What Did You Work On Today? 8/3/11
- JGriffin
- zen recordist
- Posts: 6739
- Joined: Thu Jul 31, 2003 1:44 pm
- Location: criticizing globally, offending locally
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Spent 6 hours on some radio that should have taken 2.
Recorded crowd noise with 2 Sennheiser lavalier mics in spaced omni configuration, 'cuz that's what I had on hand when the party broke out.
Test-drove my recently-acquired Altec Lansing 1592A on a bowed-saw session. First time I ever recorded saw was in 1990, and I used an EV 635 into a Soundcraft board; this time it was double-miked with an AEA R84 ribbon into the Altec and a U89 into a Daking Mic Pre One.
Recorded crowd noise with 2 Sennheiser lavalier mics in spaced omni configuration, 'cuz that's what I had on hand when the party broke out.
Test-drove my recently-acquired Altec Lansing 1592A on a bowed-saw session. First time I ever recorded saw was in 1990, and I used an EV 635 into a Soundcraft board; this time it was double-miked with an AEA R84 ribbon into the Altec and a U89 into a Daking Mic Pre One.
"Jeweller, you've failed. Jeweller."
"Lots of people are nostalgic for analog. I suspect they're people who never had to work with it." ? Brian Eno
All the DWLB music is at http://dwlb.bandcamp.com/
"Lots of people are nostalgic for analog. I suspect they're people who never had to work with it." ? Brian Eno
All the DWLB music is at http://dwlb.bandcamp.com/
- joelpatterson
- carpal tunnel
- Posts: 1732
- Joined: Tue Jun 10, 2003 5:20 pm
- Location: Albany, New York
Okay, you double dared me, so here it is...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rv6gE9FsRxk
If you want to try this at home, be aware-- this worm will crawl along for a few minutes, and then go all comatose-- and then wake up and keep trucking. It must be the case that there are few predators, I mean you don't dress up in a lime green suit to be inconspicuous now do you?
For a soundtrack, I recalled a session the spectacular bluegrass band Hill Hollow did here a few years ago-- one of these race-through-as-much-material-as-possible-in-a-12-hour-stretch, so I thought revisiting a mix of "Reuben Had a Train" would be as logical as anything else... no more illogical, at least. The bulk of the song has an RMS of -9, which is pretty loudish, in my world.
Enjoy! And remember, you made me do it!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rv6gE9FsRxk
If you want to try this at home, be aware-- this worm will crawl along for a few minutes, and then go all comatose-- and then wake up and keep trucking. It must be the case that there are few predators, I mean you don't dress up in a lime green suit to be inconspicuous now do you?
For a soundtrack, I recalled a session the spectacular bluegrass band Hill Hollow did here a few years ago-- one of these race-through-as-much-material-as-possible-in-a-12-hour-stretch, so I thought revisiting a mix of "Reuben Had a Train" would be as logical as anything else... no more illogical, at least. The bulk of the song has an RMS of -9, which is pretty loudish, in my world.
Enjoy! And remember, you made me do it!
-
- zen recordist
- Posts: 10890
- Joined: Mon Jun 16, 2003 1:26 am
- Location: Charlotte, NC
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I'm in the middle of mixing a completely stellar record by songwriter Chris Smith, aka Sunshone Still. Some of you may know Sunshine Still as the artist whose song, "Damn You, California," I played during the mixing panel at the first TapeOp Con in Tucson. Chris is one of my favorite artists of all time. I've done five recording projects with him and I mixed the first two Sunshone Still albums. I tracked and mixed this one and it is one of the crazy best things I've ever asked to be a part of. It's great to have watched Chris' growth as a writer and performer over the last ten years or so and this album is a beautiful represenation of where he is right now. The guy is smart, a completely engaging vocalist, a hell of a songwriter, and a totally nice guy. I can't wait for this album to come out. It's dark and heavy, reflecting much of Chris' personal experiences in the two years since his last album, but it's SOOOOOO good.dave watkins wrote:and as always, what did you do today garges?
So, while mixing this record this week, Danielle Howle came by the studio on Wednesday to sing harmony/background vocal parts on two of the songs. Danielle is an absolute trip and a very cool person, so we had a great time working on her stuff. John Elderkin from The Public Good (another great, smart guy with a terrific vibe) was in town and dropped by the studio for a bit and later on, folk singer/writer Si Kahn came by the studio to borrow a guitar amp from me for some rehearsals for a festival he playing near Staunton, VA this weekend. It was an extremely busy day, full of hang time with extremely cool people.
Also, after the session, I goofed around a bit with my beautiful new drumkit, which made its debut on my jazz trio's gig last night. Been super-stoked about that kit and it sounds and plays GREAT!
Chris Garges
Charlotte, NC
- ulriggribbons
- steve albini likes it
- Posts: 399
- Joined: Sun Oct 26, 2003 7:50 pm
- Location: Seattle, WA
I've been living in mono for about a week now (this is a better experience than the last time I lived in mono for more than a week, with a burst ear drum, but that's a different story).
I've a pair of LA3A's from a friend in for repair, one of which makes noise at random. This pair has gone back and forth several times to me and also to another tech, it's kind of like chasing the boogeyman.
So I've the pair across the outputs for a while, with the audio in mono to see how they compare, waiting for the noise. Aside from recapping and making minor adjustments to get the two units as close as possible in sound, here's what I've learned:
1. LA3A's are fun to work on. The top and bottom covers come off, so everything is easy access.
2. T4B's slow down over time. I don't know if the electroluminescent panel loses it's snappiness, or of it's the LDR, but swapping in a NOS T4B makes it way more responsive. So when people talk about the sound of LA3A's or LA2A's, which state are they diggin. Snappy responsive compression, or slow smeared compression?
3. Great records sound just as great in mono. I've been listening to a lot of records this last week( I've just been leaving it on while I work on other things, waiting for it to freak so I can take a look at it), and can't count the number of times I've caught myself digging a record only to stop and say "this is mono!"
Regards
ju
I've a pair of LA3A's from a friend in for repair, one of which makes noise at random. This pair has gone back and forth several times to me and also to another tech, it's kind of like chasing the boogeyman.
So I've the pair across the outputs for a while, with the audio in mono to see how they compare, waiting for the noise. Aside from recapping and making minor adjustments to get the two units as close as possible in sound, here's what I've learned:
1. LA3A's are fun to work on. The top and bottom covers come off, so everything is easy access.
2. T4B's slow down over time. I don't know if the electroluminescent panel loses it's snappiness, or of it's the LDR, but swapping in a NOS T4B makes it way more responsive. So when people talk about the sound of LA3A's or LA2A's, which state are they diggin. Snappy responsive compression, or slow smeared compression?
3. Great records sound just as great in mono. I've been listening to a lot of records this last week( I've just been leaving it on while I work on other things, waiting for it to freak so I can take a look at it), and can't count the number of times I've caught myself digging a record only to stop and say "this is mono!"
Regards
ju
-
- studio intern
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- zen recordist
- Posts: 8876
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Mixing the new Robin McKelle record. I tracked it. People on the record are incredible.
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_McKelle
Fun sounds. Talented people.
john: your post made me crack up.
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_McKelle
Fun sounds. Talented people.
john: your post made me crack up.
- Sean Sullivan
- moves faders with mind
- Posts: 2555
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Amen to that. I wish my wife dug shitakes.cgarges wrote:Holy crap, that sounds good! I'm a sucker for good gnocci and meaty mushrooms.JohnDavisNYC wrote:cooked some gnocci with a 3 mushroom ragout (porcini, crimini, and shitake)
Chris Garges
Charlotte, NC
Late to the party, but I've been working on a short ep of my own stuff. It's been ages since I worked on something by myself. Shit's hard!
Also been practicing on the upright bass. Got a long-term loaner about a month ago, and wow, it's really, really fun. My intonation's still shaky, but my ear and brain are getting used to helping my hands make quick adjustments.
- NewAndImprov
- re-cappin' neve
- Posts: 670
- Joined: Thu May 08, 2003 10:07 am
- Location: Corvallis, OR
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Missed this thread! Last Thursday, the 4th, was the first session for a possible CD by a latin band I've been playing with for about a year and a half. It's 3 percussionists who rotate between congas, bongos, timbales, cajon, shekere, etc, bass, guitar, and keys (me). Our bandleader, one of the percussionists, just found out he's moving permanently to Brazil, so we are recording all our material to document it, and maybe release it.
Guitarist plays a strat through a very nice Twin, micing it with an SM7 and a Shinybox ribbon. Bass is a modern jazz recorded DI. I'm playing a Kurzwiel SP4 for Rhodes and Wurly, and a Hammond XK-1, both recorded DI but will probably be reamped. Percussion is all close mic'd, and we have some really bizarre room mics one of the percussionists borrowed from his job, they're these holophonic heads with 5 mic elements, they can put out a pre-encoded DTS surround signal, or 5 discreet channels. We're recording them discreet, and probably won't mix in surround, but it was a chance to try them out. So far, they sound really transparent.
We have another session tonight, on my way there momentarily. Will try to take some photos.
Guitarist plays a strat through a very nice Twin, micing it with an SM7 and a Shinybox ribbon. Bass is a modern jazz recorded DI. I'm playing a Kurzwiel SP4 for Rhodes and Wurly, and a Hammond XK-1, both recorded DI but will probably be reamped. Percussion is all close mic'd, and we have some really bizarre room mics one of the percussionists borrowed from his job, they're these holophonic heads with 5 mic elements, they can put out a pre-encoded DTS surround signal, or 5 discreet channels. We're recording them discreet, and probably won't mix in surround, but it was a chance to try them out. So far, they sound really transparent.
We have another session tonight, on my way there momentarily. Will try to take some photos.
- Gregg Juke
- cryogenically thawing
- Posts: 3544
- Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2010 10:35 pm
- Location: Buffalo, NY, USA
- Contact:
Tonight (being Thursday, August 11th), we worked on a new solo performance video for Yvonne Schmidt to support her new record. There will be a series of these coming-up; one or two of those, a little group "unplugged" thing, and something with a live full band...
Tonight we shot and tracked video and audio for "Born Under a Bad Sign," Yvonne on solo electric guitar and vocal. I shot it in B&W with my Canon Vixia HFR10 in 1080p in Cine Mode (approximates 24p frame rate), and the audio was Fender Strat through a Fender Blues Jr. (miked with a 57), with a little touch-up reamping with the "Ampiltube" plug-in (a little grit and some delay). Vocals through a Shinybox ribbon into a DBX pre-amp, with a little reverb, EQ, and compression. All tracked into Sonar Producer 6. The video will be edited in Sony Vegas.
We'll finish it up next week and I'll try to get it posted asap.
GJ
Tonight we shot and tracked video and audio for "Born Under a Bad Sign," Yvonne on solo electric guitar and vocal. I shot it in B&W with my Canon Vixia HFR10 in 1080p in Cine Mode (approximates 24p frame rate), and the audio was Fender Strat through a Fender Blues Jr. (miked with a 57), with a little touch-up reamping with the "Ampiltube" plug-in (a little grit and some delay). Vocals through a Shinybox ribbon into a DBX pre-amp, with a little reverb, EQ, and compression. All tracked into Sonar Producer 6. The video will be edited in Sony Vegas.
We'll finish it up next week and I'll try to get it posted asap.
GJ
Last edited by Gregg Juke on Thu Aug 11, 2011 11:49 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- Brett Siler
- moves faders with mind
- Posts: 2518
- Joined: Fri Dec 05, 2003 12:16 pm
- Location: Evansville, IN
- Contact:
Mixing a band I tracked named Throneface. Kinda Mevlinsish inspired 3 piece. Cool stuff
My musical endeavors!
My Music: http://www.brettsiler.bandcamp.com/
StudioMother Brain Sound Infrastructure
My Music: http://www.brettsiler.bandcamp.com/
StudioMother Brain Sound Infrastructure
- Brett Siler
- moves faders with mind
- Posts: 2518
- Joined: Fri Dec 05, 2003 12:16 pm
- Location: Evansville, IN
- Contact:
Early this morning started mixing an avant garde duo called Castro's Bead. They are a laptop and guitar duo. Lots of drone sound scapes, heavy rock riffs and a spastic track of free drum machine and guitar. Bizarre and cool stuff.
About to start a recording sessiong with a rock group called The City Grimm. Gonna be a late one, 8pm-2am!
About to start a recording sessiong with a rock group called The City Grimm. Gonna be a late one, 8pm-2am!
My musical endeavors!
My Music: http://www.brettsiler.bandcamp.com/
StudioMother Brain Sound Infrastructure
My Music: http://www.brettsiler.bandcamp.com/
StudioMother Brain Sound Infrastructure
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