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For my home recording of solo guitar, I'm using a Henriksen Bud Ten, Royer R-121 mic, Royer dBoost, Focusrite Clarett 2Pre audio interface into Logic Pro for my DAW.
What I'm hearing through the amp as I'm recording sounds perfect for me. However, what the DAW is capturing sounds dull no matter how I place the mic. I'm assuming part of the reason is that the Henriksen has a separate 1" tweeter which the mic isn't picking up. Is there something (a box of sorts) that I can use to shape my tone after the mic?
Thanks
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05-07-2024 01:24 PM
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The R-121 is a ribbon mic. I usually think of ribbon mics as warm and not having the same crisp high end of a condenser mic. Which seem to be the current go to standard mic. (Although I have never used a R-121).
Maybe an equalizer would help.
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Edit:
You know, I have a Creation Audio Labs MK 4.23 Clean Boost here somewhere. I think I may give that a try and hear what happens.
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For solo guitar, and given you have a tweeter on the Hendrickson, I'd experiment with placing your mic further away from the speaker so it picks up more of the tweeter. You can also play with placement relative to the main speaker and the tweeter to change the sound.
I'd suggest first working on dialing in the mic placement to your preferred tone before using any eq or other plugins on your DAW.
Is the dboost necessary? That's also something to experiment with.
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Originally Posted by fep
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Originally Posted by 2-5Guy
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What you miss are the reflections/ambience of the room. Reverb plugins have this option, which adds short delays in a range of times to emulate walls.
in ProTools I add between 15% and 20% medium-room ambience.
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Originally Posted by fep
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Originally Posted by Ukena
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You can have a looper play through the amp and move the mic around listening through headphones. Or use an amp plugin when mixing, they usually feel lackluster but sound good.
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