How to Use a Gate on Live Drums - Master Audio Engineer - Church Live Audio Mixing
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- Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024
- Austin Harman Mixes explains the utilization of a Microphone Gate on Live Drums. Microphone gates are used in live audio mixing to automatically turn on and off microphones based on specified parameters. Church audio mixing can be difficult, and require a specific approach. Drum bleed, including cymbal bleed can be solved using gates that are correctly dialed in.
Drums in particular require the usage of gates to avoid cymbal bleed and adjacent drum mic bleed. If dialed in correctly, gates can be an incredibly helpful tool in improving your live mix. Learn how to mix audio with Austin Harman Mixes.
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Austin has been a professional Audio Engineer/Mixer for over 10 years. During his time mixing audio, he has mixed thousands of church services, live events, conferences, camps, and really bad bars with bad PAs. Austin also is a system integrator and designer, actively running and managing The Penn Group and Penn Audio. Let Austin help you design your next audio, video, or lighting install.
Upgrading Your Audio, Video or Lighting? Let us design, install and support it:
Church Audio, Video and Lighting Experts:
The Penn Group
www.thepenn.group
You can follow me on instagram: @austinharmanmixes
Need help with your church? Send me an email: sales@thepenn.group
Interested in learning more about Audio? Leave a comment below.
Upgrading Your Audio, Video or Lighting? Let us design, install and support it:
Church Audio, Video and Lighting Experts:
The Penn Group
www.thepenn.group
Interested in learning more about Audio? Leave a comment below.
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This was very helpful. Especially being a new engineer to the live sound space.
Great! Glad you enjoyed.
Best explanation ever after watching tons of videos throughout the years.
Thank you! You’re very kind!
Great explanation!!!!
Glad it was helpful!
that was informative Thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
excellent..thank u
You are most welcome! Glad you enjoyed.
You are awesome man.
🤩🤩🤩 thank you
@@austinharmanmixes great content you have in here. Thank you!
Question:
I use a 15-inch subfill for kick and put it next to a drummer. They like the thump they're getting and it makes the bass drum sound huge. Every once in a while I hear this loud low frequency humming like a feedback. Do you think it is one of the drum mics causing the low freq feedback/humming.
@josephbisenio4984 it’s probably feedback in mic from your thump.
Love this!
I made it for you!
Great video but can we put a gate on the background noise😊
Thank you Donald! You absolutely can. Just follow the same practices here.
Also- sorry I recorded this pre-rehearsal for a gig! It was loud.
perhaps lowering the gain on your mic would have helped@@austinharmanmixes
@@stradbass4766 it was recorded on an iPhone 🤩
Hello question for you, what streaming console do you use? Currently we use a tri caster but i dont like the sound it provides any suggestions
Hey Thomas-
We use the Allen & Heath Avantis. Feel free to send me an email: sales@thepenn.group
I also have several videos on the channel of me using it.
Hello, do you recommend add gate on the overheads mics? (Cymbals)
Hey Issac- Thanks for the question. It depends on if you’re close micing cymbals versus having general overheads. If you have just a stereo pair, i wouldn’t because i would use them to help you get the whole kit sound. If you’re doing close micing, i would gate each one so that it only opens when each cymbal is hit. Great question.
What about one overhead drum mic? We don't have enough mics to mic the whole set.
Hey Great Question. If you’re just using one mic, I don’t recommend generally to gate that mic. You’d want the “environment” to be a part of the sound of the drums as a whole. You’d get undesirable “pumping” if you try to gate and get it dialed in based on the dynamics of the drummer. Hope this helps!
@@austinharmanmixes I thought that might be the case. Thx!
@@Zebrajellyfishphoto you bet!