Earthworks Redesigns DP30/C Drum Periscope Microphone

November 1st, 2011

November 1, 2011, Milford, NH ― Earthworks has unveiled a new and improved DP30/C Drum Periscope microphone for tom and snare.

The new design came about thanks to recommendations from drummers using the DP30/C. The newly redesigned DP30/C features a thicker and more rugged gooseneck that will stay in place when the drums are hit hard. After working to get the microphone in the sweet spot, drummers will not have to worry about the DP30/C migrating once they start drumming.

The new DP30/C maintains the same sound quality and craftsmanship of the original. The microphone capsule housing is designed to protect the microphone capsule and withstand a direct hit from a drumstick. The electronics are housed in a cylindrical tube attached to the other end of the mini-gooseneck and provides a high level, low impedance output that will prevent radio frequency interference.

Its’ incredibly fast impulse response will allow the microphone to capture the full detail of the attack, while its short diaphragm settling time will allow you to hear a full bodied sound with subtle details that other microphones miss. The DP30/C will handle sound levels up to 145dB SPL with no audible distortion and its heavy construction will enable it to withstand the punishment of the road.

The DP30/C, as well as microphone from the rest of Earthworks lineup, comes with a 15 year warranty. For additional information on this microphone and others by Earthworks, visit the company online at www.earthworksaudio.com.

Earthworks M30 Giveaway at AES Convention

October 20th, 2011

October 20, 2011, Milford, NH ― Earthworks is holding a drawing at the 131st AES Convention to give away an M30 measurement microphone worth $949 to one show attendee.

The hand-tuned M30 is a precision device, optimized for clean, very fast impulse performance with virtually no handling noise. Its ultra flat frequency response to 30kHz, near-perfect omnidirectional polar pattern and accurate reproduction of sound make it ideally suited for acoustical measurements.

Convention attendees can stop by the Earthworks booth #645 to enter to win an M30 and see the entire product line. The winner will be drawn at 3:00 pm, October 23, 2011 at the Earthworks booth.

Official Giveaway Rules

  1. Void where prohibited or restricted by law.
  2. You must be at least 18 years of age.
  3. Prize winners are responsible for all local, state and federal taxes.
  4. By accepting a prize, all winners agree that Earthworks may post his/her name in any and all media, including future advertising or publicity, without further consideration, unless prohibited by law.
  5. Entrants agree to join Earthworks email list upon entry.
  6. The winner does not need to be present to win.
  7. Earthworks reserves the right to cancel, terminate, modify or suspend the giveaway, reject any entry, or make any revisions to the official rules as we deem necessary.

Earthworks Debuts Wireless Capsule at AES

October 17th, 2011

Milford, NH, October 17, 2011 — Earthworks Microphones will debut its first ever wireless product, the WL40V Wireless Vocal Microphone Capsule, at AES this year.

The WL40V, as well as microphones from the rest of Earthworks lineup, will be at the 131st AES Convention in New York City, October 21-23, Booth #645.

The WL40V has been adapted in wireless capsule form from the SR40V Vocal Microphone released earlier this year. Designed to maintain the same signature sound as its wired counterpart, the WL40V delivers a detailed and realistic vocal sound that requires little to no EQ. Its textbook perfect hypercardioid polar pattern and extended flat frequency response translate to a natural on- and off-axis performance coupled with benchmark levels of clarity and detail.

The wireless capsule is interchangeable with any screw-on-type handheld transmitters that receive a 31.3mm/pitch 1.0mm threading, such as those from Lectrosonics, Line 6 and Shure.

The WL40V will be available through authorized Earthworks dealers Q1 2012, and like all Earthworks microphones, will come with a 15 year warranty.

Earthworks SR20 Gets More Vocal

October 11th, 2011

Milford, NH, October 11, 2011 – Earthworks Microphones’ hand-built SR20 cardioid condenser microphone has been updated with a metal mesh windscreen more traditionally associated with vocal microphones.

The SR20 is a powerful microphone and can be used in any miking scenario live or in the studio. Earthworks patented design delivers a warm and true vocal sound, while its uniform polar response provides the same precision and sound quality at the front and side of the microphone.

The windscreen can be removed, which reveals the small diaphragm tip Earthworks SR Series microphones are known for. The SR20 is in the very well-known class of versatile instrument microphones within the “Sound Reinforcement” series and is an economical choice within the Earthworks line at $599.

Bill Norton, Earthworks’ COO, commented on the company’s new SR20. “We have always had great success with the SR20 and we are certain that this new look and form factor will be welcome to the studio recording and live audio marketplace.” states Norton. “Earthworks’ dedication to producing what we call True Live Sound has long been a hallmark that defines our entire product line.”

The new SR20, as well as microphones from the rest of Earthworks lineup, will be at AES in New York City, October 21-23, Booth #645.

It is available through authorized Earthworks dealers. All Earthworks microphones come with comes with a 15 year warranty.


Earthworks QTC30 Microphone Review

October 7th, 2011

Review by Joel Patterson

November 8, 2006

Product Features

•High definition “time coherent” revolutionary design

•Omni pattern

•Lower Self Noise Compared to “TC” Series

Product Specs

•Frequency Response: 6Hz to 30kHz

•Sensitivity: 30mV/Pa (-30.5dBV/Pa)

•Power Requirements: 48V Phantom

•Minimum Output load: 600 ohms

•Noise: 22 dB SPL equivalent (A weighted)

•Weight: .35 lb (160 g) each

First Impressions

“Can you take me back where I came from?” is not a question I ask much: when I started my humble studio ten years ago, I was an expert at throwing some pretty basic gear at the problem and getting pretty fair recordings. It always took a healthy dose of experimentation and mucho radiation treatments of processing, but I’d always end up with things sounding “like they really did.” That is where these microphones begin.

These don’t look like microphones at all. They look like deluxe, stainless steel Sharpie markers. End to end it’s only 6.5 inches, the wide end of the shaft only large enough to accommodate a female XLR cable, narrowing down to a point, almost, at the capsule end. It’s not possible to disassemble it, it’s a solid bar.

In Use

These are a world away from anything else that calls itself a “microphone.” I know all of you remember the thrill of hearing something playing back, for the first time. Recordings in general, music, movie soundtracks, the whole gorgeous realm of the media. There wasn’t any doubt in your mind that what you were hearing was different from the real life you heard day-to-day. Because “real” stuff had a snap, an urgency, an immediacy. It was real.

These mics capture all of that, every last iota of believability. This is great for everything. It’s so relaxing to listen to the natural sound of something. All the compressing and EQing and squeezing and throttling I used to do, it really had the potential to make for some irritating music because it was warped and shaped in artificial ways. If you mic up a drumkit with these, you will, mercifully, get a true image, and that itself can be worth a thousand words. However, close mic’ing of drums would distort the QTC series as they are not made for close mic’ing of extremely loud sources.

There is no handling noise, which is a big, big plus for me, and no proximity effect. This is good, because for situations where your goal is to get a nice rendering of singers in a hall, or an orchestra, you can’t lose. I had this set on an ORTF bar at a high school band concert, I threw it up at the last minute to catch the percussion of “The Typewriter” (Anderson / Werle), a novelty piece where a few of the best kids on shakers and bells simulate the sound effects of a typewriter. The clattering was crisp and even and not only that, the QTC30′s gave a sweet picture of the band playing behind… so accurate and dense. At a piano camp for aspiring young performers called Summer Sonatina, where set up and teardown times were of the essence, I slapped these up at the edge of an open grand piano, and the results were glistening and gleaming: dynamic, searing performances as well as the beautiful hush of the hall.

So, this would be the best microphone in the world and the only one you’d ever need… except for the inconvenient fact that sometimes, you only want a narrow pattern of one isolated thing, or sometimes you need a little coloring, or some specific job calls for a specific tool. I’ve steadily acquired every accessory that’s offered, and there’s a tantalizing “100 mph windscreen” that at first blush seems silly, but then again, hurricane Foley might be an exciting sideline.

PROS

•Perfectly flawless imaging and true-to-life detail

•Very small and inconspicuous

•142 SPL peak

•Lower self noise spec compared to “TC” series

CONS

•Fine for all but the loudest close mic sources (don’t put 2″ from a rock snare)

•They are not giving them away

Conclusion

There sure is some mojo science that went into creating these, bordering on and spilling over into pure magic. For people who’ve gotten them, it’s very much an instance of getting back to where you started–and knowing the place for the first time.

Free AES Passes from Earthworks

October 5th, 2011

AES New York 2011 Registration

Advance registration deadline has been extended to October 7, 2011.

Register for 2011 AES

Earthworks has arranged for you to receive a free VIP Exhibits Only Badge to AES New York 2011. We’ll be in Booth 645s. Hope to see you there!


Earthworks Mikes Inaugural Concert of Ravenscroft Pianos Model 275

September 26th, 2011

This past weekend, the inaugural concert of the Ravenscroft Pianos Model 275 was held at the Tempe Center for the Arts.

An Earthworks PM40 and a matched pair of QTC50s were used to mike the piano.

Find out more about Ravenscroft Pianos.

A KILLER’S HUNCH

September 7th, 2011

Ronnie Vannucci turns in Big Talk with Earthworks SR40V

LAS VEGAS, NV—In the winter of 2010, following a tour of Australia and New Zealand, the Killers decided the time was right to give it a rest. Not a bad move, according to Ronnie Vannucci, the band’s 35 year-old drummer, especially when you consider that the Las Vegas-based rockers had spent just about the entire last decade in constant company.

Settling back into life at home with his wife in Vegas, Vannucci could easily have chilled by the pool, gone snowboarding in Park City, or simply wandered off into the desert to get some sun and commune with wild burros. There was none of that. Instead, while finishing work on his degree in music from UNLV, he went right back into the studio to produce Big Talk, a record of unusual merit that definitively exceeds most people’s definition of what a side project should be.

Big Talk was tracked with help from producer Joe Chicarelli (the Strokes, My Morning Jacket) and engineer Robert Root. Longtime friend Taylor Milne lent his talents on guitar, as did Weezer founder Matt Sharp, another old pal who stopped by to play bass on a couple of tracks. The rest was pretty much Ronnie, who despite facing the gravity of stepping out from his drum kit to assume a leading role, casually contends that “the making of this record was basically an excuse to drink while it’s still light out.”

Marked by upbeat rhythms, trenchant hooks, and a strong melodic undercurrent that unites pop and rock with some serious synth and grand, looming guitar riffs, Big Talk is also a lesson in the power of spontaneity.

“On one level, we approached the whole record like a demo,” Vannucci confides. “I’d follow an idea or a hunch, and then many times I would track extemporaneously right from the control room. We weren’t always looking for keepers, but they turned out that way, so we left them alone.”

Vannucci’s go-to microphone in the control room was a high-definition SR40V from Earthworks. “Katzenjammer” the album’s first track, was recorded entirely with the hand-tuned, hypercardioid mic, which was engineered for use both in the studio and onstage. “Hunting Season”, the 11th song on the disc, was also captured with the mic, as was “Girl at Sunrise”, a scat-style number done totally off-the-cuff from the lyrics on down.

“There’s a dynamic on the record that screamed out for variety,” Vannucci says. “Plus we had a distinct need for low-end and a great deal of body. The SR40V always delivered, and was our ‘easy’ mic in terms of use. It didn’t require any EQ, and it seems like whatever we did with it exceeded our expectations. Based on my experiences with the mic on this record, I’ll always keep one at hand. I can’t wait to try it live and see what it can do in the heat of battle.”

Released July 19th on Vannucci’s own Little Oil Records in association with Epitaph Records, Big Talk is available on iTunes and at www.epitaph.com. Offering natural clarity, great presence, and depth, the SR40V has excellent on and off-axis performance, a frequency response of 80 Hz to 40 kHz, and a self-noise rating of only 22 dB SPL (A-weighted). Handmade in the USA, it is available from authorized Earthworks dealers around the globe.

Earthworks Audio Teams Up With Alto Music to Give Away an SR40V

September 1st, 2011

September 1, 2011 Milford, NH ― Earthworks Audio has teamed up with Alto Music to give away its newest microphone, the SR40V High Definition Vocal Microphone™ worth $1499, to one lucky winner in September.

Engineered for use on stage or in the studio, the hand-tuned and tested Earthworks SR40V allows you to capture and reproduce your vocals with unmatched clarity and depth. With a frequency response of 30Hz to 40kHz, an extremely fast impulse response and a very short diaphragm settling time you will hear subtle details that conventional vocal microphones miss.

Alto Music, one of Earthworks’ premier dealers in New York, will host the giveaway on their Facebook page. Enter at: www.facebook.com/altomusic. The contest runs from September 1 – 30, 2011. A winner will be drawn by October 7, 2011.

A complete list of rules can be found on the contest entry page.

Earthworks Audio Sponsors Women’s Audio Mission

August 18th, 2011

Milford, NH, August 18, 2011 – Earthworks, Inc., a leading manufacturer of High Definition Microphones™ for recording, live sound, and test/measurement applications, has donated a matched pair of QTC30 omni microphones to Women’s Audio Mission for use in their Recording Studio and Training Facility.

Women’s Audio Mission already has some big plans for the small diaphragm condenser microphones.  The QTC30s are slated to be used in the microphone demonstrations and comparisons in WAM’s upcoming “Introduction to Microphones” training module, which will be released when their online training website, www.soundchannel.org, launches an expanded and revamped website on October 15, 2011. The microphones will also be used in their world-class recording studio on upcoming projects by Vietnam national champion and master musician Van-anh Vo, as well as the teen acoustic duo, The Bayonettes.

Photo Credit: Women's Audio Mission

Terri Winston, Executive Director of WAM, commented on the impact of the donation. “WAM’s mission is to provide the necessary technical training for women to succeed in the recording industry. That involves having access to the proper professional tools,” states Winston. “We were so excited when Earthworks surprised us with the generous donation of a matched pair of QTC30 microphones. It really ensures that our students are being trained on the best microphones in the business and have the opportunity to actually hear what a difference that makes in the resulting recording.”

About Earthworks, Inc.

Earthworks manufactures High Definition Microphones™ that are handmade and expertly tunic to sonic perfection. Each Earthworks microphone has a fifteen year warranty and is hand tuned and built in our Milford, New Hampshire facility. For additional information, visit the company online at www.earthworksaudio.com.

About Women’s Audio Mission

Women’s Audio Mission is a San Francisco based, non-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of women in music production and the recording arts. For additional information, visit WAM online at http://www.womensaudiomission.org.

Photo Credit: Women’s Audio Mission

  • Testimonials

    avatar“The Earthworks mics have become a huge part of how I mix the Indigo Girls show.  As long as I’...
    —Brian Speiser