mics.

Sampler and Sampling discussion (techniques, tips and tricks, etc.)
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Hey Guys;

A friend of mine is currently traveling the
orient and wants to use his IPod for some sampling.
What or which microphone would you recommend he use?

Another friend will be meeting him in the Philippines
in a week or so, and he wants her to bring it.
It should be small and not too expensive.

The purpose will be for recording music (instruments and
chanting/singing) and maybe animal noises so, it should
make for a decent all purpose mic. as well... maybe even
amplified?

Thanks

Tweed8

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wow .. I didn't know they made recording I-Pods with microphone inputs ... all the ones I've seen are playback only.

Do Apple make an i-mic?

[edit] just found this ...

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blue makes "the ball" for $100 bucks. It's meant to be a podcaster. Don't know anything about it's quality but is blue capable of making crappy mics...? i don't think that would be their style.

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Binaural / 'in ear' mics can capture stuff while no-one notices that you are making a recording. And, they are small and weight next to nothing (easy to take on any trip / walk).

But, they have the 'hole' in the middle effect...
-- Regards MrM --

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What I'd do is grab one of those earphone-with-microphone thingamajig's and record with the minijack put to the mic instead of the speaker.

Course, if you're looking for high quality stuff, chances are you're better off buying that handheld USB recorder a certain company is selling. (saw it in my Computer Music special magaszine.)

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I'm curious to find out how your friend intends to plug the mic into the iPod. There's the Belkin Universal Mic Adapter http://catalog.belkin.com/IWCatProductP ... _Id=169368 but it's mono and records at 8kHz sampling rate.

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Perhaps he is merely using the term "iPod" for "portable mp3 player" in the same way some people say "Kleenex" to mean "tissue." I have a portable mp3 player that has line in and can record to 16/44.1k .stereo .wav files.

I use a stereo Sony mic, not bad for just recording sounds on the fly. I wouldn't use it to record the dialogue for a big budget movie or anything, but it's good for grabbing sounds here and there. And cheap enough that if I ever were to lose or break it (something very easy to do when travelling) I wouldn't regret the loss.

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