Rubber Tracks/ Williamsburg
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- steve albini likes it
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Rubber Tracks/ Williamsburg
does anyone have any new info on this project? has anyone actually been to the location?
i met a band that recorded there but it was briefly and they didnt know much about the recording process.
i met a band that recorded there but it was briefly and they didnt know much about the recording process.
Here is an article I've read:
http://www.greenpointnews.com/news/2707 ... -all-stars
So I guess they're opening a studio 5 blocks away from my place. Seriously though, WTF?!?! Opening a studio that records people for free to hype sneakers is complete bullshit.
A spokesperson was quoted saying, ?The brand is an advocate and catalyst for creativity in music and has an on-going commitment to supporting the music community." So I guess the musical community doesn't include the people whose income is based on recording , producing, and mixing music. Neat.
http://www.greenpointnews.com/news/2707 ... -all-stars
So I guess they're opening a studio 5 blocks away from my place. Seriously though, WTF?!?! Opening a studio that records people for free to hype sneakers is complete bullshit.
A spokesperson was quoted saying, ?The brand is an advocate and catalyst for creativity in music and has an on-going commitment to supporting the music community." So I guess the musical community doesn't include the people whose income is based on recording , producing, and mixing music. Neat.
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- zen recordist
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There are no claims on anything recorded there. No publishing, no master rights, nothing. Bands walk with their hard drives.
The thing is that every band gets one day - 8 hours. This might easily lead to a lot of indie bands wandering around Williamsburg with projects they need to finish...
... somewhere?
The thing is that every band gets one day - 8 hours. This might easily lead to a lot of indie bands wandering around Williamsburg with projects they need to finish...
... somewhere?
http://play.converse.com/?p=2809
This could be interesting. I mean there's no shortage of incredible musicians/songwriters/artist whom are broke as shit.
I wonder if anything cool will come of it.
I love sneakers. I think I have about eight pairs.
This could be interesting. I mean there's no shortage of incredible musicians/songwriters/artist whom are broke as shit.
I wonder if anything cool will come of it.
I love sneakers. I think I have about eight pairs.
A session player we use frequently phoned me yesterday and said his band was recording at rubber tracks that day. So I finished my session at 6 and headed over. There's been talk about it and I wanted to see the place and a session for myself. Here's the rundown...
The place is huge, but the live room is not actually that big. A good size for brooklyn but they made the lobby bigger... ? The rubber tracks website shows videos of what I think is Nat Preists place (NOTE: a completely different studio) which has a Neve 80XX, Pultecs, Fairchilds, etc, but the actual studio has none of these. All the gear is brand new (ie UA reissues, basically an afternoon with the sweetwater catalog and a bunch of dough). They have an API 1608, but were only using it for summing and TB and instead setting levels in PT ? The track sounded fine, nothing great and nothing wrong. The guys I knew where happy to be there but hell, its FREE.
The reality is that it is a completely different vibe from all the other studios I've been in around the neighbourhood (Excello, Studio G, Mission, Strange Weather, Grand Street, Bunker, Vanity, etc..) Basically, those of us who hung our own sheetrock, waited years saving, searching, going into debt for gear, and loose sleep when the phone doesn't ring probably can't relate to rubber tracks. I mean they keep calling it "a community based recording studio"....like a title or something. I'm assuming they're trying to distance themselves from the obvious truth that they're a place that has enough money fueling it to be anywhere and exists so that unsigned artists will hand over they're best songs to be an unpaid sneaker jingle.
The place is huge, but the live room is not actually that big. A good size for brooklyn but they made the lobby bigger... ? The rubber tracks website shows videos of what I think is Nat Preists place (NOTE: a completely different studio) which has a Neve 80XX, Pultecs, Fairchilds, etc, but the actual studio has none of these. All the gear is brand new (ie UA reissues, basically an afternoon with the sweetwater catalog and a bunch of dough). They have an API 1608, but were only using it for summing and TB and instead setting levels in PT ? The track sounded fine, nothing great and nothing wrong. The guys I knew where happy to be there but hell, its FREE.
The reality is that it is a completely different vibe from all the other studios I've been in around the neighbourhood (Excello, Studio G, Mission, Strange Weather, Grand Street, Bunker, Vanity, etc..) Basically, those of us who hung our own sheetrock, waited years saving, searching, going into debt for gear, and loose sleep when the phone doesn't ring probably can't relate to rubber tracks. I mean they keep calling it "a community based recording studio"....like a title or something. I'm assuming they're trying to distance themselves from the obvious truth that they're a place that has enough money fueling it to be anywhere and exists so that unsigned artists will hand over they're best songs to be an unpaid sneaker jingle.
- joelpatterson
- carpal tunnel
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- fossiltooth
- carpal tunnel
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Here's the most comprehensive article I've seen on the new studio. (Janice Brown wrote it for SonicScoop):
Where the Rubber Meets the Road: Converse Opens A Free Recording Studio in Brooklyn
I was a little suspicious about the studio myself, so it was great to finally read more about it. I'm not really too worried about it. For the time being, it does seem like a pretty innocuous PR move. I hope it stays that way. I do believe in keeping on eye on big corporate entities, so if you experience anything to the contrary, let me know.
As far as its impact on the local recording community, their outlook is hopeful. We'll see. I suppose a free day of tracking in a decent studio could have the effect of spoiling would-be-home-recordists for the better, reminding them that real studios can be useful for certain things. That would be a best-case-scenario. (And of course it's only possible if they're hiring engineers who are great to work with.) As always, time will tell.
Where the Rubber Meets the Road: Converse Opens A Free Recording Studio in Brooklyn
I was a little suspicious about the studio myself, so it was great to finally read more about it. I'm not really too worried about it. For the time being, it does seem like a pretty innocuous PR move. I hope it stays that way. I do believe in keeping on eye on big corporate entities, so if you experience anything to the contrary, let me know.
As far as its impact on the local recording community, their outlook is hopeful. We'll see. I suppose a free day of tracking in a decent studio could have the effect of spoiling would-be-home-recordists for the better, reminding them that real studios can be useful for certain things. That would be a best-case-scenario. (And of course it's only possible if they're hiring engineers who are great to work with.) As always, time will tell.
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- re-cappin' neve
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