Bradford Holt
August 21st, 2011, 09:11 PM
I filmed an adventure race documentary last February and got great stuff, but my audio needed improvement. I brought my own equipment - my 5D and EX-1 and said I needed audio gear, but all I was handed was a wireless lav, sent into the remote wilderness of Patagonia to do my best.
The EX I planned on using for interviews and the 5D for beauty shots and timelapses. Well, the incessant rain killed my EX for a night (even with my rain guard there was no escape) so I was reduced to using my 5D for OTFs where I'd just jam it in the subject's face and hope for the best. You could hear the person, but I want better.
Anyway, I want to do a better job. I'm thinking of getting a wireless lav for when I have the opportunity to do actual interviews, but for the purpose of my job, there is NO time to mic anyone - I'm trying to follow racers and get soundbytes in the moment - so I figure a camera mounted shotgun with a deadcat would be the best. I also need the gear to be capable of enduring extreme elements.
I am confident with cameras but am admittedly no audio expert. If anyone has any suggestions on a shotgun mic (to either mount to an EX or 5D - I feel my 5D served me better because of its weather resistance and on a wireless mic system I'd love to hear them. I need as good as audio as I can get given the circumstances, because without it I have some meaningless images. I need to capture the raw emotion of the moment.
To sum up, I am looking for:
1. Shotgun mic for 5D/EX
2. Wireless lav setup
3. Equipment must be able to endure elements (I've researched tactics like using unlubricated condoms but would like good gear to begin with)
4. To be told something different if there's a better option given my limitations (1 man band chasing down athletes)
I'm not looking for the cheapest route but rather the best route. Granted, I don't want to overspend, and I know mic placement is far more important than the gear itself (it's how you use the tool not the tool itself), but I don't want to waste money on gear I'll have to replace because it wasn't robust enough. I've been down going the cost cutting route and it always seems to cost more in the end.
Thanks for reading through my lengthy post, and I am looking forward to some suggestions.
The EX I planned on using for interviews and the 5D for beauty shots and timelapses. Well, the incessant rain killed my EX for a night (even with my rain guard there was no escape) so I was reduced to using my 5D for OTFs where I'd just jam it in the subject's face and hope for the best. You could hear the person, but I want better.
Anyway, I want to do a better job. I'm thinking of getting a wireless lav for when I have the opportunity to do actual interviews, but for the purpose of my job, there is NO time to mic anyone - I'm trying to follow racers and get soundbytes in the moment - so I figure a camera mounted shotgun with a deadcat would be the best. I also need the gear to be capable of enduring extreme elements.
I am confident with cameras but am admittedly no audio expert. If anyone has any suggestions on a shotgun mic (to either mount to an EX or 5D - I feel my 5D served me better because of its weather resistance and on a wireless mic system I'd love to hear them. I need as good as audio as I can get given the circumstances, because without it I have some meaningless images. I need to capture the raw emotion of the moment.
To sum up, I am looking for:
1. Shotgun mic for 5D/EX
2. Wireless lav setup
3. Equipment must be able to endure elements (I've researched tactics like using unlubricated condoms but would like good gear to begin with)
4. To be told something different if there's a better option given my limitations (1 man band chasing down athletes)
I'm not looking for the cheapest route but rather the best route. Granted, I don't want to overspend, and I know mic placement is far more important than the gear itself (it's how you use the tool not the tool itself), but I don't want to waste money on gear I'll have to replace because it wasn't robust enough. I've been down going the cost cutting route and it always seems to cost more in the end.
Thanks for reading through my lengthy post, and I am looking forward to some suggestions.