Win Audio Technica mics worth £1604!
Last month we gave you the first of two questions for your chance to win a selection of Artist Series drum and instrument microphones from Audio-Technica, a major sponsor of the International Drum Foundation´s Rhythm Course taking place in Bath this Summer.
The prize includes an ATM250 kick drum/ percussion mic, two ATM650 snare/ hi-hat/ percussion mics, two ATM350 tom mics and two ATM450 percussion/ overhead mics totaling a whopping £1,064! UK metal drummer Adrian Erlandsson swears by their mics: “My drumming ranges from the faintest bedlam to an aural metal holocaust. Audio Technica Microphones capture it all with excellence”, he says.
The second question appears in the current issue of Rhythm. Alternatively head over to www.futurecomps.co.uk/audiotechnicacomp to find out how to enter online or to enter by text (and to read the terms & conditions).
Entries must be received by Tuesday 1 July. Good luck!
Get the MusicRadar Newsletter
Want all the hottest music and gear news, reviews, deals, features and more, direct to your inbox? Sign up here.
I'm MusicRadar's eCommerce Editor. In addition to testing the latest music gear, with a particular focus on electronic drums, it's my job to manage the 300+ buyer's guides on MusicRadar and help musicians find the right gear for them at the best prices. I dabble with guitar, but my main instrument is the drums, which I have been playing for 24 years. I've been a part of the music gear industry for 20 years, including 7 years as Editor of the UK's best-selling drum magazine Rhythm, and 5 years as a freelance music writer, during which time I worked with the world's biggest instrument brands including Roland, Boss, Laney and Natal.
“He was playing this kit that had cushions in it and tape all over it. It didn’t sound like Rodge”: Queen hated Roger Taylor’s drum sound on their debut album so much that they “augmented” every beat for its reissue
“What we get here is the essence of Alesis’ flagship electronic drum set, with all the great features, minus the stuff that is likely to be ‘nice-to-have’ rather than essential”: Alesis Strata Core review