
sonusman
Banned
The distortion on the vocal is part an intentional thing done at mix, and part a result of the mp3 encoding. It wasn't supposed to come out that distorted, and the original track isn't at all.
ART pre's. Drums and guitar ran through a 100' Horizon snake (track in a basement when I had my mobile rig.....I was out on the street during drum tracking...bass was overdubbed in the rig, but the guitars were in the basement...everything else was overdubbed is a throw together setup that we could go anywhere with...preamps in a rack, Mackie 1604 to monitor tracks (never used the pre's for tracking...yuk!!! I won't go THAT cheap sounding!!!
).
Type 1 ADAT's
Behringer Composers used at mix (oh, and one old AutoCom)
Symetrix 501 comp used here and there.
Behringer Gates used on the snare and tom WHILE tracking!!!
Lexicon LXP 1 and PCM 70 and PCM 42 and Alesis Quadraverb 2 for effects.
DDA console
Mixed down to a Fostex DAT player.
The 3 horn solos were on the same track of tape, so I had to run 3 compressors inline from the deck to the console and manually switch them for each solo while mixing....the eq tweeks for the solo's were fun to get done.
My point I can see is being understood. You can spend a whole lot of time TALKING about preamps, and which is the best deal blah blah blah, OR, you can just start recording and learn about the important stuff.
I worked with the other producer/tracking engineer on this mix, and compromises were made I was not happy with. The other guy was the guitar player in the band, and is an excellent tracking engineer. But, he is not what I would consider a very good mixing engineer, and usually he just send projects he tracks to me to mix. In this case, he just felt he needed to still have some control at mix time, so a lot of things that HE thought was going to work were done on this mix that I would have done. Oh well, that is how it works in recording when you are paid by clients.
Trust me when I say that the I was after an even MORE open sound while mixing, but had to start squishing stuff at the other producers call. The ART preamp's in many cases were allowing us to tracking much better levels to tape than the many Class A pre's that were available throughout the project so I don't blame them. The studio we mixed this at has an engineer who has tracked/mixed major label release stuff. When we brought in the tapes and played them just to hear what his room sounded like, he couldn't believe that we tracked this stuff on ADAT's, and used cheap mic pre's. Talk like that brings a smile to my face....
There is a splattering of Focusrite Red's, Neve, Demeter, API pre's on this CD. More than likely, the Rhodes on this cut used one of those, but then again, that was 4 years ago that we tracked this, so my memory of those occasional preamp's is vague.
Anyway, get yer butt's to tracking and forget about all this preamp talk. It is rubbish.
Eddie
ART pre's. Drums and guitar ran through a 100' Horizon snake (track in a basement when I had my mobile rig.....I was out on the street during drum tracking...bass was overdubbed in the rig, but the guitars were in the basement...everything else was overdubbed is a throw together setup that we could go anywhere with...preamps in a rack, Mackie 1604 to monitor tracks (never used the pre's for tracking...yuk!!! I won't go THAT cheap sounding!!!

Type 1 ADAT's
Behringer Composers used at mix (oh, and one old AutoCom)
Symetrix 501 comp used here and there.
Behringer Gates used on the snare and tom WHILE tracking!!!
Lexicon LXP 1 and PCM 70 and PCM 42 and Alesis Quadraverb 2 for effects.
DDA console
Mixed down to a Fostex DAT player.
The 3 horn solos were on the same track of tape, so I had to run 3 compressors inline from the deck to the console and manually switch them for each solo while mixing....the eq tweeks for the solo's were fun to get done.
My point I can see is being understood. You can spend a whole lot of time TALKING about preamps, and which is the best deal blah blah blah, OR, you can just start recording and learn about the important stuff.
I worked with the other producer/tracking engineer on this mix, and compromises were made I was not happy with. The other guy was the guitar player in the band, and is an excellent tracking engineer. But, he is not what I would consider a very good mixing engineer, and usually he just send projects he tracks to me to mix. In this case, he just felt he needed to still have some control at mix time, so a lot of things that HE thought was going to work were done on this mix that I would have done. Oh well, that is how it works in recording when you are paid by clients.
Trust me when I say that the I was after an even MORE open sound while mixing, but had to start squishing stuff at the other producers call. The ART preamp's in many cases were allowing us to tracking much better levels to tape than the many Class A pre's that were available throughout the project so I don't blame them. The studio we mixed this at has an engineer who has tracked/mixed major label release stuff. When we brought in the tapes and played them just to hear what his room sounded like, he couldn't believe that we tracked this stuff on ADAT's, and used cheap mic pre's. Talk like that brings a smile to my face....

There is a splattering of Focusrite Red's, Neve, Demeter, API pre's on this CD. More than likely, the Rhodes on this cut used one of those, but then again, that was 4 years ago that we tracked this, so my memory of those occasional preamp's is vague.
Anyway, get yer butt's to tracking and forget about all this preamp talk. It is rubbish.
Eddie