Cello with piano accompany in Church
Cello with piano accompany in Church
Trying to record a cello audition in church, with a grand piano accompany. It is a medium size catholic church with high arc ceiling. There will be no audience so I can place mic and camera anywhere I like. As a beginner, I only have a sE8 omni pair to use, connected to ZOOM F6. Any suggestion on how to place this mic pair? Greatly appreciated.
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
If you want a stereo recording then use the microphones as spaced omnis and have the cellist positioned centrally in front of the piano soundboard. Hopefully they will self balance for levels.
You’ll have to experiment with how close the microphones are to the performers to balance with the amount of reverb in the room.
You’ll have to experiment with how close the microphones are to the performers to balance with the amount of reverb in the room.
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
is there a rule of thumb for the space between omni mics? I have seen AB 30. Is 30 cm enough to create a good stereo image? Will 1-2 meters be better?
For cello distance, what is the range to try? Is 1 to 2 meters a good start?
For cello distance, what is the range to try? Is 1 to 2 meters a good start?
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
I’ve never used spaced omnis so I can’t comment, I’m just suggesting what I’ve read. I think spacing them a meter apart could give you that ‘hole in the middle’ effect and might not be very Mono compatible, I think that’s where the Decca tree comes in with the third centrally positioned microphone.
I suggested the cellist being centrally positioned but you might want the cello to be slightly left or right.
The distance from performers to microphones is something to decide on while setting up/rehearsing as it depends on the amount of reverberation in the room.
I suggested the cellist being centrally positioned but you might want the cello to be slightly left or right.
The distance from performers to microphones is something to decide on while setting up/rehearsing as it depends on the amount of reverberation in the room.
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
I’d use around 30cm spacing and focus on placement to get the best balance of cello versus piano versus room, bearing in mind if it’s for a cello audition you may give a little more emphasis to the cello so the adjudicators can make their assessment.
I’d probably also use the omnis 90 degrees off axis to attenuate any HF lift they may have on axis.
Bob
I’d probably also use the omnis 90 degrees off axis to attenuate any HF lift they may have on axis.
Bob
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Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
Nailed it, Bob! I can’t better any of your suggestions, not that I’m that clever, but I recorded with spaced omnis quite a bit when I wanted full, even bass for organs, etc. usually 30-60cm spacing.
I’d be looking to get the cello sufficiently nearer to the mikes than the piano that both players can play comfortably without the piano drowning the cello. That should help give the cello the extra focus Bob mentions.
I’d be looking to get the cello sufficiently nearer to the mikes than the piano that both players can play comfortably without the piano drowning the cello. That should help give the cello the extra focus Bob mentions.
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
Everything has been said, I would just add cooperative players, who are prepared to move around, plenty of rehearsal time, and a decent control room space that’s isolated from the performance area, and this is what my job used to be, mic monkey, moving the mics so the engineer didn’t have to keep running backwards and forwards, and this is where talkback comes in handy.
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
Before you do anything else, listen to the ensemble in the room. Once that is in your brain you will know what to capture. We're assuming it's a grand piano... is it?
A very tall mic stand is needed since the best part of the sound projects upwards. I've had success with a regular boom mic stand at almost full extension for a string quartet in a similar space. As well as the room reverb, you'll need to think about how close the mics are to the audience. People can make a lot of noise when they're not clapping. But you also want to capture a lively and enthusiastic sounding response.
Listen listen listen to the mic output with good isolated headphones and playbacks. Do not rush this part. Judge the mic width by ear and use a meter such as Izotope imager, you want it to mostly be between 0 and +1. IIRC I went to something like 33cm the last time. It depends on the room reverb mainly, but I don't usually analyse it that much I go by feel. With that quartet I was also trying to ensure that the second violin was clear because the soloist was often a bit on the loud side. Getting the mic stand to full height extension achieved that.
So much for my views. Here are some relevant articles from the magazine:
https://www.soundonsound.com/techniques ... ion-part-1
https://www.soundonsound.com/sound-advi ... cord-choir
A very tall mic stand is needed since the best part of the sound projects upwards. I've had success with a regular boom mic stand at almost full extension for a string quartet in a similar space. As well as the room reverb, you'll need to think about how close the mics are to the audience. People can make a lot of noise when they're not clapping. But you also want to capture a lively and enthusiastic sounding response.
Listen listen listen to the mic output with good isolated headphones and playbacks. Do not rush this part. Judge the mic width by ear and use a meter such as Izotope imager, you want it to mostly be between 0 and +1. IIRC I went to something like 33cm the last time. It depends on the room reverb mainly, but I don't usually analyse it that much I go by feel. With that quartet I was also trying to ensure that the second violin was clear because the soloist was often a bit on the loud side. Getting the mic stand to full height extension achieved that.
So much for my views. Here are some relevant articles from the magazine:
https://www.soundonsound.com/techniques ... ion-part-1
https://www.soundonsound.com/sound-advi ... cord-choir
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Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
Gentlemen, best to read the op before commenting. It’s a grand piano, no audience and a recording for audition………. Best to keep it simple with focus on the cello to enable adjudicators to assess. Just checked out the frequency plot of SE8s - yes, I’d angle them 90 degrees off axis as suggested!
Bob
Bob
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Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
... without wishing to "rain on your parade" so as to speak, a few years ago I was called upon to record the national finals of the Young Virtuoso Awards which was a similar set-up of soloists in a church ... the preliminary heats had been recorded with a stereo pair much has been suggested here, in this case with a couple of Rode NT1000, but I opted to add two NT5 spot mics as well and record on a Roland R-44 ... just as well as it poured with rain throughout with the result that the stereo pair was almost useless and the spot mikes saved the day ... worth bearing in mind if there is no possibility of retakes ...
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
Bob Bickerton wrote: ↑Sun Oct 02, 2022 9:57 am Gentlemen, best to read the op before commenting. It’s a grand piano, no audience and a recording for audition………. Best to keep it simple with focus on the cello to enable adjudicators to assess. Just checked out the frequency plot of SE8s - yes, I’d angle them 90 degrees off axis as suggested!
Bob
Good call

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Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
Bob Bickerton wrote: ↑Sun Oct 02, 2022 9:57 am Gentlemen, best to read the op before commenting. It’s a grand piano, no audience and a recording for audition………. Best to keep it simple with focus on the cello to enable adjudicators to assess. Just checked out the frequency plot of SE8s - yes, I’d angle them 90 degrees off axis as suggested!
Bob
really a newby question: What does 90 degree off axis look like? If I am holding the mics in front of the player, instead of pointing the mics to the cello (in the front), left mic pointing to left and right mic pointing to the right?
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
ceejay wrote: ↑Sun Oct 02, 2022 11:47 am ... without wishing to "rain on your parade" so as to speak, a few years ago I was called upon to record the national finals of the Young Virtuoso Awards which was a similar set-up of soloists in a church ... the preliminary heats had been recorded with a stereo pair much has been suggested here, in this case with a couple of Rode NT1000, but I opted to add two NT5 spot mics as well and record on a Roland R-44 ... just as well as it poured with rain throughout with the result that the stereo pair was almost useless and the spot mikes saved the day ... worth bearing in mind if there is no possibility of retakes ...
So how did you place the two NT5 spot mics?
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
Tomás Mulcahy wrote: ↑Sun Oct 02, 2022 12:35 pmBob Bickerton wrote: ↑Sun Oct 02, 2022 9:57 am Gentlemen, best to read the op before commenting. It’s a grand piano, no audience and a recording for audition………. Best to keep it simple with focus on the cello to enable adjudicators to assess. Just checked out the frequency plot of SE8s - yes, I’d angle them 90 degrees off axis as suggested!
Bob
Good callWhy 90 degrees though?
The SE8, like many Omni SDCs, has a high frequency lift, so is tuned for use in the diffuse field. However, this lift is less prominent or even neutralised when used 90 degrees off axis to the source, the body of the microphone acting to attenuate higher frequencies.
Now whether the above scenario is deemed diffuse or near field is dependent on the distance the mics are used from the source, but either way recording a stringed instrument, especially if the player is a student (just guessing here), it would likely be best to avoid the HF lift and use a flatter response.
It’s a fairly common technique when recording piano in the near field say with Neumann KM183s to use them 90 degrees off axis.
Hugh come along and give a more technical response, but that’s the basic thinking.
Bob
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Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
Bob Bickerton wrote: ↑Sun Oct 02, 2022 2:03 pm Hugh come along and give a more technical response, but that’s the basic thinking.
Here's a post from Hugh from a few months ago...
https://www.soundonsound.com/forum/view ... ld#p808093
.
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Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
So for the OP, just to clarify, 90 degrees off axis means pointing vertically upwards rather than towards the instruments.
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Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
It's all been covered well.
IME the other things to be aware of are traffic noise and visitors!
The mics higher up can work very well to get the best sound balance. Do quite a few short tests adjusting the placement to find the best spot. Once the audio is sorted, you are allowed to think about where the camera might be placed.
In this sort of situation I now often use IEMs for monitoring.
IME the other things to be aware of are traffic noise and visitors!
The mics higher up can work very well to get the best sound balance. Do quite a few short tests adjusting the placement to find the best spot. Once the audio is sorted, you are allowed to think about where the camera might be placed.

In this sort of situation I now often use IEMs for monitoring.
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
... there was nothing subtle there I assure you ... one was under the lid of the grand piano and the other was on the variety of soloists like soprano, violin, flute in a fast-moving, live show so, having not used the NT5 before, I dropped back into my TV audio days with KM84 and instructed my assistant to, in the short changeover time between acts, put the mic as close as possible and point it in the vague direction of where the sound was coming from without causing an obstruction ... the final winner was a classical guitarist who I'm sure gained extra points for persevering through the worst of the storm ... the guy who did the mix for the national radio broadcast told me that for her performance he used only the spot mic, dialled up a "church" stereo reverb preset and dropped it across the mic to roughly match the other contestants ... "belt and braces" sound production - like the boy scouts "be prepared" for anything!
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
Isn’t it just 20 degrees less than an ORTF pair? Should look like a shallow ORTF?
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
We're not talking about the stereo capture side of things here but the pressure build up at the capsule. If you're using omni's then ORTF isn't a thing, nor is anything else that relies on the directional properties of the capsule. The off-axis suggestion here is to manage the effect of HF build up.
Hugh's thread that James linked to above covers it.
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Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
blinddrew wrote: ↑Mon Oct 03, 2022 8:48 am
We're not talking about the stereo capture side of things here but the pressure build up at the capsule. If you're using omni's then ORTF isn't a thing, nor is anything else that relies on the directional properties of the capsule. The off-axis suggestion here is to manage the effect of HF build up.
Hugh's thread that James linked to above covers it.
I’m just talking about how it looks.
Re: Cello with piano accompany in Church
It looks like two microphones, 30 cm apart, standing vertically upright.
Not really like ORTF at all.
Not really like ORTF at all.
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