Home of the jammr Community
Hi everyone, I am brand new to playing online or even having my instrument (drums) go into a computer. I am wondering how acoustic drums can be made part of this. I have a mixing board (16 channel) but do not yet have drum microphones. Can anyone with experience explain how this would work? Thanks and looking forward to jamming!
Offline
Following; I am in the same boat…
Offline
I've looked into it and it looks like I will need a set of drum mics and hook them into the mixer and then to the computer. Doesn't seem that difficult.
Offline
You'll want a multi-channel computer interface to capture the drums, at least 4 channels, so you can balance kick, snare, overhead pair (left and right).
You'll want to spend some time getting a good drum recording, with a good balance of overheads (cymbals and hats: important for time keeping obviously) that aren't too shrill or harsh, with a good stereo picture.
I would spend time tuning up, hitting record, and playing back, and making adjustments. Once it sounds balanced, you're good to go.
As for drum mic setups: I would recommend two condensers (either small diaphragm or large diaphragm) for overheads and using the Recorder Man setup, which is easy to get a good stereo picture of the kit and is easy to place with just using a piece of string or two drum sticks. Google “Recorder Man drum setup” and you'll find a ton of videos/pictures, etc.
You can buy drum mic kits nowadays from all major mic manufacturers and they'll do the trick.
If you have mics lying around, the venerable SM57 works well on snare top and kick in (more attack than boom, but that's what you need so the kick is audible to the bass player: remember you're basically mixing an album live here, there is no “amp in the room” or “drums in the room” everything is what's being captured by the mics).
Other mics that'll work fine are SM58 (you can unscrew the head basket and it essentially becomes an SM57) for snare or kick if you have those laying around for vocal duties.
Offline
Thanks for your reply, it will help me out tons. Regarding the mixer you mentioned, I currently have a Yamaha MG16XU, 16 channel mixer with a USB-c output. Am I correct in assuming that this should be able to work as the computer interface? I'm buying a 7 piece Shure drum mic kit. I like your idea of recording the drums to get the mix right. Thanks again.
Offline
dnacho
Thanks for your reply, it will help me out tons. Regarding the mixer you mentioned, I currently have a Yamaha MG16XU, 16 channel mixer with a USB-c output. Am I correct in assuming that this should be able to work as the computer interface? I'm buying a 7 piece Shure drum mic kit. I like your idea of recording the drums to get the mix right. Thanks again.
Offline
Thanks again! I`ve never played in a studio situation so it appears as though I`ve got some learning to do over the next while. I`ve jammed and played live with mic`d drums but never to a computer. The mics have been ordered and are on the way so I`ll let you know how it goes when I get everything hooked up. Your tips so far seem to be pretty straightforward.
Offline
dnacho
Thanks again! I`ve never played in a studio situation so it appears as though I`ve got some learning to do over the next while. I`ve jammed and played live with mic`d drums but never to a computer. The mics have been ordered and are on the way so I`ll let you know how it goes when I get everything hooked up. Your tips so far seem to be pretty straightforward.
Offline
captaincancel
…it should be fine, provided you do some practice recordings and get the mix balance right between channels on the mixer so that nothing is overwhelming in the mix…
Offline
Julian you hit the spot! Its really important to get your setup out of the way before jamming since you will be negatively impacting the experience of all the other people
Offline