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Best mic for basscabinet


Galaxy
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Depends on what you want to pay really.

£260 - [url="http://www.heilsound.com/pro/products/pr40/"]Heil Sound PR40[/url]. Despite the rather cool looks, this is a dynamic mic, not a condenser. It can handle high SPLs, with a very good frequency response.

£110 - [url="http://www.akg.com/site/products/powerslave,id,261,pid,261,nodeid,2,_language,EN.html"]AKG D112[/url] - better known for recording drums, the kick drum in particular. Robust. Very robust. Some prefer the AKG 412 but this is £300. The 412 is better known as a tom mic, but there's no reason to limit it to that.

£80 - [url="http://www.akg.com/site/products/powerslave,id,1159,pid,1159,nodeid,2,_country,EN,_language,EN.html"]AKG P2[/url] - cheaper than the D112, and possibly better suited to bass instruments in general than the D112, which is a kick drum specialist mic really.

There are others from Electrovoice (RE20 or N/D868 for example) and Shure (PG52, Beta 52a) etc, but the golden rule is don't use a Shure SM58 or 57 - no real bass end at all.

Edited by ShergoldSnickers
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Sennheiser e602-II seems to be the microphone of choice for the touring bands we have in. Recommended

[url="http://www.thomann.de/gb/sennheiser_e_602_ii.htm"]http://www.thomann.de/gb/sennheiser_e_602_ii.htm[/url]

Edited by Bankai
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[quote name='Bankai' post='1174637' date='Mar 24 2011, 01:52 PM']Sennheiser e602-II seems to be the microphone of choice for the touring bands we have in. Recommended

[url="http://www.thomann.de/gb/sennheiser_e_602_ii.htm"]http://www.thomann.de/gb/sennheiser_e_602_ii.htm[/url][/quote]

That's what I use.

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[quote name='Bankai' post='1174637' date='Mar 24 2011, 01:52 PM']Sennheiser e602-II seems to be the microphone of choice for the touring bands we have in. Recommended

[url="http://www.thomann.de/gb/sennheiser_e_602_ii.htm"]http://www.thomann.de/gb/sennheiser_e_602_ii.htm[/url][/quote]

[quote name='Doddy' post='1174662' date='Mar 24 2011, 02:04 PM']That's what I use.[/quote]
Asking around, two out of three responders have mentioned this Sennheiser mic.

I actually agree with Alex's comment above, ideally you should use DI, or a combination of mic and DI, and preferably a suitable wide range instrument mic over a kick mic. However, with just one mic and no DI, I've found it easier to get a sound starting from a kick mic, rather than an instrument mic with no bottom end, but we are all different. :)

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I'll second the dont use a drum mic call above - its a bad idea, they tend to suck mids for a start, since you have to eq that mid back into the bass.

I would also put a huge +1 on the Heil PR40, it is a sublime mic, designed for broadcast vocal, very good frequency plot, goes a lot higher and deeper than most dynamics do.

Strangely it does in fact make a great kick mic too, you eq your own mid cut into it rather than relying on a built in one. In this case it can be ok to use the same mic for a bass cab and a kick since the frequency response of this mic is so much flatter than a kick mic.

Oh and if you record vocals it sounds lovely on a pretty wide range of voices, and no one but no one is going to overload this mic with their voice...

Ive also got pretty good results (mixed with a DI) with a 57, 58, Senn e835, and particularly good results with a [url="http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/aug03/articles/blueball.htm"]blueball[/url]

Edited by 51m0n
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[quote name='joegarcia' post='1175320' date='Mar 24 2011, 10:11 PM']My faves are EV RE-20, Sennheiser MD421,[/quote]

+1. The RE20 is a great mic with no proximity effect (it can be practically up against the grille without over-emphasising the bottom end).

The MD421s will take anything that you can throw at them and deliver a good sound. I've used them on everything from drums, banjo, trombone etc...

I'd still recommend a quality DI though.

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You'd never use a cabinet mic solo. It should be used in combination with a good DI. The microphone is there just to add that bass power/tone to it that you just can't get from DI alone. Hence using what is primarily a bass drum microphone. You don't need to rely on it to reproduce everything, it's there to do a specific job in supplementing the DI, and a microphone like the e602 does that best.

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+1 on mixing mic sound with DI
I use an old Bassman 2x15 cab and got my best ever results by mic both speakers into separate channels and DI into a third channel.
I can't remember for sure what mics we used though; but I think one was an SM57 and the other a big kick mic

Edited by Bassnut62
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I've always felt that micing a cab is about capturing the midrange and treble character of the speaker, hence why it tends to be more popular with the Ampeg SVT rock set. With the larger scale pro tour rigs there's often an Avalon U5 or similar lurking in the background delivering the weight of the sound. Close micing a large 2 or 3 way rear-ported cab with no supplementary DI is not easy if you want a balanced sound!

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[quote name='Bankai' post='1175502' date='Mar 25 2011, 03:57 AM']You'd never use a cabinet mic solo. It should be used in combination with a good DI. The microphone is there just to add that bass power/tone to it that you just can't get from DI alone. Hence using what is primarily a bass drum microphone. You don't need to rely on it to reproduce everything, it's there to do a specific job in supplementing the DI, and a microphone like the e602 does that best.[/quote]

Definitely agree on principle about mixing DI and mic but have to disagree about the e602. You want mids and highs from the mic and the e602 scoops loads of the important mids out.
Check it's frequency response:

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[quote name='joegarcia' post='1176022' date='Mar 25 2011, 03:19 PM']You want mids and highs from the mic and the e602 scoops loads of the important mids out.
Check it's frequency response:

[/quote]
Interesting. I go the other way round; relying on DI for clear and articulate mid/highs and then mic for POWERAWESOMENESSBLOWYOURFACEOFFBASS.
Hence the e602 choice.

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DI + mic is great if you get the right mic for the situation. Your best bet is going to be trying out a few mics and see what you like the sound of, also pay close attention to how much bleed you're getting from other loud things on the stage. There is no "best" mic for this situation, just personal preference. Take note of what the guys here prefer to use and then go and do a little online homework!

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[quote name='Bankai' post='1175502' date='Mar 25 2011, 04:57 AM']You'd never use a cabinet mic solo. It should be used in combination with a good DI. The microphone is there just to add that bass power/tone to it that you just can't get from DI alone. Hence using what is primarily a bass drum microphone. You don't need to rely on it to reproduce everything, it's there to do a specific job in supplementing the DI, and a microphone like the e602 does that best.[/quote]

+1. Madness not to have DI as well IMHO.

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