Micing a piano
Micing a piano
Anyone every mic'd an upright piano?
Mic choice? Dynamics, condensers? etc.
Mic placement?
Where to start - I'm not even that sure of the layout inside a piano!
Mic choice? Dynamics, condensers? etc.
Mic placement?
Where to start - I'm not even that sure of the layout inside a piano!
- vomitHatSteve
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Re: Micing a piano
Yep. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oT3MdL-p_Q
I opened the top and an SDC on either end pointed vaguely towards the center. Then shuffled them around a few times.
The key things I gathered in my research were:
Remove any panels you can to get microphones into the piano.
Condensers - proximity (or lack thereof) is gonna make life real difficult with dynamics.
The pedals are surprisingly loud. Check for those.
Hire a real pianist if you're bad at it like I am.
I opened the top and an SDC on either end pointed vaguely towards the center. Then shuffled them around a few times.
The key things I gathered in my research were:
Remove any panels you can to get microphones into the piano.
Condensers - proximity (or lack thereof) is gonna make life real difficult with dynamics.
The pedals are surprisingly loud. Check for those.
Hire a real pianist if you're bad at it like I am.
Re: Micing a piano
Cheers, Steve.
Re: Micing a piano
I found this toovomitHatSteve wrote: ↑Tue May 07, 2019 12:27 pm Yep. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oT3MdL-p_Q
I opened the top and an SDC on either end pointed vaguely towards the center. Then shuffled them around a few times.
The key things I gathered in my research were:
Remove any panels you can to get microphones into the piano.
Condensers - proximity (or lack thereof) is gonna make life real difficult with dynamics.
The pedals are surprisingly loud. Check for those.
Hire a real pianist if you're bad at it like I am.
https://www.soundonsound.com/techniques ... ight-piano
Basically - I have access to a Piano, a pianist and a reason to record one. Figured it would be interesting.
Re: Micing a piano
I've miked a piano a few times. I spent no time giving it much thought beyond just putting two mics up over the top of it. I treated it like drum overheads. Came out fine to me.
Rebel Yell
Re: Micing a piano
as a piano tech, the soundboard is essentially like the top of an acoustic.
I think you could mic the back of the piano getting all the sound from the soundboard and you'd pick up less action and pedal noise
I think you could mic the back of the piano getting all the sound from the soundboard and you'd pick up less action and pedal noise
- WhiskeyJack
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Re: Micing a piano
I've never done it. only just DI from a keyboard HaHa!! Should be a fun challenge though i suspect.

Re: Micing a piano
Yeah, that's where I was gonna start. I was gonna open the lid, stick a pair of C1000S about 30cm above the top about 15cm I'm from the edges and work from there.
Re: Micing a piano
once again ...... most of the sound of a upright comes out of the back which is why i always told customers to not put the piano up against the wall ...... leave at least 3 or 4 inches ....... you have to try it of course but I would not be inclined to open the lid since that let mechanical noises out.
On grands you often see mics being put underneath the piano to catch the soundboard best ..... and that's essentially the back of a vertical
On grands you often see mics being put underneath the piano to catch the soundboard best ..... and that's essentially the back of a vertical
Re: Micing a piano
What Lt, Greg and VHS say. I believe to do it "properly", you'd treat it similarly to overheads - using a matched pair, ideally, of SDCs - just a matter of working out the positioning. I'm sure the google can tell you more.
- vomitHatSteve
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Re: Micing a piano
Well, except Bob disagrees with me and Gerg!

JD, I'm pretty sure I worked from the same SOS page you found.
I'm not gonna second-guess Bob's expertise. I certainly have no idea what I'm doing.
That said, my piano is against the wall!
Re: Micing a piano
I was assuming JD could successfully integrate the various suggestions and come up with the right answer.vomitHatSteve wrote: ↑Wed May 08, 2019 12:29 pmWell, except Bob disagrees with me and Gerg!
JD, I'm pretty sure I worked from the same SOS page you found.
I'm not gonna second-guess Bob's expertise. I certainly have no idea what I'm doing.
That said, my piano is against the wall!
Re: Micing a piano
The piano I will be a attempting to mic is also against the wall in the corner of a room.
- vomitHatSteve
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Re: Micing a piano
Sorry, Bob. Sometimes the practicalities of positioning a piece of furniture have to trump how it sounds!
Re: Micing a piano
I suspend my piano from the ceiling so the sound radiates into all dimensions of time and space.
It's tough to play it up there though.
It's tough to play it up there though.
Rebel Yell
Re: Micing a piano
I tried to post a GIF of Lionel Richie dancing on the ceiling, but it didn't work. The gag just doesn't land when typed out in text...
Re: Micing a piano
lol .... no apologies needed ...... lots of people open the lid to mic and if you add the fact that of the things in the world I care about, this isn't one of them, I'm good!
I look forward to hearing how it goes.

I look forward to hearing how it goes.
Re: Micing a piano
Is the piano the focus of the recording? If it's just "filler", you might be able to get away with a single mic, positioned back and over the player's shoulder a bit and pointed towards where the music rests.
http://eastofcleveland.com/m/photograph3.mp3 (from a really early period in my recording attempts, done with a USB mic!)
Also note that if you're going to try a "stereo pair" like drum overheads, you'll also have phasing issues between the left/right mics, so position the mics with the 3:1 rule in mind, and all that. (I was at a place with grand piano once and thought it would be neat to record my daughter playing something on the piano, I wasn't careful with how close I had the mics to each other, and the end result wasn't great.)
http://eastofcleveland.com/m/photograph3.mp3 (from a really early period in my recording attempts, done with a USB mic!)
Also note that if you're going to try a "stereo pair" like drum overheads, you'll also have phasing issues between the left/right mics, so position the mics with the 3:1 rule in mind, and all that. (I was at a place with grand piano once and thought it would be neat to record my daughter playing something on the piano, I wasn't careful with how close I had the mics to each other, and the end result wasn't great.)
awesome youtube comment of the day
Bill and Ted time traveled and brought a bass player from 1973, a drummer from 1984 and a guitar player from 1995. Now they're spreading peace all over the world
Bill and Ted time traveled and brought a bass player from 1973, a drummer from 1984 and a guitar player from 1995. Now they're spreading peace all over the world
- vomitHatSteve
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Re: Micing a piano
See... now I'm thinking about Feng Shui... Where would a dragon want its piano?vomitHatSteve wrote: ↑Thu May 09, 2019 11:44 am Sorry, Bob. Sometimes the practicalities of positioning a piece of furniture have to trump how it sounds!
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