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Microphones

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sycamore
Posted 2010-03-10 7:59 AM (#377412)
Subject: Microphones


Joined:
March 2007
Posts: 698

Location: Cork, Ireland
Would like to get a mic for (a) recording jam sessions on to a home PC (with bog-standard sound card) and (b) playing harmonica through a portable amp (sort of like a pignose, works well with acoustic guitar pickups.). Will a single mic do both jobs, or are they two totally different requirements?
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Paul Templeman
Posted 2010-03-10 8:46 AM (#377413 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones


Joined:
February 2002
Posts: 5750

Location: Scotland
Polar opposites. For the harp the last thing you need is a really good mic with a wide frequency response. A cheap dynamic will be fine. You can pick up an old Shure Unidyne B on ebay for around £15. Or there are dedicated harp mikes like the Shure Green Bullet ot Hohner Bluesblaster. For recording to your PC get the best mic you can afford. Rather than going via the soundcard the best bet would be to get a USB condenser mic. Samson do one for under £60
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sycamore
Posted 2010-03-10 9:27 AM (#377414 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones


Joined:
March 2007
Posts: 698

Location: Cork, Ireland
Thanks, I guessed the answer would be straightforward. Might try the harp one first.
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stephent28
Posted 2010-03-10 11:49 AM (#377415 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones



Joined:
April 2004
Posts: 13303

Location: Latitude 39.56819, Longitude -105.080066
What Paul said. Nothing I can add to that.
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Gallerinski
Posted 2010-03-10 3:40 PM (#377416 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones
Joined:
May 2008
Posts: 4996

Location: Phoenix AZ
I have nothing more to add either.
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cliff
Posted 2010-03-10 3:43 PM (#377417 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones


Joined:
March 2002
Posts: 14842

Location: NJ
uh . . .
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cliff
Posted 2010-03-10 3:44 PM (#377418 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones


Joined:
March 2002
Posts: 14842

Location: NJ
. . . never mind.

I got nuthin', either . . .
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sycamore
Posted 2010-03-11 5:20 AM (#377419 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones


Joined:
March 2007
Posts: 698

Location: Cork, Ireland
I have no further questions
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Waskel
Posted 2010-03-11 7:16 AM (#377420 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones



Joined:
February 2005
Posts: 11840

Location: closely held secret
I should think not.
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muzza
Posted 2010-03-11 8:30 PM (#377421 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones



Joined:
August 2005
Posts: 3736

Location: Sunshine State, Australia
Sorry, I've got something to add.

Syc, get a green bullet - preferably an older one from the US. Consensus amongst good harp players (not to be confused with ME) is that the new 520DX (Mexican made) isn't a scratch on the older US made ones. You'll likely pay a bit more, but it's worth it if you're serious about getting a 'Chicago' sound.

Just my $0.05. (We don't have $0.02's in Australia any more.)
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schroeder
Posted 2010-03-12 6:44 AM (#377422 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones


Joined:
November 2004
Posts: 4413

muzza's not being strictly truthful.
He can make a seriously nice noise on the harps. I really liked his playing.
That's the first and last nice thing I expect to say about an Australian.
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Darkbar
Posted 2010-03-12 12:47 PM (#377423 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones



Joined:
January 2009
Posts: 4536

Location: Flahdaw
Originally posted by schroeder:

That's the first and last nice thing I expect to say about an Australian.
I heard he could handle his booze pretty good too.
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TAFKAR
Posted 2010-03-12 3:36 PM (#377424 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones



Joined:
April 2008
Posts: 2985

Location: Sydney, Australia
Originally posted by schroeder:
muzza's not being strictly truthful.
He can make a seriously nice noise on the harps. I really liked his playing.
That's the first and last nice thing I expect to say about an Australian.
+1 on Muzz's harp playing. There's video evidence on the Ning site which I posted last year.

Some of my best friends are Australian.
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muzza
Posted 2010-03-12 10:34 PM (#377425 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones



Joined:
August 2005
Posts: 3736

Location: Sunshine State, Australia
Originally posted by schroeder:

That's the first and last nice thing I expect to say about an Australian.
Or ANYBODY for that matter...

You're gettin' soft in your old age, Schro.
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sycamore
Posted 2010-03-22 10:27 AM (#377426 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones


Joined:
March 2007
Posts: 698

Location: Cork, Ireland
Playing mostly Irish trad tunes on the harp, so not sure how the Chicago sound will go with that (might be rather good, come to think of it!). WOudl a green bullet work OK straight into a guitar-type input without a pre-amp?
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muzza
Posted 2010-03-23 2:25 AM (#377427 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones



Joined:
August 2005
Posts: 3736

Location: Sunshine State, Australia
A new mexican green bullet has a slightly cleaner sound than the old ones. Not real sure what a trad Irish harmonica should sound like. I play mainly cross-harp blues and Neil Young stuff.

One good thing about the new Green Bullets is that they have a volume knob on the body of the mic, so you can adjust the volume mid-blow if need be.

For the folky stuff, I'd just use a normal vocal mic - someone else will have to advise you of which one. I'm not a vocalist.

But then, maybe you want to start your own genre - Chicago Irish. RiverDance meets Muddy Waters. You could call it Muddy River!
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Damon67
Posted 2010-03-23 2:09 PM (#377428 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones



Joined:
December 2006
Posts: 6996

Location: Jet City
I'd get a USB interface that you can plug mics into. Then you can plug a decent cheapo condenser mic (MXL, Sampson, Nady, etc.), the bullet or cheapo Sure, plus whatever else you might use in the future like an amp mic or whatever.

Interfaces can be a single input up to many inputs. I have one with 4 inputs that I use for home recording.
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sycamore
Posted 2010-03-25 7:30 AM (#377429 - in reply to #377412)
Subject: Re: Microphones


Joined:
March 2007
Posts: 698

Location: Cork, Ireland
Muddy river - i like it. You do realise that riverdance is to irish music as Oklahoma! is to american...
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