Marc Wielage
Well-known member
Very good advice from Mr. Strangways above. :thumbsup:
I would add that if you're going to do sit-down interviews in difficult locations, your best course may be to use lavaliar microphones attached to the interview subject. Good lavs include the Sanken Cos-11, Tram TR-50, and Countryman B6. The advantage of using lavs for documentaries is that it tends to takes the room out of the vocal. Normally, this is bad for dramatic situations, sounding a little artificial and isolated, but if it's a doco in a noisy location, then this may be an advantage.
To me, nobody does documentaries better than 60 Minutes, and this is their typical strategy -- and it's one of the best-looking and best-sounding shows on TV. For run & gun situations, a Sennheiser 416 is hard to beat as a go-to mike.
I would also add that hiring an experienced location sound mixer on your crew is the best idea. This will save you money in the long run, mainly in not having to fix or redo bad tracks.
I would add that if you're going to do sit-down interviews in difficult locations, your best course may be to use lavaliar microphones attached to the interview subject. Good lavs include the Sanken Cos-11, Tram TR-50, and Countryman B6. The advantage of using lavs for documentaries is that it tends to takes the room out of the vocal. Normally, this is bad for dramatic situations, sounding a little artificial and isolated, but if it's a doco in a noisy location, then this may be an advantage.
To me, nobody does documentaries better than 60 Minutes, and this is their typical strategy -- and it's one of the best-looking and best-sounding shows on TV. For run & gun situations, a Sennheiser 416 is hard to beat as a go-to mike.
I would also add that hiring an experienced location sound mixer on your crew is the best idea. This will save you money in the long run, mainly in not having to fix or redo bad tracks.