impedance to around 500 ohms. Most non-crazy expensive modern preamps don't allow you to select impedance and deliver too high of a load creating some harshness in the upper frequencies with a 57. By lowering the impedance load you smooth out those upper frequencies and I swear the bass response is improved too. The only drawback is you lower the mic output by 1-2db but that's not a big deal at all for what you're gaining IMO. My favorite thing about this mod is you don't have to do anything to the mic itself. I think it helps the 57 in all applications, just makes an already versatile mic even more so. My favorite "go to" vocal mic for home recording is the sm7b. I feel like it's becoming a cliche, but for a reason. It's just a really good mic for a male voice. It also sounds amazing on a guitar amp and even a bass cab if you're going crazy and not just running your bass through a DI.
  9. Those are pretty cool, which model do you have? Is it one that still records to tape? You are definitely going to be limited in what you can do EQ and otherwise if you're only using that piece of hardware, but that doesn't mean you can't get a good recording! I love the lofi vibe you can get from an old school 4 track type interface. That does however mean that, like you said, your friends with their computers will probably be able to make your tracks sound a bit cleaner than you will. My my advice is to read your manual and find out what your EQ knobs are doing. Most of those 4 track or 8 track recorders have a fixed high pass knob at 100hz a fixed low pass knob at like 10k and then a sweepable mid knob that ranges from the 2-300 range up to the 4-5k range. For a good clean recording make sure you let the mic do most of the work and just sort of clean it up with the EQ. You'll get a little bit of natural tape compression if it's a tape model which can be lovely, but you'll want to really pay attention to the dynamics of what you're recording since there usually isn't much in the way of onboard compression in those units.
  10. I absolutely agree, especially for drums, more mics is my preference. I was simply stating for people just getting into it that you can get a badass drum recording with 4 mics if you practice enough. If you're looking for outboard gear and are the kind of guy who likes reaper because of the functionality and doesn't care about the flashy bells and whistles of logic, you should check out warm audio (http://www.warmaudio.com/#!products/scx5u). For $1500 you could get their 1176 clone and their pultec tube EQ clone. Highly highly highly recommend those guys. You wanna talk badass drums? Run your shit through those suckers. The pultec and 1176 are sexy as helllllll on drums. I gotta say the same thing I said before about mics. One ribbon mic is not going to do you near as much good as spending the same money on quality outboard stuff. You've got some nice mics. Enhance what you've got before you go crazy building a huge mic inventory. You will like the warm audio gear better than a ribbon. Trust me.
  11. Scott Hull is a genius and everyone should listen to everything he says about everything lol. Not a lot of people pay enough attention to what goes into making a quality record. Of course it's easy not to care about all that stuff when it doesn't matter what your records sound like when they're hanging on your wall. /snarky post
  12. @birdwell I think the proper tools would definitely help. Which DAW are you using? I was assuming you meant you used an exclusively analog setup meaning you don't mix on a computer. From the sounds of it you might want to look at something that would give you a little more control. If you aren't looking to break the bank, check out Reaper (http://www.reaper.fm) it's like $60. It isn't as pretty as logic or ProTools, but it is every bit as functional, especially for basic mixing. Having something more than a low, mid, and high knob is pretty important to get the mix you're looking for. Also, for what it's worth, some of the best "home studio" drum mixes I've ever heard were recorded with 3-4 mics. Basic (meaning limited number of mics) drum mixing boils down to this: 1) Making the microphone pick up the specific part of the kit you are looking for boils down to, you guessed it, mic placement. 2) Once you have recorded the drums and are mixing, pay attention to what the microphone actually heard and EQ accordingly. If the mic heard a crash/ride/tom you're going to want to EQ as such. Pay attention to the high end, pay attention to the low/low mid. Around the 600 area cut that boxy shit out. 3) At this point if the microphone didn't pick up what you were going for, go back, move the mic, record it again. Don't ever try to force the recording to sound like something the mic didn't actually hear.
  13. I hope everything goes well, I love talking about this stuff (as evidenced by my long, rambling, preachy posts above). Always fun to see someone else's experiments. Would love to hear what you come up with!
  14. The thing about EQ in a mix is that it's sort of counter intuitive. It's a balance between making the source sound natural vs. making it sit in the mix so to speak. Part of your brain is telling you, "this is what instrument X sounds like, I need to eq it this way." But if instrument X, Y, and Z all need similar frequency ranges to sound like themselves, they are going to muddy the mix so you have to choose which one needs a specific frequency range the most. I harped on mic selection and placement above and I will again, the more you can get your source to sound natural before doing anything to it, the easier it will be to fit it in the mix. This is because you're only having to carve EQ space to make the sound fit in the mix rather than having to do a bunch of corrective EQ and then making things fit. This is especially helpful in the analog world where you can't just stack 4 or 5 EQs on top of each other in a plugin chain. It is always worth spending a little extra time making sure you have the right mic in the right place for peak sonic efficiency. A tip I learned when I was starting out (that I still use today on more complex projects with lots of tracks) is to keep an EQ chart. It is time consuming and a little tedious, but when you are looking at starting to create a cohesive mix it serves as a sort of road map to get you where you need to go. In your mix log (I use an old spiral bound notebook) keep a track list and note the fundamental frequency/range of each instrument. Then list any boosts or cuts you make as you are prepping your tracks for the mix. When you go to put everything together you can look and see which instruments share the same areas of the sonic spectrum and start to make decisions as to what might still sound ok with a little less of that area and what starts to suffer if you take too much away. Getting a clear mix is almost all EQ. Thinking of it as a puzzle helps. When you're putting a puzzle together, to get a clear picture you have to fit all of the pieces together. If you fit some of the pieces together but then just stack other pieces on top of each other, you may get an idea of what it is supposed to look like, but it won't be the clear finished product you were going for. Sorry for rambling. TL;DR don't rush anything. The time spent getting things right on the front end will pay off on the long run.
  15. That mic deal is worth it. My advice for home recording is that unless you are up against a deadline, experiment constantly with mic placement. Especially if you have a limited arsenal to work with and especially, especially on drums. Learn to use your ears by constantly doing a/b critical listening. It doesn't hurt to research the pickup pattern/frequency response of a particular mic as sort of a baseline to know pretty much what you're going to use the mic for, but after that spend a few hours just moving the mic around to see what a difference a few inches/degrees of incline can make. You would be surprised how good a 58 can sound as a mono room mic with the right positioning/eq/compression/limiting on it. I can rep the Focusrite. In that price range you are not going to find a better USB interface. Clear, high quality preamps that are fairly transparent and don't add any noise until you start adding more gain than you would ever need. It is my go to interface when doing home scratch tracks or demos. I love GarageBand for what it is, but if you have the money Logic will be worth it. Especially if you are already pretty comfortable with some of the more advanced features of GarageBand. Logic is like the grownup version of GarageBand (in a good way). Finally, I gotta agree with @birdwell on this one. Don't rent any of those fancy mics. For the money you would spend renting a Neumann for 2-3 days you could buy Logic and probably another decent entry level vocal mic. Hell, get a wind screen and sing in to the 58. It was/is a good enough mic for lots and lots of very successful musicians. Before you go nuts with your microphones learn the basics of making a voice/instrument/whatever A: sound natural and B: fit in the mix. People are always looking for the "magic bullet" to make a great sounding record. There are no magic bullets. Attention to detail in your recording technique (mic choice, mic placement, gain staging, any analog processing done to your input signal) and a good solid grasp of EQ (THE most important tool of an engineer) and compression will ALWAYS beat out even the most high end gear in the hands of someone who doesn't take the time to learn how to pay attention to those details.
  16. Also, $35 more for the splatter. This kind of sucks. Makes a fun release with a cool DIY spirit and the excitement of a chance that you might get a special variant feel sort of dirty. Ah well, if you can't beat 'em join 'em right?
  17. Here's hoping for a remaster. Would love to hear what this album could sound like if it could breathe a little.
  18. That's funny considering the show runners said they wanted to avoid flashback style story telling because no one likes flashbacks. I too would like them to develop more of the back story. Not looking for entire episodes of flashbacks, but the backstory on the Starks/Baratheons/Targaryens provides clarity as to why things shook out the way they did.
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