With fellow engineer Scott Craggs giving away all his secrets in the MXR review, I figured I should come clean and give away one of my recording secrets too. My all-time favorite guitar amp microphone is the AKG C 1000S electret condenser. Whenever I close-mic an amp, I try to put two different mics on the cones to give myself more options when I mix. One usually becomes the primary mic in the mix while the other is usually relegated to "side mic" duties for some pseudo-stereo spread. Alongside my trusty C 1000S, I've tried many different mics-cheap to expensive, standard to whacky. Shure, Neumann, Schoeps, Sennheiser, Royer, Earthworks, RØDE, RCA, Radio Shack, even built-ins on portable tape recorders-you name it. In essence, I do a shootout between the C 1000S and a second mic every time I record an amp. The C 1000S almost always wins. Something about the quality of its creamy midrange response makes it really cut through in a mix-without sounding woolly, brittle, or harsh! A guitar track recorded with the C 1000S measuring lower in peak and average levels will have higher perceived volume, more presence, and less mud (to get in the way of drums, bass guitar, and vocals) than a guitar track recorded with another mic at higher levels. In other words, guitars recorded with the C 1000S-once they're mixed in with the rest of the instruments-sound bigger than guitars recorded with other mics. In some situations, other mics have come close to exhibiting the same "less is more" character. For example, on very distorted guitars, I found that a Neumann U 47 FET going through a Great River MP-2NV sounded similar to a C 1000S through a Neve 1272-enough so that I had a hard time differentiating the tracks. And speaking of mic preamps, the C 1000S sounds great through various Neve, API, Trident, Joe Meek, Allen & Heath, Yamaha, and Sony preamps. For some reason, it sounds awful through the Great River MP-2NV... so much so that I almost returned the MP-2NV when I tested it with the C 1000S. Also, the C 1000S overloads easily, so it's not the right mic for extremely loud guitar work. Where can you hear examples of the C 1000S on guitar? Check out any of the studio albums released in the last four or five years from Karate, Helms, Victory at Sea, and Rosa Chance Well; Chris Brokaw's tracks on his split with Viva las Vegas; or Thalia Zedek's latest EP. All of these recordings feature the C 1000S as the primary guitar amp mic. If you like the guitar sounds on these records, check out the C 1000Sfor yourself. ($200 street; www.akg.com)
Accessories, Microphones | No. 124
Swift Shield Pop Filter and Shock Mount
by John Baccigaluppi
Part of publishing Tape Op involves going to the NAMM show every January. It's nice to see our friends there, and there's always a lot of gear to look at, but honestly a lot of it is pretty much the...