Studio Switch Up #2
Studio Switch Up #2
Hi. Let’s get to it! The recording studio switch up progressed a lot then came on a surprising turn and I’m still curving around that bend as I type. More on that part in a bit.
First... Dr. Dog's new album Shame, Shame is out today! Congratulations to them.
(Dr. Dog mixing)
Drink Up Buttercup's first album (and the first album I ever produced) Born And Thrown On A Hook came out March 23! And congratulations to them.
(Drink Up Buttercup's CD release in Philly)
So...
Where I left off... Dr. Dog & I wanted to improve our music situation. Since we moved into our current studio (American Diamond if you ask me / Meth Beach if you ask them) we’ve talked about moving out. I’ve made many records in there and so far avoided taking out a loan and building a soundproof room. I don’t generally enjoy being in soundproof studios and neither do the artists I work with. We usually find more inspiration in comfortable or unusual places. Living rooms, outside, old apartments, empty fields... but sometimes there are sounds we want to record that those places insist we shouldn’t record: very quiet acoustic guitars, a string section, whispery singing. Meth Beach/American Diamond/Whatever is in a lively building. Dogs sing along and there’s an excellent yet unfortunately prolific carpenter below us. Back in November all possible disasters happened concurrently while I was recording my friend Elliott Harvey who was singing so softly I couldn’t hear him from a couple feet away... the carpenter’s saw started up, Scott decided to spray paint a t-shirt in the studio (!), some Dr. Dog members started loading out equipment, a semi truck pulled up to make a delivery, and the charming german shepherd was barking. That was the final moment when I decided I needed a vocal booth. Then I thought the “vocal booth” would be better if it could hold two people playing acoustic guitars, and maybe the piano, and drums could be cool in there, and since I hate control rooms what if it was big enough to hold the piano and me and the drums and the... so now we’re talking about soundproofing our whole studio.
Ok. So that was the impetus. Frustration becoming inspiration. Lucky for me my father (an actual engineer) enjoys redesigning rooms and building them. One frustrated day in December I told him everything I wanted out of our studio redesign. No control room, lively tracking room, daylight, windows that still open, a very open design, quiet, should still feel like one big space while separating the kitchen, storage, and loft area. We do need a separate space for people as they come in. As much as the one big room is a great idea sometimes friends, parents, wives or whoever come over and half to instantly stop talking so we can keep working. Awkward. So then Pops whipped up something great. He laid out a plan that would turn the studio into a long rectangle (about 680 sq. ft - same as now) and outside the studio have storage, a kitchen, and a large raised loft area.
It definitely optimizes the 1400 sq. ft we have. So in January 2010 that became the plan. Our estimate is about $10,000 to build that. (including no equipment changes). Our landlord approved the design. This is now the big idea. Now I can move on the fun part of picking what equipment to change up but...
Then a larger opportunity came up. A space on the first floor of our building opened up. This is a huge space. It seems to be at least triple the size.
We applied my Dad’s construction ideas to that space and it turns out we could build a recording space about 1400 sq. ft and still have a whole lot of space all around it. There’s enough room to build a smaller studio in the future if we need to. The loading dock connects to it. And! the carpenter noise is quieter in there. Seems like a better situation all around, eh? All except the rent is double and the cost to build is double.
Hmm. Which to build in? If we build on the larger 1st floor space we could keep working in our current space then move in when it’s complete. That’s a big advantage. But all the costs are double. Hmmm
Since I was also making records, working and going about life during this process the planning didn’t happen particularly quickly. I can make gear decisions quickly but since I know very little about construction and such these decisions take me a while. So now we’re at mid February and the plan is to build in one of these two spaces... I just need to finish cost estimates then find someone to loan me the money to do it. I think building in the larger 1st floor is a better idea if I can afford it. Then...
Unforeseen opportunity #2. So in February this guy calls me about 10 times over a couple weeks. He has a recording studio in south Philly and wants a young producer/engineer to use it, take it over, do something with it. I avoid these calls for a while because I’m stubborn and have decided to go into a lot of debt to build a studio. Since I’ve decided to go into debt to build a studio what could I possibly want with this guy calling offering a studio... so... eventually I call him back, we have an encouraging conversation and I’m left confused. I go down to visit his studio and it’s nice. It's BIG, sounds great, it’s old, it’s very well made.
There’s a Harrison console sitting in it(!)(needs some repair). There’s a beautiful grand piano(!)(...also needs repair). There's a bunch of tube outboard equipment. The studio doesn’t look good but that’s nothing christmas lights, lamps, some color can’t fix. I mean it looks good in the sense that it looks like a big old professional studio but if you’ve worked at our studio you know that’s not our style. Those paces tend to make my friends feel intimidated. The owner and I have another inspiring conversation about music, recording, Philadelphia, the music business... and now I leave feeling hesitant excitement. What will it sound like in there? Can I fix the console? How in the world can I move in there and but keep my prices as affordable as they are now? So I was getting ahead of myself, as I do. The owner said just bring a friend over to play some music, try out the room, see if I even like it there. I thought about it, went down to SXSW (fantastic), came back, brought 1/2 of Drink Up Buttercup to this new studio to record some drums just to see what it sounded like. Damn. Sounds good. The next day(last Friday) I started an album in there recording acoustic guitar all day. Sounded great, too.
So I can thank my slow decision making skills for allowing this studio situation to show up.
So where does that leave us.
Plans are drawn up for building in our current studio for maybe 10-15k.
Plans are drawn up for building in the larger space on our building’s first floor for maybe 20-25k.
An existing studio has come up as potentially great situation
What will I do? I’m going to pursue the existing studio space for a few weeks more and see what happens. If I can dream up a way that makes sense for me, the owner, Dr. Dog, and my friends to make records in there then we will. If it doesn’t work out then we’ll build one of our two studio plans.
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Finally! On to equipment. Much more fun.
Right now I'm mixing Pepi Ginsberg's next record and am trying out some Waves plugins. The Maserati and CLA signature packs. I don't like them. I find them confusing. There's no way to know what's really going on with them. You get controls that are named things like Snap, Grit, Sub, Power, Loud, Unnnghg, Yeah!, Dirt... I made some of those up. They look nice... faux wood grain & such. They feature pretty looking knobs that are very frustrating to "turn" with a mouse (let me right now say thank you to Ableton for designing a DAW that actually doesn't try to look like a piece of analog hardware). They do sound very good, actually, but they're not for me. I'd rather know precisely what I'm doing to a track I'm also demoing the JJP analog collection. Of course these are plugins... there's nothing analog about them. When I'm mixing I tend to wish I had more 1176's and a couple LA2A's. So until I do have those I thought I'd see if there are some plugins that are good. I tend to use my laptop for everything and since Apple dropped express cards from their design I can't use anything digital from Universal Audio. There plugins seems nice but I need native plugs. URS seems good, too, but I demoed them years ago, forgot what they sound like, and now that I'm shopping around my iLok won't let me demo them again. Whoops. I don't need reverbs or delays. We have two real tape echoes and two channels of real spring reverb and an actual hallway near some stairs.
Speakers. Proac Studio 100's still seem the best to me.
I mixed most all of Shame, Shame on Proac's and it turned out great. any problems in the mixes weren't because of the speakers. I just also have to find an amp that isn't a Bryston 4B. I don't know anything about amps so I'll research those a bit.Console! Even if we move into new south philly studio we'll keep Meth Diamond/American Beach. It's such a worn in & locally loved spot it'd be silly not to keep it. So if that happens I'm looking at two console problems. The Harrison in the new spot needs recapping and other as yet unknown repairs. The Allen & Heath at Meth Beach either deserves repair or replacement. I would imagine this studio would be mainly recording & writing... not mixing. So automation wouldn't be important. I really like Daniel Lanois' idea to keep the recording and mixing consoles separate. Use one console or set of mic amps for recording and return on a different console so you can always have a mix going. There is an interesting console by Allen & Heath being designed now called the r24. It's an analog console with full automation. Look it up. The other one I mentioned is the Toft. My friend Ryan who built & run's Drexel's recording studios let me come in and fool around with one. It was only a short period of time but the mix I made on it was ok. Pretty ok. This could be a good replacement for the Sigma we have now. I'm going to see if I can demo one more thoroughly.
Lately when looking at equipment that I want it's mainly stereo buss effects. Right now I don't mix with a compressor or EQ or anything on the stereo buss because I don't own one. I have been using some plugins on the final mix or Tube EQ at Larry's Gold's and I've preferred the results every time. I taked to Greg Calbi about my Shame, Shame mixes and the one piece of gear he used on every mix was the Anamod ATS-1. So what I'm looking for now is a stereo buss compressor, stereo buss EQ, and maybe this Anamod piece. Since, as you know, I mainly make independent records and this is all I do for a living there's not extra money laying around to blow on gear. Everything has to make a significant difference to be worth buying. There's a tempting option which is to just use a mac tower and get a UAD card since they make a Neve 33609, Massive Passive, and Fatso emulation (that last one's funny since the Fatso itself is emulating something else). That would mean I'd need to use a tower and be in the same place every time I'm mixing, but then if I buy all these pieces of hardware that's at least 6 rackspaces full of gear. I doubt I'd be taking that rack with me every place I work on a mix. So I'd be tied to one place anyway. Plus... they're plugins. I actually enjoy mixing when I'm using hardware. Using plugins I find a bit tedious.
Ok, so what I'm looking for: stereo compressor, stereo EQ, maybe also Stereo distortion/tape simulation (Fatso, Anamod ATS1).
Ok let's add it up...
HARDWARE
Compression:
Neve 33609 stereo compressor = $4500.00
There are likely other candidates - I just don't know which yet
Manley Massive stereo EQ = 4320.00
2 Channels of beautiful Tube Tech EQ1AM (which I mixed Shame, Shame thru) = $12,150.00Tape Simulation/Distortion:
Anamod ATS 1 = $3000.00
Fatso Jr. = $2250.00
DIGITAL
Necessary: a UAD PCIe card to run plugins = seems to be somewhere around $1000
Apple Intel tower = about $2300.00
Universal Audio Manley Massive Passive plugin = $300.00
Universal Audio Fatso Plugin = $300.00
Universal Audio Neve 33609 plugin = $250.00
Totals:
Analog Hardware = about $12,000 (Anamod, Manley, Neve)
Digital Faking It But Still Pretty Close = about $4000.00
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OK! So that's where things are. I promise it will not take 3 months for the next update.
Here's a great article on Dr. Dog's new album: http://www.expressnightout.com/content/2010/04/dr-dog-shame-shame-liner-notes-930-club.php
take care,
Bill