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Episode: 3331
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Title: HPR3331: Audio for Podcasting: Episode 1 - The Microphone
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3331/hpr3331.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 20:57:53
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3331 for Mundi, 10th of May 2021.
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Today's show is entitled, Audio for Podcasting, Episode 1, The Microphone and is part of the
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series podcasting, How Do It Is Hosted by Finch Sarah and is about 23 minutes long and carries
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an explicit flag. The summary is Finch Shares Tips and Tricks on Producing Quality Audio for HPR
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Episodes. This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthost.com. Get 15% discount on all
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shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15. Better web hosting that's Aniston Fair at Ananasthost.com.
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Hey, what's good Hacker Public Radio? This is Taj and I wanted to do another little
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episode. This is probably going to turn out to be more than one episode, dealing with
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simply just audio and how to sort of work your audio to make it sound better. Now Hacker Public
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Radio has policy that as long as it's intelligible that the audio is good enough. For me, I know
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that that's not good enough, so I want to help people get to a point where they have a little bit
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better audio than just it works. So today we're going to start at the very beginning of that
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process. We're going to talk about the signal chain in the very beginning of the signal chain,
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which is the microphone that you're using and how you use it and things you need to keep in mind
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as you're using that microphone. Now, where I have any room to talk about this is that I actually
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spent a decent portion of my career working in Pro Audio and that was either in a studio setting
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or it was in a live setting and as much as people want to romanticize the audio world and think
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that we're always mixing bands and recording albums, the vast majority of the work that I did
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happened to be doing voiceovers or doing commercial audio where somebody was doing the script
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to a commercial when we were putting it to that or educational presentations. These were all
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things that we would do regularly. So a lot of what you were doing in the studio or live were
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simply just voices and that was it. And most of Hacker Public Radio tends to be that. So what I
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wanted to do is just kind of help people walk through that process to get a little bit better audio.
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Now, I will say I'm going to try to keep this as simple as possible. I'm not going to use big
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words and if I use a big word, I'm going to try to explain it. This should be simple enough that
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anybody should be able to understand what's going on and be able to get better audio.
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Now, I'm going to use tools that everybody should have access to. If you have a computer, you can
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use Audacity. So all I'm going to use for all the things in the series are going to be Audacity
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with the stock plug-ins. I'm not going to do anything special and we'll talk about how to change
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the audio to fit what you want. So to begin with, we talked about the signal chain and so what that
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means is where your sound starts to where it ends up and everything that it passes through in that
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process. So the first part in the signal chain passed you and your voice would be your microphone.
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Now, there are lots of different kinds of microphones and there's lots of different opinions
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about microphones. I'm going to kind of explain the different types of microphones and you can make
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a decision based on what I tell you. I do have recommendations that I think are pretty
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solid, but if you want to go a different route or you have something different,
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by all means, please use that. One of the truths of any kind of audio is you can only do
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with what you have. So the way you record your audio and the quality of the audio that you record
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initially is really going to determine how good your outcome is. So one of the things,
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you know, they get set a lot is you can only polish a turd so much and it's still a turd. So if
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your recording is really bad, you're not going to be able to polish it up too much. Now one of the
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things I'd like to do in sort of this little micro series is take some recordings that may not be
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the best and massage them to get better, but you're never going to get a really good high quality
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recording and really good high quality audio without your initial recording being fairly high
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fidelity. And so what that's typically going to mean is a dedicated microphone and really a good
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quiet space to record. Now that's not to say you can't have a good recording without those things,
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but really those things are going to give you the best chance in having good quality audio.
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So let's talk about microphones. Really when we're talking about doing sort of this kind of audio,
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there are three kinds of microphones that you're going to encounter. There are dynamic microphones,
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there are condenser microphones and there are ribbon microphones. Under no circumstances should
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anybody recording on hacker public radio have a ribbon microphone. If you do, you have a really
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nice microphone and you shouldn't be using it for this. So that really brings us down to two
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different kinds of microphones. You have a condenser microphone and a dynamic microphone. Now these
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two different kinds of microphones do different things and it's always a trade off as to which microphone
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you use for what things. If you go into a professional studio most of the time for vocal,
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you're going to see a lot of condenser mics. Now condenser mics are very, very sensitive.
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That has to do with the size of the diaphragm of the microphone which is a little part inside that
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vibrates and that's what translates the movement of air into an electrical signal which then turns
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it into sound for us to edit in our audacity that we're using. Now the nice thing about a condenser
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mic is that very, very, very, very small element that is moving is really good at picking up high
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frequencies and it's very, very, very sensitive. So sensitive that you have to be kind of careful with
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these microphones a lot of the time. Most of them, actually almost all of them require extra power.
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So you'll have to have a battery in it or you'll have to run USB to a computer or if you're using a
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mixer you'll have to use what's called phantom power to power these. Now the nice thing is they're
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exceedingly sensitive which means you can get very, very, very, very clean nuances of sound,
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especially in the voice because the voice has a lot of nuance in it. It's benefit is also
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it's downside because having that ability to pick up the smallest most minute detail means that
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you pick up the smallest and most night new detail which is most of the time actually not what we
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want. Unless we have a very controlled environment, a condenser mic is going to pick up a lot of
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sounds that you may want to eliminate. So I would suggest condenser mics may not be the best.
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As a matter of fact, right now I'm recording out a dynamic mic. I typically use a dynamic mic
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mainly because I don't have the ability to really treat the room I'm in to have good acoustics
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and to isolate sound that I won't be picking up with the microphone. Now for most people,
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you may not hear this if you're not listening closely but somebody who really knows how audio
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will hear these background noises or you'll hear the reverberation of the room. So condenser mics,
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if you have a nice setup where you can isolate yourself and make sure there are very few reflections
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off the walls and that you have good sound dampening material, a condenser mic is really good.
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What I would suggest is a dynamic mic. Now a dynamic mic has a larger diaphragm or a larger element
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in it which means it picks up mid-level and low range sounds a lot better. So you're going to get
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a little more beefiness to your tone typically and it is not as sensitive. So that means a lot of
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the things that you're going to hear in the room and the room sound tend to be eliminated and
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that's really going to help you in the audio editing because you're not going to have to find sounds
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in the room and try to take them out. Typically a dynamic mic is a very very small envelope that you
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can stay in and get that sound and if something is outside of that envelope, it tends to not get picked
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up very well. Now you are going to lose some quality making this decision. But dynamic mics are
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just tend to be easier to control and easier to get a better sound out of. You need to know a little
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bit more to use a condenser. So if you were starting out and you wanted to buy some equipment,
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I would say go with a good dynamic microphone. Now the next thing you need to look for,
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depending on what type of microphone this would also, this is going to be the same for
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condenser mics or dynamic mics is the mic pattern. So you're going to see on the packaging of the
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mic you buy or you should. If you don't, you probably bought a cheap mic that doesn't disclose
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this information. But you should see a little diagram and it's a circle and it tends to have
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little shapes and these are the patterns of the mic. And really what you're there's two different
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kinds you want to look for, there's the omnidirectional mic which just like it sounds, the sound coming in
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from all directions is equally important and it's going to pick those up equally well. So the
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front of the mic and the back of the mic and the side of the mic all should register sound about
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the same. These are pretty much terrible for what we want to do. Now if you're recording an orchestra
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an omnidirectional mic is brilliant, but for a voice, typically if one person is talking, we want
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it to address one way. So what we're going to look for are cardioid patterns and cardioid patterns
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tend to look like little hearts and you can find super cardioid and hyper cardioid and cardioid
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and these are all different variations on this pattern. But what tends to happen with a cardioid
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mic is that the front of the microphone is the most sensitive. So you want to point the microphone
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directly at your face. There will be some caveats to this later as we go forward. But really you want
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that microphone pointed directly at you. As you move off axis, you're going to get less frequency
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response and it's going to record less. So for example, I'm setting here. I'm on my dynamic
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microphone. It's pointed pretty much directly towards my face. And what I'm going to do is I'm just
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going to keep talking and move to the side. So I start here and I'm going to move to the side, move
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to the side, move to the side, move to the side, move to the side, move to the side. You can probably
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already tell that this isn't picking up nearly as well as it was before. So I'm going to move back
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to the front and now I'm going to go to the other side. So move to the side, move to the side, move
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to the side, move to the side. Now that's a cardioid pattern. It's mostly centered directly towards
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me. And then on the sides, there's less coming into the microphone. So this automatically kind of
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gives it a shotgun effect. It's more pointed towards you. So it's going to prioritize the sound
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coming directly at it and not things from the sides. Again, if you have a room that's not well treated
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or you're recording in a space that you can't really control the sound very well, this is going
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to help because it's going to automatically just by design eliminate a lot of the sound of the room
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and focus directly on you. So the next thing I'm going to talk about is how to use the microphone,
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which sounds silly. Basically most people, rightfully so, imagine that you point the microphone at
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your pie hole, you open your pie hole and you get a sound. And that is kind of the way it works.
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But there are little tricks you can use to get better sound quality just on how you use the
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microphone. So from here, I'm basically when I'm talking into this microphone, like I said,
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I'm using a dynamic microphone, but a lot of these ideas still apply to a condenser microphone.
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You want to be pay attention to where you are in regards to the microphone. So typically with
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a microphone, you want to be really close to it. Now, what that's going to do is it's going to give
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you a proximity effect. And so I'll demonstrate that a little bit. Right now, I'm about maybe three
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inches from the microphone. I want to be usually about that close. If I get a little closer,
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you should notice that my sound gets deeper, right? So there's more bass pickup and we call this
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present. And then if I go back to where I normally am, it should lighten up a little bit. But as I move
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further away and further away and further away, my sound gets a little tinier and a lot of the
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bass rolls out and it's picking up a little more of the room probably at this point and it just
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doesn't sound as good. So you really want to stay in about that three to four inch area for a dynamic
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microphone condenser microphones. You really got to be careful this close. You have to have really
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good technique. You may want to back out just a little bit more, maybe four to five inches on one
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of those because you don't want to overpower the actual element in the microphone. Now, like I said,
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I am talking pretty much directly into the microphone. And I said there was a caveat to this.
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There are two sounds that people make and I just made one of them that are pretty common when
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you're doing audio with a human voice. They are sibilant and plosives. Now, if you just say the words,
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you probably understand what they are. A sibilant makes a hissing sound and a plosive makes a popping
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sound. Both of these are really not desirable when you're even doing this. Now, there are some tricks
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you can use in post-processing to post-processing. That's a good plosive word to kind of get rid of
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these or at least tame them down. But there's actually some microphone tricks that you can use to get
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rid of these. The biggest one is you should probably have some sort of pop filter. Now, a lot of
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times you'll see the foam balls that you can put on a dynamic microphone. That's typically what I
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use. It's pretty good. If you have a condenser microphone, you'll usually see a screen that is
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in front of it. They basically serve the same purpose. When you get a plosive, it's because there's
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a big gust of air that is coming across the element of the microphone and it interprets that
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as sound because movement equals electrical signals, which equals sound. So you're trying to
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eliminate that and having something there as a barrier to stop that airflow from going into
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the microphone is going to get rid of a lot of that for you. Now, sibilants really trying to
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control yourself on that is very helpful. But really, for both of these, you can do one simple little
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trick with your microphone and your microphone placement to sort of try to eliminate these as best
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you can. So if I take the microphone, I am pretty much in line with it. I am right in the center
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of the cardioid pattern. So when I have a sibilant or a plosive, this is the worst possible place to
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be. It is the best place for sound quality, but it is not the best place for those two things.
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So one of the things you can do is take your microphone and just angle it slightly.
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Yeah, somewhere between 20 to 30 degrees is where I found the sweet spot. Some people will say more,
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some people will say less, but if you angle it off just a little bit, you're going to get rid of a
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lot of that because the air now is not going directly into the element of the microphone. It's going
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across it. And so you're going to get a little bit of reduction in that. Now, there is a compromise,
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like I said, audio is all about compromise. You're going to lose some fidelity. But this is a good
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compromise, especially if you have a good pop filter and you're training yourself to sort of
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lay off of the sibilance a little bit, you're going to get a fairly decent sound without doing
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anything. You don't have to do any post processing. It's really going to help clean that up for you.
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Now, the last thing I'm going to say is if you're using a microphone and you're sitting at a
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desk like I am right now, one of the things you need to be aware of is every movement you make
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is going to transfer into your microphone. If your microphone is attached to your desk.
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So if you have a mic stand and you have that mic stand on your desk,
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you're going to hear every movement. If you type on your keyboard, that's going to come through.
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If you accidentally bang your desk, it's going to come through. And these are all sounds that are
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not very good for what we're wanting. So a good way to try to eliminate that as much as possible
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is if you can get a mic stand or a mic arm that you can mount somewhere that isn't your desk or
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isn't where you're sitting, something that is physically isolated. If you can't do that,
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you can get some spring loaded arms that will try to dampen the movement as much as possible.
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You're probably still going to hear it, but it will at least dampen it enough to where it's not
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overpowering everything. Actually, I have one of those and I just hit the desk,
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I'm interested to see how it sounds because I don't often do that just on purpose.
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But a lot of times it will eliminate some of it. Some of the cheaper arms, when you do that,
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you'll get this noise, which is actually the springs vibrating. So my Litch may vary.
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You may want to, if it's something you want to do, you may want to spend a little bit of extra
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money to get a good one. I have a cheap one here because I just happen to have it, so it worked out for me.
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Okay, so now down to recommendations of what I think. If you're going to spend some money and
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you're going to start what you should buy and why I think that. I'm basically going to recommend
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two dynamic microphones. If you want to go down the condenser route, there are plenty of good
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condenser mics and really a web search will tell you what's good and what's not. You don't have to
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be an audio specialist to know that. Several reviews and maybe I'll come back with some condenser
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mics, but I really strongly believe that most people should be using dynamic microphones
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because they're not in a situation that's conducive to using the condenser.
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Okay, so let me switch over here so I can take a look at what I want to talk about. Basically,
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the first one, this is the worst kept secret in podcasting. If you know anybody who does any audio,
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the dust podcasting, this microphone is going to come up a lot. It is the Samsung Q2U.
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This is a very inexpensive microphone. Now, you have to understand, inexpensive is relative.
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So while it's inexpensive compared to most microphones, most good microphones, it is a little
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pricey. Right now, I'm looking at the podcasting pack that you can get. I'll put a link in the
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show notes for this. Basically, it comes with a pop filter, it comes with a little stand,
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it comes with cables and everything you need to get started. The nice thing about this is
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for the money, this is an amazing microphone. It's a workhorse that lots of podcasters use.
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If you've heard some live stuff from you random, you've heard these microphones,
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you know, they're very, very good for what they are. They're not the best microphone in the
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world, but they are great for what you paid for them. So the podcasting pack right now is,
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I'm looking at it. It's $79.99 US. I don't think I've ever paid that for that for them. You can
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find them cheaper than that, typically. Now, the nice thing about this microphone is it has two
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different kinds of outputs on it. One is a USB output. So you can plug this directly into
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your computer and record without any kind of audio interface, without anything. It should just
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pick up as a sound card. I've used them in Windows, Mac, Linux, all three work flawlessly. No problems.
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They also have a headphone jack. So you can monitor what you're recording. I would not
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use that religiously. It's good to get an initial sound test, but really pass that. You need
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to listen to the finalized audio. And it also has an XLR jack. And if you don't know what XLR is,
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it is a cable that is pretty thick. And it's a circular plug that has three pins in it.
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And this is sort of the standard in the audio industry. So you can take this mic that you bought
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for podcasting and use it on your computer and you're fine. You'll never have to do anything
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more than that. But if you want to get fancier and you want to use better equipment. And so for
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me, my microphone goes into a mixer and an audio interface so I can tweak my audio just a little
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bit more. You can go from this USB mode into sort of a pro mode and you don't have to buy anything
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extra other than whatever interface you're using. So it's a mic that can grow with you.
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This would be my number one recommendation if you're going to start out.
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Now I'm going to make a second recommendation. And it's a similar mic.
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This one, you hear a lot of people talk about this company and about how their equipment's not good.
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I don't see it. I think this is a good mic. To me, this mic is actually a little better than
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the Samsung. And it's actually the mic I'm on right now. So it kind of gives you an idea of what
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it is. It is the audio Technica ATR 2100. And this is another microphone. It's a dynamic microphone.
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It comes with a lot of the same stuff that the Samsung microphone comes with.
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To me, this has a little bit more frequency response. I can get a little bit more on the low
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and high end on this one. So it's just a hair better in my opinion. Now it is a little more
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expensive. This one right now is $99. That is typically what I see them for. The Samsung,
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you can find cheaper than that $79. But this one's typically around $99. US, of course.
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But for me, that little bit of extra cost comes out in the audio. That being said, I'm somebody
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who knows how to tweak that extra range out of it. For most people, I would say the same
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since the way to go. It's the cheapest barrier to entry to get in. Now, you can record on your phone.
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You can record on your Bluetooth headphones. There's lots of ways to use the microphone in your
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laptop or anything like that. But going all the way back to the beginning, your audio is only
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ever going to be as good as that initial recording. So my sort of hope is that if this is something
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you want to get into and something you're willing to invest into, that you invest in getting the
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proper equipment so you can get a good sound. There have been many, many, many, many, many times
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where something has come up on Hacker Public Radio that I'm really, really interested in.
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But the sound quality is so bad that I can't listen to it. And I hate that that's happening.
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And I hate that for the people who spent the time recording it. And I hate that for me because I
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lost out on information. So taking a little bit of time to work on our audio, I think we'll pay
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off in dividends and we will all get better because of it. So that's all I have for this first
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overview of how to get sound into your computer. Really? You buy a microphone, you plug it in,
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and you can use audacity to record. And you can use other things, but audacity,
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something that everybody can use. So that's probably what I'm going to stick with when I do this.
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What I kind of foresee in the long term when it comes to this little series about audio is I
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think it would be interesting to record different things on different devices in different areas.
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And then walk you through what I would do to it to sort of clean it up and make it as good as it
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can be, even as something as simple as, you know, taking my phone out to like someplace really
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loud and see what we could get out of that and walk you through the steps to do that. So look
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for that in the future. I think that's where we're going to go with this. But with that,
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I will catch everybody next time.
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You've been listening to HECCA Public Radio at HECCA Public Radio. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. HECCA Public Radio was found
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by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club and is part of the binary revolution
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at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is
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released on the creative comments, attribution, share a live 3.0 license.
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