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Recording drums

A guide to capturing the drum kit in the studio

The MusicRadar Team, Tue 27 Nov 2007, 10:58 am UTC

Recording Drums

Tom's are best captured using dynamic mics, but you can always use an overhead too.

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Toms

In most cases you can leave the toms to the overheads, but if you want a bit more control, the simplest option is to treat them like your snare and use a dynamic mic angled down towards the centre of each. In a two tom setup you can also try a single mic with a wide-cardioid pattern placed carefully in between. You can even place mics inside the toms, but this can lead to an excessively resonant sound.

Tom's are best captured using dynamic mics, but you can always use an overhead too.

Monitoring

If your drummer is just bashing out loops, they might not even need headphones, but in most cases they'll be playing along with a click, band or backing track, which means they will. So you'll need to give them a half decent drum mix, or they'll be all over the place. We'd suggest a sub-mix for drums, so you can tweak individual levels and the overall level. It's sometimes even worth providing a little analogue mixer for the drummer's monitoring, supplied from about four outputs on your audio interface, so that they can tweak their own levels.

Latency is a problem for drummers. Some are able to mentally compensate for any monitoring delays, but if yours can't, you have two options. First, you can use an external mixer, placed before your audio interface, which can be used by the drummer for monitoring and to supply simultaneous outputs to your computer. Second, and even easier, they can listen to their drumming in one ear and have the headphones play the backing track in the other. The Sennheiser HD25, although expensive, is excellent for this, as it has less noise bleed than any other pair we've tried.

It's incredibly important for drummers to be comfortable with the monitoring.

One mic or two?

We're often asked, 'How many drum mics should I use?' After the obligatory jokes, we explain that it's like measuring a piece of string. As a general guide, the harder you're going to bang the drums (rock), the more reverb you plan to add (rock), and if you plan to use bloody great tom rolls (rock), the more close-mics you'll need to give yourself mixing and processing options. But if you're using brushes (jazz), aren't using too many - if any - toms (funk) and want the feel of Ronnie Scott's rather than Wembley (jazz and funk), then you can get away with far fewer microphones - possibly just one or two overheads.

If you have the mics, though, it's always worth trying a few close - you can always rely solely on the overheads if you want to, anyway. Just remember, every mic you add further compounds bleed and phase issues at mixdown. Not only that, but placing one mic correctly takes a long time to master for a given kit, room and player, so each mic makes your life potentially much harder upfront. And as you add mics to the mix, bring in your overheads, as they'll then only be needed for the hats and cymbals.

Ambience

Being loud, drums create brighter and more noticeable reflections than other instruments. And their sparse nature and short release times (cymbals notwithstanding), mean we're far more aware of these reflections than with other instruments, even if we aren't conscious of it. Consequently, many engineers include ambient mics in their setup. These are usually placed as far away from the kit as the space allows, to capture the room's sound. The mic you choose is really to taste on this one, but as sound levels are quieter and the risk of damage, we like to use a nice pair of condensers.

No, it's not Plant Idol; this mic is recording the room ambience.

Making space

Generally speaking, pro studios will have a separate booth for the drummer. This is so that they can't disturb the rest of the band while they play along with a drum machine, but an added benefit is that you can achieve good recording separation and modify the environment in which the drums are being recorded. Drums will naturally generate a great deal of reverberation wherever they are. Since rock drums tend to be soaked in reverb, they're often recorded in wooden or concrete panelled rooms, for big and bright natural reverb. If you're recording rock drums in your own home, larger bathrooms or kitchens are popular.

For most other drum sounds - especially funkier ones - you can go the other way. Place the drums in a smaller, carpeted room. Duvets under the kit, cushions around the place and thick blankets everywhere all help you make space for those intricate grooves.

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