Recording 'clean' sound

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mendipman
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Tell us something.: I play flute and stringed instruments and enjoy playing in sessions and for step dancers and teach music part-time. My flutes are a new Gilles Lehart blackwood keyless in D, a c.1820 Clementi 'Nicholson improved' English boxwood single key in F and a simple-system 8-key English blackwood flute made by Richard Weekes of Plymouth, Devon c.1840 both in beautiful, pristine condition. I also have a wooden c.1880 English keyed flageolet. My home is in North Somerset a short distance from where my family come from at Blackford in the Mendip Hills and my repertoire are the tunes that are local to my area. That is the rural vernacular English music from when ordinary working people simply played and danced to their own rhythm with little concern for that which lay beyond a day's walk.
Location: Somerset, England

Re: Recording 'clean' sound

Post by mendipman »

The guidance I'm looking for is how to set up at home. Simple stuff.

I have a long history mic-ing banjo and can get excellent quality clear recordings with my Audio- Technica 2020USB. But what works for banjo does not work for recording my flute.

What are the standard guides for mic position both in terms of distance from the flute and position in relation to the flute body?
PB+J
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Tell us something.: I'm a historian and the author of "The Beat Cop:Chicago's Chief O'Neill and the Creation of Irish Music," published by the University of Chicago in 2022. I live in Arlington VA and play the flute sincerely but not well

Re: Recording 'clean' sound

Post by PB+J »

mendipman wrote:The guidance I'm looking for is how to set up at home. Simple stuff.

I have a long history mic-ing banjo and can get excellent quality clear recordings with my Audio- Technica 2020USB. But what works for banjo does not work for recording my flute.

What are the standard guides for mic position both in terms of distance from the flute and position in relation to the flute body?

I posted a couple links in which people discuss more or less standard methods
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mendipman
Posts: 151
Joined: Tue Oct 17, 2017 11:24 am
antispam: No
Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
Tell us something.: I play flute and stringed instruments and enjoy playing in sessions and for step dancers and teach music part-time. My flutes are a new Gilles Lehart blackwood keyless in D, a c.1820 Clementi 'Nicholson improved' English boxwood single key in F and a simple-system 8-key English blackwood flute made by Richard Weekes of Plymouth, Devon c.1840 both in beautiful, pristine condition. I also have a wooden c.1880 English keyed flageolet. My home is in North Somerset a short distance from where my family come from at Blackford in the Mendip Hills and my repertoire are the tunes that are local to my area. That is the rural vernacular English music from when ordinary working people simply played and danced to their own rhythm with little concern for that which lay beyond a day's walk.
Location: Somerset, England

Re: Recording 'clean' sound

Post by mendipman »

PB+J wrote:
I posted a couple links in which people discuss more or less standard methods

I missed those links. Thank you.
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