Neumann BCM 104 — Editorial Review
The Neumann BCM 104 is a large-diaphragm cardioid condenser purpose-built for broadcast and voice. It folds an integrated pop screen and a shock-mounted capsule into a body designed for speech, and it has become a studio favorite well beyond the broadcast booth.
Featured Video Review
Broadcast-tuned, remarkably quiet
Per Neumann, the BCM 104 pairs a very linear response — with a gentle presence boost around 4 kHz and a slight lift above 10 kHz for speech intelligibility — with an extremely low 7 dB-A self-noise and up to 138 dB SPL handling. RecordingHacks documents the integrated pop screen and speech-optimized capsule. In Podcastage's review and test — featured above — it's compared against the SM7B, TLM 103, and U 87.
Honest cons
- Premium price. It's a Neumann broadcast mic, priced well above mass-market options.
- Condenser sensitivity. As a sensitive condenser it captures room ambience, so it rewards a treated space.
- Handling noise. Some users find it sensitive to handling/desk vibration without a good boom.
- Cardioid only. A single fixed polar pattern, voiced specifically for voice work.
Where this microphone fits
- Broadcasters and podcasters who want a presenceful, intelligible voice with controlled sibilance.
- Voice-over artists needing very low self-noise for clean, quiet recordings.
- Studios that also want a clear, authoritative condenser for vocals and instruments.
- Not budget buyers, untreated-room users wanting a forgiving dynamic, or those needing multiple polar patterns.
Sources & Citations
- Neumann, "BCM 104 broadcast microphone (product and technical overview)," neumann.com (accessed 2026-05-26)
- RecordingHacks, "Neumann BCM 104," recordinghacks.com (accessed 2026-05-26)
Last verified: 2026-05-26
