this post was submitted on 29 May 2024
11 points (92.3% liked)

Audio Engineering

354 readers
10 users here now

A place to discuss all things audio engineering! Please keep discussion civil and professional.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
11
Recording an orchestra and choir (self.audioengineering)
submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by PsyKiere to c/[email protected]
 

Hello!

I'm in a situation where I'm coordinating the recording of an orchestra and choir concert with a sound engineer with which we have not had the best experience in the past. So I'm trying to find the best way to record the concert so we can tell him how to place the mics (He's open to discussion and agreeing with that).

The concert is happening in a church with a full orchestra and a choir of about 80 people.

  • Of course, the goal will be to rely mainly on a main stereo pair. I was thinking about a ORTF pair a few meters about the conductor's head. Would a Decca tree be better if we have the possibility?
  • I read that the 3:1 rule to mic the choir is pretty standard but my concern is that the microphones would pick up a lot of brass which are really close to the choir. I don't think I should get the mics too close to choir to have an homogeneous sound. What would be a good distance from the choir and will increasing the height of the microphones be enough to minimize brass in that context?
  • What kind of microphones should be used for spot mics for instrument sections? (Cardioid?) And at what distance should they be placed to have some flexibility in the final mix?
  • Are there any mics that I'm missing that could further improve the recording?

These concerns and knowledge have been accumulated from personal research, so feel free to correct me on anything! I just want to get the best sound possible for a choir that has been practicing really hard.

Thanks!

top 1 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] Sequentialsilence 2 points 6 months ago

As with anything audio the answer is it depends. What equipment is at our disposal? How much time do we have to prepare? Etc. What I will say is there are no “rules” in audio, just guidelines. Try to learn what the rule was attempting to accomplish and see if it’s applicable for you. The 3:1 rule is so rarely applicable for me in the live and broadcast world that I never even consider it. The moment you put more than 2 microphones in a space the 3:1 is no longer applicable.

What I usually have remind people of is that the conductor should be doing most of the mixing for you and all you need to do is capture it. A stereo configuration either above the conductor’s head, or if it’s being filmed, directly in front of their music stand usually gets you 90% of what you need. That stereo configuration could be XY, ORTF, A-B, or binaural depending on space and budget. I never run a decca tree, I’ve always gotten better results out of a simple spaced pair. I will however run a williams star or standard star.

If possible I would do an area mic for each section of the orchestra and choir. For the choir specifically pay very close attention to the polar pickup pattern of your mics and use that to fight the inverse square law. You will be micing closer with the choir than the orchestra and as a result the inverse square law will play more into the micing results. If you can, position the orchestra in the null of the choir mics, that will help in the final mix.

As for style of mics (condenser, cardioid, whatever) that all depends on your room. Condensers are great, but dynamics work just fine. I tend to use condensers as I like the subtleties they produce, but if you find you are getting too much noise bleed or room echo, especially in the choir section, go dynamic. As for pickup patterns I can’t tell you what kind to get as that’s way to specific to your room and layout, if you’re unsure a cardioid is always a safe bet.