Hi Juice,
What brand of mic /model have you found that can be pushed for recording without having the sound fall apart ?
Thanks
Basil
That is not an easy question to answer and trial an error is always going to be your best friend.
I can tell you I've never been blessed with the financial status to afford mics that cost thousands but I've tried many of the low end mics and found the mid way point can usually do a fair job.
About 25 years ago I remember Peavey came out with this mic that they claimed sounded exactly as the Shure Standard SM-58 (BTW don't underestimate the quality you can get out of an SM 58). So I was intrigued because I was outfitting my bands setup and figured I could save some dough as they were like half the cost.
Being skeptical I put both mics sided by side to see if I could hear the difference.
I was actually a little surprized at first because it did sound pretty close although I wasn't really pushing it.
So I figured these just might work. So I grab the mic from the stand and all of sudded I thought my speakers were going to jump out of their cabinets.
I said whoa! what he heck is that. The handling noise on the mic was so bad you couldn't even touch it without making loud low end noises from the rubbing of your hand around the mic. It picked up every little nuance of vibration through the mic stand which would be no good for live performance when you got drums kicking away and jumping around. A Feed back nightmare waiting to happen.
I grabbed the SM 58 and it was quiet as anything when I handled it and moved it around in my hand.
The insulation protecting the element seemed to be the biggest difference and obviously loud volumes would penetrate through the Case of the microphone adding noise and that to me was not acceptable.
As far as breaking up? It's hard to say what will do it. But chances are if have to treat your equipment with kid gloves because it needs to be dealt delicately or it throws a tantrum.
Keep looking.
All mics don't fit all situations so if you have to buy a mic to do all get one that has extra features like DB padding.
Good brand named mics will usually have very good case consrtuction and a low noise shelf.
If you need to carry around some mics just to plot down ideas then the real cheap mics will do the job and hurt so much if they get broken or lost or runned over.
I have been using recently the Rode NT3 for my live events and they have a very nice tightness to them. I know that seems like a weird term but I put them side by side to two of my Groove Tubes Large Diaphram mics and it was way more responsive. I sold the 2 GT's. The NT 3 is only a medium size condenser but sounds really good for both vocals and acoustic guitar.
You can hear them being used live by going to my website and seeing any of the recent videos.