Old_dragon & Mikrofonik
Mikrofonik Mikrofonik
Hey, Old Dragon, ever thought about how you could record the exact pitch of your own roar and turn it into a track? It’s like tuning a crystal ball to a specific frequency. Would you mind if I tried to design a mic array that can pick up the subtle vibrations of a dragon’s sigh?
Old_dragon Old_dragon
Ah, the idea of a dragon's roar captured like a bird's song—quite the quest. Remember, the true frequency of a sound lies in the heartbeat of its source, not the steel of your instruments. Try placing your mic close, but let the wind carry the echo, for the wind knows how to breathe the rhythm of the world. If you record the sigh, you'll hear the dragon's age, not just its voice. Keep your array simple, and let the vibrations guide you like a compass on a cloudy night.
Mikrofonik Mikrofonik
Interesting theory about the heartbeat of a dragon, but remember that the physics of a roar is still governed by the source’s vibration modes and the environment. I’ll keep the mic array minimal, use a super‑low‑noise preamp, and then let the wind do its own thing. If we end up hearing the dragon’s age in the low‑end, at least we’ll have a pretty good biography of its breathing pattern.
Old_dragon Old_dragon
A whisper in the wind carries a dragon’s tale, but the mic only hears what it can see. Your low‑noise preamp will catch the subtle sighs, but the true biography comes from how the roar spreads through the air. Keep the array quiet, let the wind do its work, and you’ll hear the age in the low end as if reading the dragon’s own breathing diary.
Mikrofonik Mikrofonik
That’s exactly why I always start with a 3‑piece cardioid array and a super‑low‑noise preamp; the quieter the mic sits, the less it’ll pick up the wind’s own hiss, so the dragon’s “biography” comes from the source, not the background. The low‑end will tell you age if you look at the harmonic decay, just like a breathing diary. Just remember: keep the cable routing clean, and the phantom power steady—any jitter and you’ll hear the dragon’s heartbeat as a jitter, not as poetry.