by FrankH » Thu Sep 15, 2011 3:14 am
This is what I did a few years ago. I set up a Studio Projects LSD2 Stereo mic in an XY config in my garage, sans car. I recorded claps (listening to a click) onto a stereo track in my DAW.
I marked the floor with tape in 5 spots (L-LC-C-RC-R) and did 5 takes, moving from spot to spot. Then I stepped back about 8' from the marks and did another 5 tracks. Mixed all 10 pairs down to stereo and cut out about 8 of the best samples. Did the same thing for the "front 5" and the "rear 5".
Those were loaded into Native Instrument's Kontakt and set to fire from one key, "Round-Robin". Every time I hit the same key on the keyboard, the sampler played a different sample in rotation.
As for processing....I find that a relatively narrow bell-curve lift (+3 to+12dB), somewhere between 1-2kHz will tweak all the extra "clap" sound you'll need. If you want more "snap", add a compressor with a very slow (100-200ms) attack. Reverb? I have no preference....depends on the material. I may also insert a dual mono panner plug-in on my DAW to squeeze the stereo field closer to mono. This too, depends on the material.