On Fri, Dec 28, 2012 at 9:38 PM, Len Ovens <len(a)ovenwerks.net> wrote:
On Thu, December 27, 2012 4:18 pm, Fons Adriaensen wrote:
>sm58
IMHO in most cases they sound horrible, and the
sound changes
all the time unless they are kept at exactly the same distance.
I've started giving singers etc. a Beyer M58 instead. This is
an omni dynamic, originally designed for ENG/EFP so it can take
some abuse. It works very well for singers, and when used
outdoors it picks up much less wind noise than an SM58.
I would guess a lot of that is omni vs. cardioid. How does that effect
monitoring (the main reason for directionality on stage)? I can't see us
getting in ear monitoring any time soon. I think new mics are something
that has a chance.... I may be allowed to replace the worst of the lot
anyway (a Dixon.... worse than most karaoke mics... certainly worse than
the sm58). I have had trouble with battery or phantom power for stage work
with loud pops every time the singer moves so dynamic is what I want even
if it sounds less than studio worthy.
Actually monitoring is only one reason directional mics get used on a
stage. The other is more simply preventing bleed and phase problems. Try
close micing two rack toms for instance and you will rapdily discover the
problem. Or try keeping the cymbal bleed out of the vocal mic. This list
can go on for quite a while.
Using Omnis on stage generally isn't a good idea, but can be done. For
instance due to proximity effect, similarly to what Fons mentions, is why
you will find musical theater always uses omni-directional microphones.
Then again I don't see many concert mixer mixing a concert like a
theatrical mixer mixes a live musical (At least a good theatrical mixer).
You are literally changing levels every line. However you might get more
detailed in other ways in concert mixing, for instance with effect
processing and similar, but personally I find theatrical mixing a huge
order more difficult than most concert mixing I do.
Likewise I just this past week did a concert with a second drum kit on
stage that my music director went to for one song, which was a collection
of toms and a snare for a more high energy version of 'Little Drummer
Boy'. They were all grouped together so I used a single omni mic to pick
up the entire setup, it worked really well.
Seablade