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Shure SM87
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All user reviews for the Shure SM87

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  • jimmycutjimmycut

    Sweet and precise

    Shure SM87Published on 04/10/13 at 02:09
    (This content has been automatically translated from French)
    Condenser with phantom power.

    Specific clip.

    OVERALL OPINION

    I use it for 3 weeks. Electro vocal variety.

    I compared with Sennheiser 865 which flatters a little too serious. With a 945 (dynamqique) is very punchy. But the only one I recognize my voice (and its faults!) Is the Shure.

    On amplified speakers KRK, very round in the bass, is accurate and clear. Perfect combo.
  • Bernard AncèzeBernard Ancèze

    Shure SM87Published on 04/24/07 at 02:30
    (This content has been automatically translated from French)
    Vocal mic
    Hyper-cardioid condenser
    50 Hz / 15000 Hz
    2 mV / P
    150 Ohms
    Phantom: 12V / 48V Perhaps 9V / 52V. This is to check.

    OVERALL OPINION

    I have several SM87 for years. This is the first condenser microphone designed for voice near the stage made it seem. Show: http://members.aol.com/mihartkopf/frameset.htm
    He did not stay long in the catalog Shure. Finally I do not know what was the first of the SM85 or SM87. I have owned several pieces of two models, I still have 4 or 5. The SM87 (like 85) is made to close the socket and doing very well. I find it less balanced than the sm85. Very interresting used as his grand-son the famous SM87A quasiement has the same sound, …
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    Vocal mic
    Hyper-cardioid condenser
    50 Hz / 15000 Hz
    2 mV / P
    150 Ohms
    Phantom: 12V / 48V Perhaps 9V / 52V. This is to check.

    OVERALL OPINION

    I have several SM87 for years. This is the first condenser microphone designed for voice near the stage made it seem. Show: http://members.aol.com/mihartkopf/frameset.htm
    He did not stay long in the catalog Shure. Finally I do not know what was the first of the SM85 or SM87. I have owned several pieces of two models, I still have 4 or 5. The SM87 (like 85) is made to close the socket and doing very well. I find it less balanced than the sm85. Very interresting used as his grand-son the famous SM87A quasiement has the same sound, the same fish, the same solid construction. I could not choose between the two, easy to mix and have few acoustic reactions. Used in over-head, sax, some skin too much cash for it. I like him for that too, you can take a gueuleur blues or a slender girl's voice, and in proximity to 15/20 cm (if the singer moves a little) by compressing more or less depending on the difficulty . This is a great vocal mic, you know. After it is a matter of taste and experience. In home studio is clean and efficient as it removes fairly easily for himself the filth and parasites captures the delicate inflections of the song.
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  • Anonymous

    Shure SM87Published on 07/21/11 at 13:55
    The Shure SM87 microphone is that next little nudge the Shure gives you before shoving you into Beta condenser territory. And what a nudge it is. In a nutshell, the Shure SM87 does deliver very crisp and clean, but warm sound. I am putting a lot of emphasis on warm here. It is not imbalanced and skewed or exaggerated in the low end, like the venerable SM58 is wont to do when working the microphone up close. This is warm, but still clear and crisp. Imagine throwing a fuzzy blanket over someone instead of an entire comforter, and that is about as nice of a metaphor I can give.

    This being said, the Shure SM87 is not at all suited for thicker songs where the microphone needs to really cut th…
    Read more
    The Shure SM87 microphone is that next little nudge the Shure gives you before shoving you into Beta condenser territory. And what a nudge it is. In a nutshell, the Shure SM87 does deliver very crisp and clean, but warm sound. I am putting a lot of emphasis on warm here. It is not imbalanced and skewed or exaggerated in the low end, like the venerable SM58 is wont to do when working the microphone up close. This is warm, but still clear and crisp. Imagine throwing a fuzzy blanket over someone instead of an entire comforter, and that is about as nice of a metaphor I can give.

    This being said, the Shure SM87 is not at all suited for thicker songs where the microphone needs to really cut through the mix. In testing, it had a very unfortunate tendency to get lost in a heavier sound. However, this hyper smoothness also means that it is wonderful on emptier sounds, to take the most obvious example, an acoustic guitar and voice.

    The Shure SM87 is a condenser microphone intended for live use, and thus unfortunately lacks a few of the refinements that a studio condenser is expected to possess. Self noise is a 24 dB, only workable in live venues. So if you are like me, and work across the live-studio barrier, then this is not the microphone for you. It has a supercardioid pickup pattern for maximum off axis sound isolation, and a respectable frequency response from 50 Hz all the way up to the wonderful standard of 20,000 Hz. It handles a rather impressive 140.5 dB of SPL's. However, with this microphone being ideal for quieter worlds, this spec may be wasted on it. It is certainly nice to have when one is mic'ing in a pinch, however.

    OVERALL OPINION

    The SM87 is a great microphone if you know what you are looking for. The microphone itself is extremely warm, and on a quieter stage, sounds fantastic. It does get lost in a heavier mix though. This is probably because unlike the SM58, whose muddiness can be compensated for by the often unpleasant but penetrating midrange honk, the SM87 is incredibly clear, and not designed to overpower any element of a performance. That is why it is a very specific microphone that needs to be tested out, more so than usual, before taking a plunge. It should also be noted that this microphone breaches the $200 mark, and several microphones in the high end line have been opened up under $300.
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