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#368077 - 06/24/13 12:08 PM
Re: Microphone Recomendations
[Re: montunoman]
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/21/00
Posts: 43703
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#368081 - 06/24/13 12:45 PM
Re: Microphone Recomendations
[Re: montunoman]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14282
Loc: NW Florida
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Two important things to consider...
First off is, if she isn't a strong singer, by the time you get her gain up to where it picks her up well, it's going to pick up a lot more of anything else! One solution to this (or at least a slight fix!) is to make sure she keeps the microphone virtually touching her lips while she sings. If she is holding the mike away from her lips, you'll need more gain, which equals more bleed. Make sure she stays right on it. If she tends to back off as she gets louder try putting a hair of compression on the mike, rather than her move it around.
Secondly, there is the issue of pickup pattern... SM58's are cardioid pattern. This means, essentially that the microphone rejects sounds the BEST from wherever it is pointing. That is, if the business end of the mike is held directly in front of the singer, the mike rejects sounds from whatever the other end is pointing at(180º away). This is designed so that monitors are directly in front of the singer, and the mike points up at 45º and the monitor is rejected the most.
However, there are other pickup patterns. Hyper-cardioid, or super-cardioid patterns reject picking up best from 45º or so from the SIDE of the mike. This is really good if your monitors are to the side of you (like most keyboard players have to have them), or you have instrumentalists next to you you want to keep out the mike.
So, all in all, I'd highly recommend an EV N/D767a if this is the case. If not, the female optimized N/D367s is a good choice. Both are hotter than hell, reject feedback amazingly well, and are crisp, full and robust. I've used the EV N/DYM series for well over 20 years, not a single complaint (other than my trusty 457 got stolen a few years back!). I currently run a 767, and it sounds great.
The last thing in the equation is monitors... TBH, if she is willing to try, I might suggest some inexpensive in-ear earphones, either wired or unwired (if she moves around a lot). For one thing, she can have the vocals incredibly loud in her ears without the slightest hint of feedback, and if your board has sufficient aux/effect/monitor sends, she can have exactly what she wants in there without disturbing the stage sound. And none of it will bleed into the mike.
Hope this helps.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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