
- Features Blue's legendary studio condenser capsule and electronic components
- iOS compatible with iPod touch (4th Gen), iPhone 4/4S, iPad/iPad2/iPad (3rd Gen)
- Use the Apple Lightning Adapter (sold separately) for compatibility with iPhone 5, iPad (4th Gen), and iPad Mini
- Work with Garage Band and other recording applications
- Focus Control switch offers two sonic signatures in one mic, plus onboard control for volume, gain and instant mute
- Headphone jack for zero-latency real-time monitoring
Buy Blue Microphones Spark Digital Studio-Grade Condenser Microphone for Apple iPad and USB 2.0 Now
The sound quality I get from this mic is the best I've had so far in a usb mic. The best mic you can get at this price. For people who are having trouble with the low input levels, you need to hold down the microphone button for three seconds to switch over to the mic input level. I was surprised at the average of three stars this mic got in reviews and reading over them, I must shake my head at these silly people. It does come with an adapter to use with an iPad, but the sound quality you get with an actual computer doesn't compare and the high quality mic just goes to waste.I love Apogee and I love my MiC but when I saw that Amazon had this Blue Spark for a mere $155 I jumped all over it (even added the mere $3.99 for next day shipping cuz gear lust has a way with me).I am in my third decade of project studio singer/songwriting and God only knows how much has been siphoned off the family budget for "tools". Along the way I have sang through expensive microphones and also through telephone receivers. One lesson learned is that it takes a good tune to grab an audience. Another lesson is that we live in an incredible time period.
What used to cost hundreds, thousands to record and produce can now be (somewhat clunk-illy) recorded on the go with a "smart phone". I realize it's not for everyone, but if you wish a fairly portable, nearly high-dollar sound...then order the Blue Spark Digital.
Combined with a USB OTG cable, this puppy makes me SO glad I returned my iPhone and got the Galaxy Note 2. That said, it comes with the 30-pin if you still am an iPerson. I have also connected to an i7 Windoze laptop via USB and it works great with Mountain Lion as well.
Now, for brass tacks...the Apogee MiC isn't a Neuman. I know. I'm not stupid. Neither are you, though. So, if you like Apogee and want portability--buy both! You'll find good use for them. I am sure of it. The "focus" button you will either love or loathe. I personally am afraid of how much I love it. It is best for voice podcasting but I've recorded vocals on a song just to see which camp I am in.
All serious musicians are bleeding cash. Bleed some toward Blue this time around. You'll never miss it!I enjoy working with this microphone, but it took some time for me to learn how to use it. I often get better results when I use the focus feature and keep the gain low to get a cleaner sound. It is definitely a step above the previous usb microphones by Blue. Would not recommend for professional use if you are making music. This is good for demo making. If you are singing you MUST get the pop filter.I bought the Blue Spark Digital as a way to quickly lay down rough tracks & demo quality recordings for an upcoming record I wanted to have professionally done. The Blue Spark met and exceeded my expectations so much, that I'm considering making my album using this microphone and my iPad!
Sounds great for acoustic guitar and vocals (no other instruments attempted).
For less than $200 and $10 purchase of Garageband or another premium multi-track recording app on your iPad, it's tough to recommend a product other than this one for on-the-go or quick recording.
(Used with iPad Mini and the 30-pin to lightening adapter worked just fine.)
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