On 5/20/12 17:23 , John Higdon wrote:
> In article
> <
e90e3570-d215-47c4...@x6g2000pbh.googlegroups.com>,
> chris319 <
c319...@aol.com> wrote:
>
>> Take note of post #14 in this thread about the Electro-Voice RE20, a
>> commonly-used mic in radio broadcasting. I know MicDaddy. He works for
>> E-V.
>>
>>
http://www.gearslutz.com/board/high-end/719912-ev-re20-noise.html#post7897474
>
> Unfortunately, I have to agree with the recommendation to try a Shure
> SM-7B. Not only does the microphone seem to be more impervious to stray
> magnetic fields, it is a better-sounding microphone for voice. I have
> never been a fan of the RE-20 and frankly I have never seen what the
> attraction is. Many stations use them, but not mine. When I came on
> board here, the first things to go were the RE-20s. The air staff, in
> chorus, proclaimed "wow...what a difference".
Electrovoice -- I want to say it was durng the 70's -- put a good
deal of effort into getting RE-20's into radio stations. There were
price/volume bonuses, and SM-5B and SM-7 were expensive. So,
stations picked them up in droves. A number of my stations used
them. And abandoned them, when I brought my SM-7 into the production
studio. Once the work hit the air, jocks and manglement took notice.
And changes were made.
Over the years, I evaluated a lot of microphones for my stations.
RE-20's were always on the list by manglement and engineering
specification, but I found them to be, sonically, wildly
inconsistent unit to unit, and within production runs, and prone to
significant sonic change over time. SM-7's were/are more consistent
unit to unit, within and without production runs, and were more
likely to retain their sonics. They were also more likely to produce
a good sound with a jock's poor mic technique.
Every station I worked at, eventually found their ways to SM-7's.
>
> But the most unruly mics I ever had to use were Sony C37A (large
> diaphram capacitor studio mics). While these units can't be beat for
> recording symphony orchestras, they are damned near impossible to make
> the human voice sound pleasing in a studio utilizing them.
Capacitor studio mics are pretty much a license to frustrate. Few
at radio know how to use them. Or have the mic techniques necessary
to bring out the great potential built into them. I don't know how
many times I tried to find a workable large diaphragm capacitor mic
for on-air and production use at radio stations. The mics were
great. The techniques applied to them...not so much.
I had a manager who noticed that Howard Stern was using a Neumann
when his radio show was on television. So, he ordered that one be
acquired for evaluation in the main on-air studio. I believe it was
a U-87. He about had a stroke on the price.
Not nearly as bad as the stroke the engineer had when he caught a
weekender spraying Lysol in to that Neumann microphone the week it
was installed.
>