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Big Booms in Small Places Boston MA

It is totally possible to get some bom bastic drum sounds at home with less-than-insanely expense microphones if you follow a few simple recording and processing guidelines.

Stephen Morrill
617-315-5127
Boston, MA
Guitar Center Boston
617-247-1389
1255 Boylston St.
Boston, MA
Avid Technology, Inc.
650 731 6300
75 Network Dr
Burlington, MA
Guitar Center Natick
508-655-6525
321-C Speen St. Cloverleaf Marketplace
Natick, MA
Thompson Guitars
978-369-3359
W Concord, MA
Broken Neck Guitar Repair
617-262-0220
Boston, MA
Music & Arts
617-332-3578
839 Beacon Street
Newton Centre, MA
Music & Arts
978-532-3380
Route #114, 300 Andover Street
Peabody, MA
Guitar Center Danvers
978-777-1950
120 Andover St.
Danvers, MA
Haynes Flute & Piccolo Co
(617) 482-7456
12 Piedmont St
Boston, MA
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Big Booms in Small Places

Recording huge drum sounds in a home studio is something like The Ultimate Struggle. You typically don’t have fabulous microphones, and the recording space is usually your dining room, living room, or garage. So you may decide to go the loop-and-sample route, royally annoying your(hopefully) loyal drummer, and causing the band to perhaps revise all the parts the members had worked out to groove with the drummer’s feel and his or her specific input into the songs. You don’t have to do that—unless you want to, that is.

It is totally possible to get some bom bastic drum sounds at home with less-than-insanely expensive microphones if you follow a few simple recording and processing guidelines. You can record your songs the way you’ve always played them, keeping your drummer rocking to the material the band has worked on together, and retaining that wonderful vibe that occurs when a good band plays a good song. Here’s one way to go about it. . . .

Microphones

Don’t worry about them. Great mics are wonderful, but if you don’t have them (or can’t borrow them), don’t sweat it. Except for almost toy-like models, most mics can at least deliver a clean and relatively clear sound.

Start with the snare. Find a suitable dynamic mic, and position it about a half inch off the drumhead, pointed from the drummer’s left arm towards the kick pedal. Look for a relatively dry and clean swack. The next critical element is the kick drum. If all you have is another small- to mid-sized dynamic mic, don’t sweat it. Larger models, such as a Sennheiser MD421 or an AKG D112 can capture great wallop and boom, but even a Shure SM57 can give you enough kick attack and bass to serve up a rockin’ drum sound. Tighter kick sounds can be achieved if the front head is off (or if there’s a “mic hole” cut into the head), and more boomy and resonant sounds are produced when the head is left on. Start by positioning the mic somewhere near the midpoint of the drum shell, and angled inward towards the rear head. Amend the positioning until you get a nice, big smack or punch.

Finally, position a mic in front of the kit, three feet away, and at about the height of the drummer’s chest. This mic will capture the overall sound of the kit, as well as some nice room ambience. If possible, keep the ambience to a minimum. A little is cool, but too much may wash out the drum sound, and we need to get maximum impact from the three mics we’ve used.

Processing

At this point, your unaffected drum sounds should be tight, clear, clean, and punchy. If not, reposition the mics until you hear some slammin’ tones. Try to avoid using EQ, but if you hear too much mud or edginess, go for subtractive EQ at the offending frequencies. In other words, try to cut, rather than boost, but do whatever is needed to make the drums rage.

A decent compressor or compression plug-in will help dial in punch and impact. Set compression to taste on each track (a good start for aggro sounds is a 4:1 ratio at a –10dB threshold with a fast attack and release), but route the compression returns to dedic...

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