Alembic Guitars Club

Alembic products => Alembic Basses & Guitars => Topic started by: Mlazarus on April 25, 2023, 02:13:11 AM

Title: Micing the bass for recordings.
Post by: Mlazarus on April 25, 2023, 02:13:11 AM
I'm thinking anout using my shure 57 to mic my bass amp to record my series 1 into FL studio. Looking forward to the sound comparison.
Title: Re: Micing the bass for recordings.
Post by: gtrguy on April 25, 2023, 03:19:29 PM
Cool! I really like a shure beta52 for live or the Egg D112 for recording myself, but you should be able to get good results.
Title: Re: Micing the bass for recordings.
Post by: gearhed289 on April 26, 2023, 06:42:58 AM
57s are good for capturing raw amp tones. Sennheiser E609 is good for that too. Nice to combine with a D112 or just a DI.
Title: Re: Micing the bass for recordings.
Post by: Greywolf on April 27, 2023, 03:41:34 AM
The SM57 is a great workhorse , I use it to mic amps at the club frequently , my alternative is a dsm & humboldt simplifier bass station DI box which is delightful.
Title: Re: Micing the bass for recordings.
Post by: edwin on May 14, 2023, 05:24:52 PM
RE20s, 421s, U47FETs, ribbon mics, etc., all can work quite well. Even old mics like the EV RE11 can sound great with the right cabinet in the right context (nails the Grateful Dead Europe '72 tone in front of a JBL 15" powered by a Fender style head). I have a copy of the U47FET made by Beesneez (T3) which is fantastic. In a studio, you could put up a dynamic, a condenser, and a ribbon and blend them all.
Title: Re: Micing the bass for recordings.
Post by: dannobasso on May 14, 2023, 10:20:31 PM
I don't usually use an amp for recording. My signal goes into a REDDI, splits out to a choice of compressors and splits to a Tech  21 Dug pedal. The new Series 2 will present me with some new choices when it arrives for use on BLAK29's 3rd album.
Title: Re: Micing the bass for recordings.
Post by: cozmik_cowboy on May 18, 2023, 08:06:14 PM
Speaking as an engineer:
My 1st choice for electric bass is a good DI.  If I have to mic the cab, I'll probably grab a Sennheiser 441 if there's one handy; a 421 will do (quite nicely) in a pinch.  If it's a bi-amped rig, 441 on the highs, AKG D-12E on the lows (if anyone still has one; great mic for bass, kick drum, bottom of a Leslie, etc., and I mourn its passing from their catalog!)

Peter
Title: Re: Micing the bass for recordings.
Post by: edwin on May 26, 2023, 06:23:54 PM
Speaking as an engineer:
My 1st choice for electric bass is a good DI.  If I have to mic the cab, I'll probably grab a Sennheiser 441 if there's one handy; a 421 will do (quite nicely) in a pinch.  If it's a bi-amped rig, 441 on the highs, AKG D-12E on the lows (if anyone still has one; great mic for bass, kick drum, bottom of a Leslie, etc., and I mourn its passing from their catalog!)

Peter

I'm with you on the D-12E. The D112 is a terrible replacement. Turns any kick drum into a basketball. The only decent sound I've ever heard was when it was mic'ing an oboe, weirdly enough.
Title: Re: Micing the bass for recordings.
Post by: cozmik_cowboy on May 27, 2023, 08:23:23 AM
Speaking as an engineer:
My 1st choice for electric bass is a good DI.  If I have to mic the cab, I'll probably grab a Sennheiser 441 if there's one handy; a 421 will do (quite nicely) in a pinch.  If it's a bi-amped rig, 441 on the highs, AKG D-12E on the lows (if anyone still has one; great mic for bass, kick drum, bottom of a Leslie, etc., and I mourn its passing from their catalog!)

Peter

I'm with you on the D-12E. The D112 is a terrible replacement. Turns any kick drum into a basketball. The only decent sound I've ever heard was when it was mic'ing an oboe, weirdly enough.

I have never had cause to mic an oboe, so I'll take your word for it; my use for the D-112 is non-existent.  I'd rather use an RE-20 (AKA "the electronic pillow").

Peter
Title: Re: Micing the bass for recordings.
Post by: gtrguy on May 28, 2023, 09:25:58 AM
you gotta use the right preamps on the mics.