C
Chibi Nappa
New member
The band I run sound for spent the day in Studio 4 just outside of Philly yesterday. I tagged along for the experiance and to offer my input (and play one track of shaker egg
). It was a one song one shot deal. The studio and the producer (Phil Nicolo) were definatly the real deal. Bands such as Boyz 2 Men, Aerosmith, Dishwahlla, Billy Joel, Cibo Mato, and the Fugies have all recorded and mixed there. Anyway, I learned a ton from the experiance, and I thought I'd share some of it here.
The #1 thing I learned: The recorded sound is everything. I've always heard people say that, but until I experianced it first hand I had no idea just how true it is. Phil initially tracked the band live to a click track. I sat in the control room with him. The compleatly un-processed, un-mixed live sound coming out of the monitors blew me away! By the time overdubs and punch-ins were compleated, a deaf chimp could have made a professional sounding mix with those tracks.
And what a room we had to work with.... It was just a giant recording space with beautiful wooden floors and walls and a two-story ceiling. The drums just kicked ass in there, even without the $30,000 Telefunken mic in the center of the room or the Neve console everything was running into.
The second thing I learned was the value of great sounding musical EQ. Phil could crank the knobs and shape the sound any way he saw fit, and it all held together. In fact, it did much better than simply hold together.....it continued to sound just as amazing as it did before he started turning knobs. My budget EQ falls apart into a nasty, phase-y mess when I do anything past the smallest nudge. I was simply amazed. Add at least 1 channel of killer EQ to my shopping list.
Anyway, I'll be back with more stories later.

The #1 thing I learned: The recorded sound is everything. I've always heard people say that, but until I experianced it first hand I had no idea just how true it is. Phil initially tracked the band live to a click track. I sat in the control room with him. The compleatly un-processed, un-mixed live sound coming out of the monitors blew me away! By the time overdubs and punch-ins were compleated, a deaf chimp could have made a professional sounding mix with those tracks.
And what a room we had to work with.... It was just a giant recording space with beautiful wooden floors and walls and a two-story ceiling. The drums just kicked ass in there, even without the $30,000 Telefunken mic in the center of the room or the Neve console everything was running into.
The second thing I learned was the value of great sounding musical EQ. Phil could crank the knobs and shape the sound any way he saw fit, and it all held together. In fact, it did much better than simply hold together.....it continued to sound just as amazing as it did before he started turning knobs. My budget EQ falls apart into a nasty, phase-y mess when I do anything past the smallest nudge. I was simply amazed. Add at least 1 channel of killer EQ to my shopping list.

Anyway, I'll be back with more stories later.