The piano has a very rich sound radiation with a complicated spatial distribution at short distance . Two mics at different locations (typically 1 m apart) close to the instrument capture a richer sound than a single one. A single mic must be put at a larger distance from the piano where the sound field is more homogeneous. But then you get more reverberation from the room (the undirect sound due to reflections on the walls), which gives a less accurate sound.
A-B is better than coincident technique (XY, Blumlein, MS, ORTF ...) for miking piano at short distance (< 2 m) . I said 1 m as a typical figure : it means somewhere between 40 cm, the minimum for AB like here and 1.5 m, the distance you get if you put the mics at both ends over an upright piano.
What are all these setups? A-B, Blumlein, MS, etc.? Can someone give a simple, layperson explanation? Thanks!
Dang. The link isn't working. Even when shortened.
I have been considering thishttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B0002YLDZA/It is a battery powered stereo condenser mic so no phantom power/preamp is required. In principle you can plug this directly into the audio-in jack on a laptop or camcorder.Anyone care to burst my bubble?
Uh, so . . . back to English . . . For someone like me who doesn't know much about all that and doesn't have a huge budget to buy all this equipment and/or hire someone, what would be an easier way that would still produce a quality sound? Or is there such thing?
I have been considering thishttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B0002YLDZA/It is a battery powered stereo condenser mic so no phantom power/preamp is required. In principle you can plug this directly into the audio-in jack on a laptop or camcorder.
I have been considering thishttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B0002YLDZA/
I've just seen an ad for the Kawai PR-1, designed to record your piano performance direct to CD. It seems like a really neat, simple solution https://www.kawaius.com/main_links/digital/Special/pr-1_db_review.htmlCan you give me any advice regarding this please? It seems a little expensive.