Vintage Microphones

Started by CraigLennon, February 25, 2014, 06:29:18 AM

CraigLennon

I'm looking for an ACTUAL vintage microphone not a styled microphone.

Every search I conduct only brings up style microphones which are mostly just rubbish.

Can anyone  recommend a site that actually sells old, good condition microphones.
"I thought I'd never live without her but I got by in time" - The Jam, I Got By In Time.

Currently playing; Tanglewood TW28 CE XB Evolution Exotic Series (Nashville Tuning), Takamine G Series EG430S (Standard) & Gibson J45 (Standard).

www.craiglennonmusic.com
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thetworegs

There's always eBay a quick search found this one ..... http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Vintage-Original-1960s-Shure-Model-545S-Unidyne-III-Microphone-Mic-Dynamic-Model-/251435926763?pt=US_Pro_Audio_Microphones&hash=item3a8abfc4eb I'm sure there's more not sure if it's good or not it was just a name I recognised.....
   
If Life is a dream then use your imagination

Blooby


I think this site may, but I wouldn't expect them to be cheap: http://vintageking.com/

Good luck.

Blooby

Flash Harry

There's quite some rubbish spoken about vintage audio gear. Mostly it had poor HF response and early low end roll off, which didn't matter when you were recording to vinyl, (poor HF response and early low end roll off) coupled with valve amps, (high distortion figures, lumps of iron transformers to drive, hysteresis, crossover distortion etc.) but modern signal chains are clinical and show up the weaknesses in old microphones.

Ribbon mics used to be regarded as the 'best' sounding, but catch a plosive and you run the risk of damaging the ribbon. 

1970's condenser AKG's are probably the earliest that would sound right (unless you can find a telefunken U47) but these are rare and probably sound worse than a modern AGK 414 which has a retro(ish) look.

If you want the 1950's rock n roll radiator grill type, be prepared for noisy muddy vocals.
We are here on Earth to fart around. Don't let anybody tell you any different
- Kurt Vonnegut.

Burtog

can i ask why are you searching for a real vintage microphone?

I would have thought there are modern processors that replicate old mics or is it a look kind of thing?
recorder
Boss BR-800

bruno

I have a friend who worked for the BBC - he picked up some expensive mikes that we going to be thrown into a bin. We AB against my SE Valve mike (which you can get for around £250 these days), very little difference. Not exactly vintage, however modern mike have a brilliant price/performance ratio. I would bother with a vintage mike for home recording.

Having said that, some people like the reduced sound of older equipment, as they are trying to reproduce a 60's sound for example.
B
     
recorder
Boss BR-1600

Flash Harry

Yeah, BBC TV had AKG condensers when I was there. They were expensive enough to be individually marked and regularly audited.

I'd have loved to have had one.
We are here on Earth to fart around. Don't let anybody tell you any different
- Kurt Vonnegut.

henwrench

I love the vintage/modern argument. It tickles me to my cock-rim.

          'Vintage' wasn't vintage when it was being used. It was brand new. Or 'modern', at the time. Just buy the best mic you can afford. A Nuemann U87 will cost about £2,000. An AKG c414 will cost about £650. Both are industry standard. Both are really fucking good. Both will pick up the sound of your fingernails growing.

          Hendrix used the newest of Strats, no old shit for Jimi. The Beatles championed the use of transistor amps (check the 'roof top' gig).

                                                                   henwrench
The job of the artist is to deepen the mystery - Francis Bacon

English by birth, Brummie by the Grace of God

recorder
Boss Micro BR




IanR







recorder
PreSonus Studio 1824
recorder
PreSonus FaderPort 8
recorder
PreSonus Studio One

CraigLennon

Cheers for the replies.

I'm looking at some of the mic's that artists used during certain recordings/live sounds and trying to just experiment with their sounds.

I'm just making a list of websites that will sell old mic's. 60's & 70's are the year's I'm looking at.
"I thought I'd never live without her but I got by in time" - The Jam, I Got By In Time.

Currently playing; Tanglewood TW28 CE XB Evolution Exotic Series (Nashville Tuning), Takamine G Series EG430S (Standard) & Gibson J45 (Standard).

www.craiglennonmusic.com
www.facebook.com/craiglennonmusic
www.twitter.com/CraigLennonM