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PM40 at the Grammys!

2010.04.13
EARTHWORKS PM40 PIANOMIC™ SYSTEM
CAPTURES UNFORGETTABLE GRAMMY AWARDS PERFORMANCES
Music’s biggest night resonates with natural piano sound
Los Angeles, CA… With an audience of
approximately 25.8 million viewers, this year’s Grammy Awards telecast
was the music industry’s biggest night of the year and many of the
musical performances were equally huge. Pink’s aerial artistry was over
the top, the Black Eyed Peas shook the foundation of Staples Center,
and the 3D tribute to Michael Jackson was in a league all its own.
While perhaps at opposite ends of the musical spectrum, the
performances of Mary J. Blige and Andrea Bocelli and that of Leon
Russell with the Zac Brown Band were both highlights of the evening.
Each performance featured striking piano accompaniment and in both
cases, the piano sound was captured using the PM40 PianoMic system from
Earthworks.
As has been the case for the past 16
years, John Harris, Partner in Frenchtown, NJ-based Music Mix Mobile
(M3), served as Music Mixer for this year’s Grammy Awards broadcast.
Throughout his career, Harris has been awarded two Grammy Awards (for
Best Engineered Album and for Album of the Year), along with five Emmy
Awards and several TEC Awards. With a track record like this, it comes
as no surprise that Harris has some definite opinions about how to mic
a piano and why he insists on using the Earthworks PM40.
“The challenge for me in this type
of application is almost always external noise,” Harris explained. “In
a venue the size of Staples Center, it takes serious volume—both to
cover a stage as large as that used at the Grammys and to reach the
audience. Because of these SPL levels, the use of conventional mics on
an acoustic piano typically results in a situation where you find
yourself picking up all sorts of ambient noise, especially low end.
With most microphones, it’s very difficult to isolate the instrument.
By contrast, the PM40 lets us capture the piano with the lid closed,
thus isolating the instrument.”
Achieving the desired instrument
level in a high SPL environment is never a problem with the Earthworks
PM40. The two 40 kHz High Definition Microphones included in the system
provide a high level of gain before feedback because the microphones
are positioned very close to the sound source and are within the sound
field of the piano. The microphones deliver exceptional impulse
response and extremely short diaphragm setting times—making them
ideally suited to perform within the piano’s highly diffused sound
field.
“There have always been a number of
ways to mic a piano with the lid closed,” Harris continued, “but prior
to the PM40, I never felt any of them sounded particularly good.
Regardless of whether I close the lid or leave it open, the Earthworks
PM40 has a special quality that is heads above anything else I’ve ever
used. If you encounter low end rumble, you can roll it out of the
microphone and still get a really natural, musical piano sound.”
Harris also appreciates the PM40’s
unique mounting system. “I love the way you can adjust the positioning
of the mics,” he said. “I can move the crossbar up or down a few inches
and position the capsules right where I need them to be. I like to
place the mics right behind the dampers. I position them rather wide on
the bar and using the goosenecks, I then curl them in toward the
center. Ultimately, the capsules end up positioned roughly an octave
and a half on either side of middle C.”
Compared to the traditional practice
of using microphone stands and, perhaps, booms, to reach inside the
piano, the Earthworks crossbar approach carries additional benefits, as
Harris described. “The fact that once the PM40 is placed inside the
piano, it stays there, is a big advantage, he said. “On a show like the
Grammys, all the sets and instruments are struck once the rehearsals
are finished. The pianos get rolled down ramps into adjacent rooms or
hallways until they’re needed during the performance. With any kind of
conventional miking approach, the stands have to be moved and then
repositioned—and this never happens the same way twice. Further, if you
place the mics inside the piano and tape them into position, they will
likely shake loose and fall onto the strings. By contrast, the PM40
stays set.”
When queried about the sound quality
of the PM40, Harris offered this thought. “Simply put, the PM40 sounds
great,” he reports. “The Bocelli piece was scheduled to go directly to
Apple’s iTunes site if everything went well. Because the piece had such
an important artist plus orchestral accompaniment, there was concern
that, at the end of the night, we’d have to go back and remix in order
for it to be good enough. That, however, was not the case. The
performance and the mix both turned out really well and at the end of
it, producer Ron Fair stood up and proclaimed ‘Mix approved’ and walked
out the door. The Bocelli performance is now on iTunes mixed exactly as
it was for broadcast.”
Before re-focusing his attention on
forthcoming projects, Harris offered this closing thought about the
Earthworks PM40, “Until a year or two ago when the PM40 was introduced,
I really wasn’t familiar with Earthworks. I first used their mic system
on a Herbie Hancock piece during a Grammy show. For that project, the
lids were to be off the piano and I thought, ‘Great, how are we going
to pull this off?’ At that point, I had my first encounter with the
PM40. The PianoMic was so impressive, I’ve been using it ever since.
With the PM40, Earthworks has a great product.”