VOCALSLIVE SOUND

Vocal microphone technique that makes the engineer’s job easier

Good microphone technique is not simply “keep it close”. Distance should remain consistent through normal lines, then change deliberately for louder passages, plosives or intimate sections. Pointing the microphone away between phrases reduces spill, but cupping the grille changes the polar response and often increases feedback risk.

Singers also benefit from understanding monitor placement and avoiding the temptation to compensate for a poor mix by singing harder. A clear soundcheck conversation about what is missing—pitch reference, own voice, rhythm—gets better results than asking for “more everything”.

Which habits have improved vocal clarity most in your live setup?

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Replies

owenliversidgeSoundcheck

Consistent distance is hugely helpful for the whole mix. When the vocal level swings because the microphone moves randomly, compression has to work harder and monitor stability becomes more difficult.

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juvanieminuzaSoundcheck

Knowing the microphone’s pickup pattern matters. The safest monitor position is not identical for every pattern, and placing a wedge in the wrong rejection area can create feedback even at moderate level.

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