> I can tell you from experience ( and having a pair of 'em
> myself ) that there's a great number of television
> voiceovers done on the 416. Specifically TV promo...
>
> If you're looking for a more nuanced, intimate
> performance...more presence...then it calls for a large
> diaphragm mic...
>
> I've got a 416 that I use all the time...both at work and at
> home.
>
> Also have a TLM 103, and a few other fun condensers and even
> an RE-27 layin' around somewhere...
>
> Every mic is good for something...the 416 is a great all
> around I think. It's made for using as a boom mic...but it
> has been found to be an excellent mic for studio use as
> well. Its tight pattern makes processing almost
> unnecessary...
>
> The audio I send to TV clients is almost always dry...almost
> no compression what-so-ever.
>
> TV mixers hate the way radio guys blast everything with
> compression...
>
> You might want to cut your low-end a touch...back off your
> compression...use the cleanest path to your recorder
> possible.
>
> I go 416 to ISA 220 to Digi 002...
>
> no compression...just a clean signal.
>
> For radio reads, I ratchet up the compression a bit to give
> it the snap and sizzle...
>
Mike
I agree, the 416 rocks! After producing John Wells for years and learning that he uses the 416 to a Mackie 1202 - nothing else in the chain - I bought a 416.
I run my 416 to a Symetrix 528, then a Mackie pre-amp (1402), not much from the Mackie, then into Adobe and tweak from there. I leave the EQ OFF on the Symetrix.
Now, John Wells has told me "I don't need any extra compression...", and he;'s right. Me? I need a little help, lol!
For those who aren't aware, Ernie Anderson pioneered the use of the 416 for VO when working for ABC, then later for radio vo.
Chuck
WRWK/WTOD/WXKR Toledo<P ID="signature">______________
www.OhioRadio.net
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