🎤 Elevate your mobile audio game—because your content deserves studio-quality sound.
The Shure MV88+ Video Kit is a premium digital stereo condenser microphone designed for seamless compatibility with iOS, Android, and desktop devices. It features real-time headphone monitoring, adjustable stereo width and polar patterns, and comes bundled with a Manfrotto PIXI tripod, phone clamp, and essential cables. Perfect for livestreamers and mobile content creators seeking professional-grade audio on the move.
B**N
Most detailed recording with a sturdy, top notch quality built mic
Update 11/12/2021: I have recorded hundreds of synthesizer and electric guitar tracks with my MV88 connected to my iPad 7th generation. The app works great and I can record on the fly. I have connected my synthesizers to a setup of three pairs of studio monitors and this is a massive soundscape. Each of my synths is connected to one pair of studio monitors so I do not get a mushy sound mix. The MV88 is that good that it records even the slightest pitch changing from each synth. It is also very sensitive so when you have a midi controller with clunky keys it will record these noises and add it to your recording. I solved some kind of challenging recording situation by placing my iPad on a separate Stativ so that there is no connection to any of my keyboard stands and synth racks. The MV88 is every musician’s dream by simply plugging in a mic into an iPad and starting the recording in full stereo mode. And the output quality is sheer amazing. I play my recordings from my iPad directly through a Hi-Fi stereo system and no one who listens to my tracks would ever guess that these recordings are just made by this small mic. A winner by all means.MV88 delivers excellent quality and by far more than what I expected from such a mini-looking device. I bought this to record some of my synth and keyboard tunes without having to use the periphery of a mixer setup. Well, with this simple mic connected to my iPad recordings work out pretty well. The output quality is not too mushy and one can clearly hear and distinguish between the synth pads, the synth keys and the sequencer and arpeggiator sounds. Awesome! And of course, if my playing is recorded with a software like Ableton and connected thru a mixer, the quality is like when you make a studio recording. This is what the MV88 cannot deliver, because it is placed in front of my studio monitors which means the audio signals it receives and transforms into wav.files are different as if one records his playing with a complete software/mixer setup. A no-brainer . But for recording on the fly, this mic is priceless. The manual is worth to study, especially the settings part is a must to read. Try every knob and turn on/off every feature, you will be surprised what a difference it makes e.g. when it comes to using the compressor and limiter functions. Use ALL of the setting functions in different setups and you will be rewarded by a superb recording quality! Today I recorded for the first time some tunes I played on my electric guitar thru a stereo setup by using two ampheads and cabinets and various delay/echo pedal settings In my home studio. Wow, the MV88 is able to produce a superwide stereo image, I can hear the ping pong trails note by note, and there is no loss in low and high notes. Chords sound clear too! I converted each song into 256 bps mp4a files and emailed it to friends. Their feedback was positively overwhelming! It is true, size does not matter, and in this case I can say that the MV88 delivers such outstanding quality that even a 5*rating does not even come close to what this mic is able to handle when it comes to recording songs on the fly. I use it now every day for each and every recording as it is also a most valuable tool to improve on my playing quality, it is the perfect trainer for anybody who seriously likes to improve his playing abilities! A top notch mic at an affordable price! Superb!! EDIT 04-17-21: I recorded all my studio synth tracks via my iPad by connecting the MV88 to my iPad nd by positioning the MV 88 on a stand between both monitors (Edifier series). The recording quality comes close to recording with a DAW. I played the saved recordings through my amp system by connecting the iPad to my Onkyo system. You can’t tell the difference between playing a CD and playing these recordings. It is that clear in sounding. This mic captures every noise, so don’t cough, sneeze or shuffle your feet during recording. It even captured the chirping of birds in our backyard when I left the window open during my studio sessions. One needs to balance out the input impedance to prevent any distortion. However, this mic is the BEST in terms of recording quality. The Ahure engineers did a truly great job on this one.
S**L
You may burst out laughing hearing recordings with the MV88 for the first time—it’s that good
Update 16Oct2021 - iPhone Xs Max in 2018 finally introduced stereo mics. The MV88 is still superior in frequency response and doesn't require the always-on compression in the iPhone.I modified a 2021 Spigen Ultra Hybrid case with an X-acto knife to clear the MV88 (see photo). It was possible to leave intact the top edge over the Lightning connector--unlike some cases with an open area thereto I’ve used the MV88 for live music performance video recording in stereo, with a handheld iPhone 6s Plus since Dec2015. As of 04Jul2017 there is no competition for this application. As a musician and software engineer coding audio signal processing, I’ve found the sound quality to be excellent. Amazing lows and clear, extended natural highs vs. mics like the Zoom iQ7 and the old Tascam iM2. Amazon apparently doesn’t allow external links, but google “youtube electric eye lucky strike” should yield two videos of the same performance, with audio from the Zoom iQ7 vs. the MV88.There are other great stereo mics from Shure and Rode, but they're significantly bulkier and heavier—impractical for handheld video. And there is no contest vs the mono, overload prone built-in iPhone mics—optimized for noise cancellation and monaural voice, rather than stereo live music. You may burst out laughing hearing recordings with the MV88 for the first time. Commenters saying there is little or no difference—maybe are listening on the iPhone speaker? Headphones, external speakers, are the real test.The MOTIV app is easy to use. Documentation is a joy—clear and detailed, often answering not just how, but why. Its Band preset works amazingly well for rock concerts—just a touch of compression and limiting, to the point i’ve never heard distortion on live performances, other than traceable to overloaded mixer/monitor/amps in the original performance. Even on video of Motley Crue’s Final Tour 31Dec2015, the explosions weren’t distorted (google youtube motley crue antera77, at 27:42)The highly elegant pivot and twist system for the stereo mics gives correctly oriented stereo audio for landscape mode (“horizontal”) video. Mics like the Rode iXYL and the apparently abandoned Blue Mikey Digital Lightning (Blue’s website as of 04Jul2017 touts iOS 7 compatibility—a version introduced Sep2013) require portrait mode for this—rendering them essentially useless for landscape mode video. The jewel-like, all metal construction screams quality, vs. plasticy, deformed Mickey Mouse ears looking mics like the Zoom iQ7.Suggested improvements, 0-10 scale, 10 being highest priority/cost:10/10: Recording level indication on the mic - add two or three green LED level meters to the single MV88 “Communication Established” LED.My biggest disappointments have involved not knowing audio levels while recording video. Excellent workaround has been an iOS video app like Filmic Pro with on-screen audio level meters. Apple’s default Camera app has none—suggestion to Apple: Make audio level meters a Preferences-selectable option! Much less elegant workaround: carry earbuds or headphones to the live show to monitor the audio. Earbuds are hard to hear in a live music setting, and more bulk and kit to lose and fuss with—especially with iPhone 7 and newer needing an adapter for headphones.The $100 Zoom iQ7 Lightning mic has three LED level meters, so they’re likely cost-effective.4/10: “Turn Airplane Mode On When MV88 detected” option in the Shure MOTIV appI’ve come home to interference-riddled audio several times, because I forgot to turn Airplane Mode on. No reliable way to tell if interference is occurring while taking video, even with an audio level meter-equipped video app like Filmic Pro.You wouldn’t want Airplane Mode automatic:* not clear that iOS would allow this* some would like to do live streaming, and/or to take calls while recording even if it interrupts the video app3/10: Improve software system reliability in establishing MV88 communicationI don’t know if this is practical. But I’ve had big disappointments from not paying attention to the MV88 green LED. Not noticing the serial data connection wasn’t established meant the horrible, built in mono iPhone mic took over, or worse, no audio. Even using an audio level meter equipped app like Filmic Pro, sometimes I haven’t noticed if the on-screen audio meters were showing stereo vs. mono, or no audio. Apparently it’s fairly common even with the MV88 plugged into the Lightning connector, that a serial data connection is not established. Understandable given several systems have to interact perfectly:* mechanical Lightning connection* three software systems—iOS, video app, Shure MOTIV appThe ideal live music recorder would be a dedicated video camera and permanently attached stereo mic and integrated software. It may be that Shure has already maximized communication reliability, given the constraints of integrating with the iPhone hardware and software.1/10: Add RFID—MV88 is so tiny, it’s easy to lose!A passive 916MHz RFID tag would add an insignificant $0.15 (in volume as of 2006) to the $150 cost. You’ve got the radio hardware to sent out RFID signals right there on the iPhone. Most practical would be just a response—tells you the MV88 is in the room somewhere at least, vs. lost at the gig. GPS chips and a beeper in the MV88 would be nice, but almost certainly not cost effective. Source: wikipedia RFID.——I’d like to address the remainder of this review to errors in the review “Not $150 worth of mic, just ok.By Amazon Customer #99 on March 7, 2017”, as these are common misunderstandings that could dissuade many from making an excellent choice in the MV88:“Bottom line: It's good but, frustratingly, not $150 good…Zoom makes one…at least as good for…less.”I disagree completely. Superior performance, build quality and features are well worth $150 vs competition like the $100 Zoom iQ7. This is generally echoed by the majority of other reviews here.“ “It's fine for speech and podcasts and YouTube videos, but not really good enough for a musician. It is noticeably noisy (hissy)…”For conversations, and live music performances at least, avoiding distortion and overload, is far more important than background hiss—a comparative non-issue. As a musician and audio engineer, I’ve found the MV88 audio excellent—extended bass and highs, and if there’s any distortion, it’s been from overdriven mixers/monitors/amps in the original performance. On quiet passages, audience noise has been more an issue than background hiss.From Shure:“The MV88 was designed primarily to record loud sounds, like a rock concert, or medium sounds, such as conversation. As the sounds gets softer and/or the MV88 is placed farther away from the sound source, at some point the self-noise (hiss level) of the MV88 might become noticeable or objectionable…The MV88 does not have an exceptionally low noise floor like a Shure KSM44A (4 dB SPL-A), however the KSM44A is nearly seven times the price. If the requirement is to record very soft bird sounds in a forest, or the barely audible whispers of wind in the trees, the MV88 may not be appropriate.” (google Shure Customer Help MV88 recording soft sounds)Further, the biggest source of background hiss is presets with Compression on, rather than quiescent mic capsule noise. Turning it off or using Flat preset in the MOTIV app will help. Just be careful to set recording levels low enough to prevent overload.“…even when the phone is in airplane mode.”Airplane mode being off, and microphone signal-to-noise performance are two different noise sources. Airplane mode turns off the iPhone cellular/Bluetooth/wifi radio frequency transmit and receive, which can cause static and other intermittent noise at audio frequencies. This has nothing to do with steady background hiss from the MV88 ADC and mic capsules’ combined signal to noise ratio.“ It has weak midrange and bass response…“Compared to what? I’ve found the MV88 to have excellent bass response vs other Lightning connector mics like the iQ7. Shure’s User Guide lists response as 20-20kHz. Its frequency response graph shows a gentle rolloff below 300Hz but no dip in the midrange:(From Shure MV88 User Guide - Specifications)You may be comparing the MV88 to a mic with artificially boosted midrange and bass.“… although it's tweakable in the MOTIV app up to a point.”Indeed it is, with the MOTIV 5-band graphic EQ:(From Shure MV88 User Guide - The ShurePlus MOTIV App - Mic setup)“It is heavy and cumbersome unless you hold the phone…on a tripod.”Maybe if you’re a leprechaun. The MV88 mass is 40.5g vs. your favored Zoom iQ7 at 30.5g. Using the MV88 handheld for shooting live music performances with my 192g iPhone 6s Plus and approx 24g Incase Halo Snap case increases the mass as a unit by about 20%. Or the mass vs. using the iQ7 by about 4.1%.(192+24+41)/(192+24).(192+24+41)/(192+24+31)Claiming a 4% increase in mass would push an iPhone-plus-mic into tripod territory is baffling.“It won't work with many cases…”It fits Apple, and some Incase cases. Making sure your case provides clearance around the Lightning connector is a reasonable tradeoff to get the excellent MV88 features. Shure also addresses this:(google Shure Customer Help MV88 use with a phone case)“Alesis and Rode make better ones.”As of Jul2017:* The RODE iXY-L orients its stereo mics incorrectly for landscape mode video. This can outweigh possibly better sound* Alesis lists no mics on its website“It’s an improvement over built in DAC/mic but not a huge improvement.”DAC (digital to analog conversion) is irrelevant to an analog audio source like a microphone. You might be thinking of analog to digital conversion (ADC).“An iPhone really needs a full outboard DAC to record decently. This seems to share…”You seem to be suggesting the MV88 relies on an iPhone internal digital to analog converter (DAC). If so, this is false.Again, digital to analog conversion—outboard or otherwise—is irrelevant to an analog audio source like a microphone. You might be thinking of analog to digital conversion (ADC). This is necessarily done by the MV88, since the iPhone Lightning connector has no analog data signals. It only has pins for a serial digital data stream. That is, the MV88 indeed has an ADC “outboard” from the iPhone.(Wikipedia Lightning Connector)
P**A
Great little mic for the iPhone or iPad/iPad Pro with lightning port
UPDATE Sept 2021: I've been using this mic since 2018, but now that I have upgraded to iOS devices that have a usb-c port, I would really love an iOS compatible/usb-c version of this microphone and it's truly a pity they don't offer one because based on the lightning version, I'd buy it in a heartbeat! It's really convenient being able to plug a mic directly into an iPad Pro without having to deal with additional cables or mounting systems.Love the portability factor; recording quality is significantly better than a lav mic I had been using. Really like the small form factor, portability and that it works perfectly with the lightning port on the iPad, and no wires. Feels like a quality build, as well.I'm not a professional videographer, and this is not as good as, say, the Blue Yeti (which is actually less expensive now, but quite heavy/you cannot travel with it) but I think the sound quality is pretty good for YouTube videos and great for those who need to do audio/voiceovers on the go. I purchased based on numerous positive reviews on YouTube and am very satisfied with it.
J**H
Works well. Has a very simple recording app.
The mic functions well, but does not capture lower frequencies. I use it for recording Didgeridoo B1#, 63 Hertz playing (as measured on the T1 tuner app). So, I won't be able to use it for quality recordings.It has very short cables and I got a 6 foot lightning to mic.I very much like the simplicity of the Motiv app that it comes with. It has some simple EQ and decibel settings. I can trim recordings. A few other helpful things too. Ultra simple to just set the decibels I want after a few tests and then press the record button.
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