One more microphone…

I yielded to the temptation… the Marantz SG-58 “Professional Audio Scope” (302 mm shotgun mic) was apparently introduced at $79, then slowly ratcheted down in price over time. Last week it briefly hit $13.44 (Amazon Prime shipping) and I “bit”. Hard to pass up at that price, even just out of curiosity. Shortly after I ordered the price bounced back up to $49.98.

DIY SM7b microphone?

Maybe this dynamic microphone classic is worth the $400 price tag, “Made in Mexico” and all. Maybe not. It has certainly proven itself many times over. Thing is, I’ve got no business owning one even at a quarter of that price. I’ve got negligible microphone experience in recent decades (when I last sang on stage the Electro-Voice EV664 was the mic of choice- ancient history). There’s no way I can remotely justify spending $400 (not to mention $150 for a Cloudlifter CL1, which seems to be the “trick” setup) on this thing.

Of course, I still want one.

Sense and nonsense: Studio Monitors

I may be about to make an exception for “studio (reference) monitors”. I have, admittedly, pretty much zero experience with them, and I went into learning more about them with an open mind. Having done so, I can’t say that they are or are not worth the money that professionals pay for them (which is often extreme), but I can say for sure that many of the reasons that I’m being fed for that make no sense.

Gear Lust – The Zoom H6

There are things that are very cool functionally but aren’t impressive to look at, and there are things that are cool to look at but not impressive functionally.

In the first category I think first of the Raspberry Pi single-board computer. There is a ton of potential in these little things, but you really have to know what it is and then think about what you can do with it to really appreciate that. To the eye, it’s just a very small circuit board, it doesn’t look particularly interesting, much less cool.

In the second category I think first of the prop-replica field, and especially the sort of stuff that Adam Savage turns out in Youtube videos. These look very, very cool, but it’s all skin-deep, the bottom line is that they may look and sound and even to some degree act as though it does something really interesting, but it’s all “a tale. Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing”. It’s basically a toy, a fake… and somehow that really isn’t cool at all.

Home Recording Centered on a Raspberry Pi, How feasible?

As I recently posted I came across a “deal” on the Behringer “U-PHORIA” (ugh, stupid name) UMC22 and UMC202HD USB audio interfaces, for $40 or $45. Even though I don’t anticipate getting a lot of use of out of these for… well, who knows. If there’s a move in the offing, which seems inevitable now, it might be a year or more… still, it got me thinking.

I was reading a lot of articles and watching a lot of Youtube videos on the functional differences between condenser microphones and dynamic microphones, and the problems of filtering out background noise, and one of the consistent gripes was about the microphones picking up computer fan noise.

Since I’ve done a lot with Raspberry Pi computers and have several of them around, I jokingly thought “why not just record with a Raspberry Pi? No fan!”.

Then the more I thought about it, the less it seemed like a joke.

Seriously, why not?