| BLUE
"Dragonfly"
Microphones |
| Awesome
Sound
from a
Hip
Condenser |
| Jim
Merod |
| 14
December
2000 |
Specifications
Large
diaphragm
cardiod
condenser @ 1
7/16"
diameter;
Body
dimensions:
7/8" ×
7/8" × 6
1/2 ";
Elastic
shockmount
attached to
swivel capsule
housing;
40 volt (no
DC/DC
conversion
needed)
high-output;
Price:
$1,199/each;
matched pair:
$2,800.
B.L.U.E
P.O. Box 910
Agoura Hills,
Ca 91376
818-784-7564
Web: www.bluemic.com
When
microphone
maestro
Martins
Salunsparens
delivered a
virtually
matched pair
of his new
DRAGONFLY
microphones to
Casa
BluePort,
a moment’s
glance inside
their
impressive
cartons told
the story. The
unusual
40-volt
powered BLUE
[Baltic
Latvian
Universal
Electronics]
Dragonfly
microphone is
not only one
of the most
eye-catching
microphones a
recording
engineer can
throw in front
of a band (and
their ogling
onlookers). It
has a sound
all its own .
. . which, in
this case, is
fantastic. I
will avoid
verbal
descriptions
of the
microphone’s
classic,
eccentric
appearance. A
photo or two
is all it
takes to show
you a Radio
Shack pipe
bomb. The
Dragonfly
floats like a
hummingbird
and stings
like a
howitzer.
Because
I am bored by
equipment
reviews that
tease you into
reading their
whole span in
order to get
to a desired
sonic bottom
line, I’ll
let you cross
the review’s
finish line
right here.
The
Dragonfly is
an awesome
microphone. It
is not a
panacea for
all recording
problems.
Aside from the
glorious DPA
4003 and its
mystical kins,
what
microphone can
solve every
difficult task
a recording
person faces?
But the
littlest,
least
expensive of
the
microphones in
the BLUE
line-up
carries a long
sonic reach .
. . and it
packs a
musical punch
that is up to
any
well-chosen
placement that
a recording
cat with good
ears and
astute
experience can
toss at it.
Let
me start right
there:
"reach."
Not enough is
written or
discussed
about this
most
mysterious
aspect of
microphone
pick up work.
In a nutshell,
some mics seem
to extend
themselves way
out into space
and "dial
in" an
off-axis or
otherwise
seemingly
distant
instrument.
The unrivaled
DPA 4003
[formerly B
& K 4003]
microphone, in
its full omni
glory (with
its valuable
nose cone
adapter in
place), is a
perfect
instance of
"microphone
reach."
Any recordist
who has
concerns about
the on-axis
placement of a
given
instrument
--or musician
. . . this is
especially a
concern during
live
recordings –
will find a
brilliant
"hedge"
in his favor
by using such
a microphone.
Recording
engineers need
all the hedges
and back door
benefits they
can muster.
There is no
place better
to start
accumulating
such
recording-savers
than with your
choice of
microphones.
My
first on
location use
of the
Dragonfly mics
was a stern
test of their
mettle. I was
brought up to
the
paradisiacal
near ocean
outback of San
Juan
Capistrano for
a high-octane
joyride with
Alex Acuna’s
Latin Jazz All
Stars. These
eight
musicians are
not laid back
lounge
loafers. You
will never
experience
more musical
fire and
acoustic force
full-in-the-chops
than Acuna’s
hilarious
pandemonium
throws at you.
Let
me list the
heart of this
line up: Luis
Eric (from
Cuba),
trumpet;
Arturo
Velasco,
trombone;
Pedro Eustache,
sax and flute;
Joe Rotundi,
keyboards;
Tiki Passilas,
timbales and
percussion;
and, of
course,
perhaps the
finest Latin
percussionist
of them all,
Alex Acuna (a
rhythmic
dynamo, a
lyrical fire
engine).
The
outdoor event
took place in
front of a
beautiful
fountain,
inside a
majestic
courtyard with
good
acoustics,
with a sold
out crowd
under the full
Harvest moon.
If you care
about romance
and the
insistent
erotic surge
of Latin
music, this
was a night
for the ages.
The
band was
spread across
the entire
span of a
ninety foot
wide stage.
Despite such
width,
percussion
instruments
congested the
stage front.
My microphone
placement for
recording had
to compete
with the
spatial
congestion of
instrument set
up and with
house
microphones --
often a first
priority for
promoters,
since their
concert or
music series
depends upon
keeping their
subscription
fan base happy
with sound and
uncluttered
sight lines.
An on location
recording cat
has to roll
with a number
of punches.
Sometimes you
can be rolled
right out of
the sweet
spots you
need.
I
was fortunate
on this
occasion. The
promoter is a
very
intelligent,
well-educated
man
sympathetic to
each part of
his venue’s
complex
equation. The
house soundman
is hip and
savvy. He was
extremely
helpful. I
need to take
these folks
with me
wherever I go.
My
first
challenge was
to get the
high SPL
(sound
pressure
level) impact
of Alex’s
explosive
drumkit and
his low
moaning "cajon"
(that
wonderful box,
with a rear
port, on which
its player
sits in order
to bang and
rub and bong
its hollow
cavity from
the front and
top). My next
target was to
capture Tiki
Pasillas’s
immense
timbales power
without losing
its quick
attack and
wide dynamic
range. Ditto
the conga’s
rhythmic
authority.
Alex Acuna’s
band builds
its music from
the volcanic
ground of such
rhythmic
eruptions. I
chose the BLUE
Dragonflies to
record
timbales and
congas. I’d
not yet used
these
hippest-looking
of all mics,
but I had high
hopes that
they would not
only cooperate
their first
time out . . .
but that they
would excel.
The
band’s three
horn front
line was under
the recording
witness of
several Audio-Technica
large
diaphragm
microphones.
Over the years
I have had
extraordinarily
good
experiences
with those
pieces and I
knew they
would be
challenged to
the max by
three
high-powered
musicians.
I
was right. The
evening was
musically
memorable in
several ways.
Not only was
it stunning
visually; not
only was the
throng eager
and
enthusiastic;
but Alex Acuna’s
madcap masters
of Latin
energy and
beauty
enchanted
themselves
into a perfect
groove. From
the opening
song, all the
way through a
one-hour first
set that
lasted an hour
and
three-quarters,
the eight
musicians
played at and
off one
another. When
that spirit of
playful
abandon and
lighthearted
interaction
takes place,
you are in for
a wild musical
ride. We were.
Luis Eric was
a brilliant
maniac on
trumpet.
Arturo Velasco
tossed off
more ideas
than any ‘bone
player since
(maybe) Frank
Rosolino. And provacateur
extraordinaire
Pedro Eustache
goaded,
growled,
bleated,
wailed,
crooned and
inspired his
on stage
colleagues.
While such
divine
intoxication
unfolded out
front, back
behind the
ensemble (dead
in the center
of the
action),
percussion
master Alex
Acuna churned
the whole
boiling rumble
into a perfect
lather.
When
I returned to
my studio, I
knew we had
three hours of
vital and
memorable
music. The
second set’s
one hour
extended to an
uproarious
hour and a
half. What I
did not know
was how the
Dragonflies
had executed
their debut
assignment.
I’d
had no doubt
about them.
One long
conversation
with their
designer,
Martins
Salunsparens,
is enough to
convince
anyone in
advance that
this soulful
man knows what
music is . . .
knows how to
craft
microphones
that are
"musical"
and, in his
own modest but
tenacious way,
is a recording
engineer’s
friend.
I
was correct
about all
that. From the
first high hat
strike and
conga thump at
the outset of
the opening
number of the
first set, I
knew we were
in a great
sonic place.
On playback,
one hears
sonic warts
that are
obscured by
the high sound
levels that
swirl through
live venues.
When, on
playback, I
heard the
authority of
Tiki’s
timbales – a
clattering,
manic sound of
brilliant
frenzy – I
knew that the
Dragonfly had
done its job
in spades.
When the deep
voiced boom of
the conga and
the
high-pitched
thwacks of its
neighboring
bongo all
called out
proudly and
perfectly, I
felt justified
in pledging
such important
work to the
newcomers in
my microphone
arsenal.
Seldom
will one
specific
microphone
define the
sound of a
recording
since most
recordings are
a blend of
many
microphones. A
crucial
exception is a
vocal
recording in
which the
vocal
"star"
is placed
front and
center and
given presence
boost in order
to shape an
intimate,
centrally-defined
mood.
In
such
applications,
the choice of
vocal mic, and
all of its
ancillary
equipment
(tube mic
preamp,
compression,
reverb, et.
al.), becomes
extremely
important. I
have yet to
use the
Dragonfly as a
vocal
microphone,
but its
uncanny
ability to
dial in the
zip and sizzle
of the
percussion
instruments it
faced was more
than
impressive.
This is, of
course,
precisely
where the
issue of
"microphone
reach"
that I alluded
to earlier
takes place in
earnest. Let
me enumerate.
Reach,
such as I have
in mind, has
everything to
do with a mic’s
ability to
capture the
fragile
(potentially
brittle) sonic
range from 1K
50 or so up
through 5K. In
fact, the way
in which a
particular
microphone
that owns
significant
"reach"
shapes that
region – or
is sensitive
to some
portion of it
– defines
the degree and
the kind of
"reach"
that it has. I
have not
measured the
Dragonfly but
it is my sense
that its
"reach"
is centered at
about 2K 25 or
so. It carries
a fairly
gentle (slowly
building)
peak, but the
sonic
"presence"
that I hear
from this mic
is intriguing
because it
inscribes a
somewhat dark
instrumental
proximity even
as the center
of its reach
is well above
a piano’s
middle C. This
may turn out
to be the case
with vocals,
too.
The
interesting
thing about
such sonic
shaping is
that, while a
mic like this
will tend to
have a fairly
broad reach
away from its
immediate
"territory,"
and while it
will (also)
have a
tendency
toward useful
off-axis
signal
shaping, it
will create
random
opportunities
(and
difficulties)
for its user.
Such a reach
sometimes
invites useful
(and unwanted)
sonic
"bleed."
Because much
of my
recording work
cannot avoid
bleed, because
I now depend
on bleed as
part of the
sonic
signature I
strive for,
the tendency
of the
Dragonfly to
invite or
attract bleed
seems
fortuitous.
This
issue has
another side
as well.
"Reach"
brings with it
sometimes
unpredictable
proximity
effects. If
you place a
mic with
awesome reach
quite close to
an instrument
(or a
vocalist) you
may find
troublesome
sonic shadows
or a boomy,
boxy
reinforcement
at a specific
spectral
point. While I
have not yet
had an
opportunity to
scope out the
variants of
such proximity
effects, and
other related
anomalies, I
am certain
that the
Dragonfly is
one hell of an
interesting
microphone.
Its inherent
sonic
signature is,
if not
precisely
"complex,"
nonetheless
eccentric in
just those
ways that give
a mic
character.
The
Dragonfly is
certainly
that: a
permanent
sonic friend
with skads of
character.
This mic
allows its
user to
experiment,
adjust,
maneuver and
manipulate its
placement in
every
imaginable way
in search of
just those
off-axis and
slight tilts
or angles of
approach that
impart a sonic
edge . . .
that lend a
recording its
most musical
results.
If
you believe
that I respect
this mic, you
are right. If
you think that
I love
eccentric
microphones
that carry
their own,
perhaps
mysterious,
signature . .
. right again.
Let me
reaffirm this
microphone’s
character. The
Dragonfly is
one of those
special tools
that on
location
recording
engineers
never have
enough of
tucked within
their leather
bags and
plastic
storage bins.
I cannot
enumerate the
number of
times that I
would have
been assisted
with recording
dilemmas if I
had had this
magnificent
and flexible
microphone
with me.
While
few
microphones
can be
designated
"classics"
– and I have
alluded
already to one
of those: the
DPA 4003 –
the Dragonfly
mic belongs to
another, no
less crucial,
rubric:
Microphones
that Sing.
Give
me six songful
microphones,
like the pair
I have to work
with here, and
I believe I
can record any
orchestra in
the world just
the way I want
to hear it, if
you give me
enough time to
hang and
thrust them
into the
appropriate
(sometimes
counter-intuitive)
positions . .
. as long as
the six
songful
instruments I
have to work
with are the
two I’ve got
already and
another four
Dragonfly
monster
slayers.

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