Recording classical music
Never have I heard a microphone capture sound moving in air with this degree of precision. On a recent classical piano recording project, using the Grados with a Korg DSD recorder for a recording session of a Steinway Grand, the pianist was very impressed after hearing the playback. “It sounds exactly like it does while I’m playing the piano,” he said. And on a local bluegrass project I recorded with the same system, both recorded vocals and acoustic instruments sounded exactly like they did live in the room — with all the tonal balance and imaging intact.
On a recent classical piano recording project, using the Grados with a Korg DSD recorder for a recording session of a Steinway Grand, the pianist was very impressed after hearing the playback. “It sounds exactly like it does while I’m playing the piano,” he said.
I recently recorded a private classical concert in a home, comprising a music room with an audience of about 60 people. The Baroque ensemble played period instruments from the 17th century, including baroque violin, viola da gamba, theorbo and baroque guitar
I set the pair of Grado microphones on two mic stands — five feet off the wood floor and four feet apart pointed straight up toward the ceiling, which is something I would never do with conventional omnidirectional microphones. (The HMP-1s are so “omni” that, even at 90 degrees off axis, the claimed response is good beyond 20 kHz.)
The microphones were linked straight to a Korg MR-1000 DSD recorder, which I operated from my lap, sitting in the first row in front of the musicians. Since I was right up front, I got a sense of how the music sounded in this room.
After the concert, I transferred the audio directly to my Sonoma DSD workstation, and then played it back. The recorded sound was better than I remembered hearing it live! As a recording engineer for nearly 50 years, that kind of sonic experience has rarely occurred.
I have done a number of DSD recordings with the HMP-1 recording system and still can’t believe how accurate it is. However, there are a few caveats. First, the HMP-1 has such high output that some recording devices, such as the Korg MR1000, can be overdriven — especially when an acoustical source is at a high sound level. With loud concerts or soloists, mic’d up close, you definitely can get overload distortion.
Using an outboard mic preamp, such as the Earthworks 1024 microphone preamp, with the Korg MR-2000S gives more control of the input signal to the recorder. (The Grado HMP-1s and Earthworks preamp are an ideal match. Tonal balances are right on — with distortion so low you forget you are listening to a recording).
My other caution is that the Grados’ amazing resolution capability makes the system brutally honest in what it picks up. If you are recording in an awful-sounding room, you will hear it. Conventional mics, depending on their sonic flavor, can sometimes color or soften a bad-sounding room, but not the Grados. Overly reflective spaces that sound really hard and edgy in real life will sound just as bad when recorded using the HMP-1s. Choose your recording space carefully.
In future recordings, I am looking forward to using more than two HMP-1s. I believe using multiple, ultra-accurate Grado mics for highlighting ambiance, for example, would not compromise the phase integrity of the main microphones — which is often a problem with most conventional microphones.
The verdict
If you are looking for a big fat bottom or a sizzly top-end sonic signature for your recording tasks, the Grado HMP-1 is not the mic for you. But if you are looking for the ultimate in accuracy and have access to nice-sounding rooms for recording, check out the Grado HMP-1 Recording Instrument system. The more resolution you record with (24-bit or, even better, DSD), the more real it sounds. It gets a Stellar Sound award with a capital “S.” For more information and dealer information, click Grado HMP-1. A professional audio engineer for almost 50 years (Sound 80, DMP Records), Tom Jung reviews home theater, audiophile and high-end recording gear for the Everything Audio Network. He tests products from his home studio in North Carolina. He can be reached via email at tjeverything.audio@verizon.net.
Manufacturer's Comments:
Let me thank Everything Audio Network and Tom Jung for the fabulous review on my new HMP-1 holographic recording scanner system. you can rest assured that I will do everything in my power to continue to create whatever I can to further the quality of recorded sound for the industry.
I've gotten some calls asking me if it's true that the HMP-1 system records well only in good rooms? My answer is no; that is not true. The HMP-1 records perfectly in any room. Tom Jung is 100% accurate in what he said, and I agree with him completely. But that is not what Tom said.
What Tom said was that because the HMP-1 records everything with such accuracy, it will absolutely record the musical program with great accuracy. And at the same time, the crappy room sound will be recorded with the same great accuracy and mixed to the original program. That is a formula for disaster.
When you are on location stuck with what I call crappy room, there are basically three things you can do to do. Go find a good room and start over; use the shortcomings of conventional mics, which include lots of varied colorations, as distractive filtering tools; or use our new accessory to the HMP-1 — the enhancement/diffusion spheres. They can create good rooms from bad rooms, big rooms from little rooms and lots of other things. I have been recording sound since 1949, and believe me, I've had to record in a lot of crappy rooms; there is no way that I would leave you defenseless against crappy rooms.
It is my fault that Tom did not know about the enhancement/ diffuser spheres or I am sure he would have mentioned them in the review. I feel relatively certain that he will review them reasonably soon. We will start deliveries in about sixty days, and they better be good, or I'm going to know about it.
Read and see about the enhancement/diffusers on my web site joegrado.com or google it on joe grado sig.com Enjoy the beginning of perfect sound.
Joe Grado
President
Joe Grado
Signature
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1 comment:
I was a bit surprised at earlier versions of the Grado mic; they seemed to be based on the Schoeps Stereospher which was in turn based on an even earlier Neumann design. I suspect the redesign may have had something to do with patent infringement, but Gado has apparently pulled victory from the jaws of defeat. I consider Mr. Jung to be one of the geniusses of modern audio and his analysis must be given great weight. I await further tests of the filters. John Dozier
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