DRUMSSTUDIO

Snare microphone placement: small moves, surprisingly large changes

owenliversidgeSoundcheck

Snare sound changes dramatically with a few centimetres of microphone movement. Pointing further towards the centre usually emphasises attack and weight; aiming nearer the edge captures more ring. Height and angle affect hi-hat spill as much as tone, so the “best” position in solo may not be best in the full kit.

I start with the microphone a few centimetres above the rim, angled towards a point between centre and edge, then listen with the hi-hat and cymbals being played. I would rather accept a slightly less exciting solo snare tone if it gives cleaner, more useful tracks.

What placement has become your dependable starting point, and how do you manage spill without overusing gates?

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Replies

juvanieminuzaSoundcheck

The rear rejection of the microphone should be aimed deliberately. Rotating the mic so its least sensitive area faces the hi-hat can improve separation without moving it far from the desired snare position.

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The drummer’s setup matters too. A very low hi-hat directly over the snare leaves fewer good microphone angles. A small ergonomic adjustment can help the recording more than aggressive processing later.

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