Real Analog Flanger (by digital accident)

I have understood how flanging (and the related phasing effects) works for many years, and have emulated the old techniques many times with modern gear, but this week I had a chance to hear the classic flanging effects in action (while using modern tools). This will be less confusing when you watch the video.

The term flanging comes from tough the flange, the metal spool for a real of tape, to slow the speed of a tape machine. You can learn about the origin of Flanging on this Wikipedia page.

Beautiful Studer C37 tube mix deck at Prosdocimi Recording Studio in North Italy

Beautiful Studer C37 tube tape machine at Prosdocimi Recording Studio in Italy

How to get your songs placed in movies and TV

Most of what we do at Recording Boot Camp is more about the craft or recording and music rather than the business side of thing, but sometimes we get opportunities we can not pass up. A couple friends of

Sherry Orson, Music Supervisor

Sherry Orson, Music Supervisor

have offered to present a workshop on music placement. Understanding the process of getting your music into films, TV, video games, etc..

Event is being hosted at the Recording Boot Camp studios June 4th, 2013

check out the even page for all the details. recordingbootcamp.com/courses/special-events/music-placement-workshop/

Why I care about High End Mic Pres

This weekend June 1-2 I am doing a rare Mixing Boot Camp and we still have space left. We also had a last minute cancellation for the 6-day Recording Boot Camp June 10-15, so we have one space unexpectedly available.

Why I care about microphone pre-amps

If you look around the recording blogosphere and Internet forums you often find two opposing viewpoints about mic pre-amps. One is that it is critical to have a large variety of high quality mic pre amps for various instruments/genres, and the other is that the whole concept of needing high-end mic pre-amps is just a big marketing scam. The truth is somewhere in the middle.

I have a pretty good selection of high-end mic pres. And while that is fun and opens up my sonic options in the studio, there are many albums I have made using only one kind of pre-amp, and I would be willing to bet that many of your favorite albums were done that way as well.  So as cool as it is to have many different kinds of mic pres, one great style of mic pre is perfectly adequate, especially for a small studio.

On the other end, I think the idea that high-end mic pre-amps do not really matter is way off the mark. I am not going to say that having a high-end pre amp is as important as having a great sounding guitar or drum kit, but great mic pres really do make a difference.

The biggest problem is that cheapo mic pres actually hurt your audio. Not only can many of them have high levels of noise, but they can smear details, clarity and depth of the tracks. This can make mixing far more difficult. I mix records from all sorts of different studios and, in most cases, when the music was recorded with high-end mic pres, rather then cheapo stock pres, the mixes come together easier. When a track has lost its detail and clarity because of low quality equipment, there is very little you can do to try and get that back.

While cheapo mic pres can actually hurt your audio, great mic pres can help you out. In my experience great mic pres will not only give you better detail, depth and clarity, they will actually make all of your mics sound better. I have even found some cheap condenser mics that I really dislike when I heard them through cheap mic pres, but found them quite useful when running them through my best pre amps.

You do not need to own a lot of mic pres, but I think buying one great mic pre is a great investment. It can make all your tracks sound better, and even if one holds the opinion that great mic pres only make a small difference, a small bit of improvement across all of your tracks can really start to add up. But if you do not have great mic pre amps, do not let that slow you down. Fire up whatever gear you have available, have fun and make some music!!!!

Since I am sure this article will fill my email in-box with people asking what mic pres I recommend, I will give you a few examples of mic pres I really like at a few price points. There are some great affordable options in the 500 series (lunchbox) format, but that is beyond the scope of this article.

Under $500-ish
I have not really tried any mic pres under around $500 that I think are a huge step up from the stock mic pres on a small console or interface. I am always on the lookout though.

$500-600 range
My favorite mic pre in this range is the True Systems P-Solo. It does not have a lot of “mojo”, but does a great job of good clean gain with a lot of detail. I prefer it over some other mic pres that are more prestigious. You can see my review of a few of the options in this price range on Ronan’s Recording Show.

$1000-ish
It is a bit over the $1000 range new (and not used), but the Great River ME-1NV is a fantastic mic pre. It offers a broad range of sounds and has a very good built in DI. It is one of my favorites, and high on my list of things I want to buy for myself.

$2000-ish
My favorite mic pre is probably the A Designs Pacifica (and the similar Ventura from the same company). About 80% of the things I record are recorded through the A Designs Pacifica. To me it has the perfect balance of detail and bigness, and I use it on everything from heavy metal to chamber music.  This is a two-channel unit so it is actually a little cheaper per channel than the Great River, but unfortunately is not available in a single channel unit (there is the P-1, a similar single channel option in the 500 series format).

Recording Tip: Push up Faders & Smile

For you folks on the Washington DC / Baltimore area, don’t for get about the Vocal Recording Master Class tomorrow May 11 at Chuck Levin’s Washington Music Center

Despite running recording boot camps, workshops and consulting around the world, my day job is still making records. A huge part of that work is mixing records that have been recorded by other producers and engineers. Regardless of the style of music, the budgets, the country of origin, or even the level of experience, the one thing usually divides the great producer/engineers from the not so great ones, is that the great productions usually sound pretty darn good when all I have done is spent a couple minutes pushing up the faders and panning.  There is something very important to learn from this.

It is important to remember what I said in the last paragraph, that this is something I find with almost any style of music, any budget, AND ANY LEVEL OF EXPERIENCE. The reason the great productions sound great is because they are great productions. The people recording have spent the time and energy to look at the big picture and understand how the various elements will work together in the end. It does not take a lot of money or experience to do this, just focused work.

When you are recording tracks you should always be thinking about how things will work together. Too many instruments in the same frequency range will actually make mixes sound smaller. Rhythmic elements that are not played tightly in the same groove will make mixes sound messier and have less punch and impact. Extra un-needed tracks will also steal detail and power from a mix.

When you think you are close to finished with a production try to do a quick mix without any kinds of effects on the tracks, using only level and panning. If the mix does not sound pretty darn good, look at what you can go back and fix at the source. Make sure the performances are great. If a virtual instrument is not working, go back to the VI and see if you can change the sample rather than try to fix the sound you have already chosen, and use the mixers secret weapon… see if you have tracks that you do not really need and delete tracks that are not absolutely necessary.

If you want your mixes to sound great, work like the great producers and make your tracks sound good before the mix.

Have Fun!
Ronan

Lots of new recording classes

If you have not done so in a while you might want to check out the Recording Boot Camp schedule We have added multiple 6 day programs, a 2 day mixing boot camp and our first Audio Restoration workshop.

Giving Tuesday special to help Phoenix House

Today November 27, is giving Tuesday where we are supposed to stop grabbing stuff for ourselves an try to help out others. So we are doing a giving Tuesday Special

Anyone that signs up today for any of our December classes at Recording Boot Camp, or the 2-day Boot Camp in January, we will donate 100% of your tuition to the music recording program at Phoenix House teen drug rehabilitation center in California.

If you sign up for the 6 day boot camp in January, we will donate 25% of that tuition to Phoenix House.

If you are not interested in our classes you can always donate directly

Cyber Monday Specials

We are doing Cyber Monday Specials Again!!

2 for 1 Phone or Skype consulting.

hellokittyphonePurchase any amount of phone-Skype consulting and get credit for double the amount you purchase. Purchase your time using our PayPal link on Monday November 26, and we will double your purchase. May be combined into one session or split into two sessions.

Mastering Boot Camp & DIY Acoustics combo special in December.

December 11 & 12 we are offering Mastering Boot Camp and DIY Acoustics classes at our Santa Monica location. Anyone that signs up for one of the classes on Cyber Monday may attend the other free of charge. Offer only applies to the December classes, and limited space is available. Just sign up for either class and send us an email (on Monday) to let us know you would like to attend both classes.

Mastering Boot Camp in Los Angeles
December 11, 2012 7:15 – 10:30 Details »

DIY Acoustics Class in Los Angeles
December 12, 2012 7:15 – 10:30 Details »

One last thing: This is not an RBC event, but my good friend, performance and vocal coach Steven Memel (Adam Levine, Sara Bareilles, Jesse McCartney, Justin Long, Drew Barrymore) is doing a free teleseminar this evening at 5pm PST on business tips and techniques for DIY musicians. Get more info here

Ronan at the Taxi Road Rally

A quick note to anyone attending the Taxi Road Rally in Los Angeles this weekend (November 8-11).

Taxi has invited me to speak at the conference again this year. I will be teaching two workshops and various mentoring opportunities.

Friday, Nov. 9th 11:00am-12:30pm –
Driver’s Ed Class – Mastering Guitar Recording on Any Budget
National Room, 2nd floor

Saturday Nov 10th 2:30-4:30pm
Driver’s Ed Class – Production Tricks For Major Impact
in Kennedy room

Friday Nov 9  3:00pm – 5:30pm  I will be doing 1-to-1 Mentor Sessions which are free to conference attendees on a first come first serve basis. For those that do not get into the 1-1 mentoring, I will have a few windows of time available for private consulting at a special Road Rally discount.

Recording Boot Camp will also have a table available in the book sellers from Come by and say hello.

If you are not going to be at the Rally you can get a sneak peak at out upcoming classes

Thanks
Ronan

Boot Camp in December & an EQ tip

We had a great group at our 6-day Recording Boot Camp in LA last week. It looks like one of the students got hired by a VERY major mixer the following week. Of course we take no real credit for that, but it’s great to see good things happen for our alumni. We have just put the next 6-day Recording Boot Camp on the books.

December 3-8, 2012

This will be our last 6-day workshop this year, so sign up early if you want to guarantee a spot. Speaking of 6-day workshops, we are looking at the possibility of doing one in North Italy in January or February. If you think you might like to attend, send me a direct email to get first priority. http://recordingbootcamp.com/courses/recording-boot-camps/

SHELVING EQ TIP

Shelving EQs do more than you might think. The simple explanation of “Shelving EQ” is that a low shelf cuts or boosts frequencies below the EQ frequency point, and a high shelf cuts or boosts above the selected EQ frequency point. While this is more or less correct, one thing that many people overlook is that Shelving EQs will affect frequencies above the frequency point of a low shelf and below that of a high shelf; with certain EQ “slopes” this can be quite dramatic.

Check out the image below of the EQ plug-in. It shows an 8dB boost on a low shelf at 100Hz. While it’s true that it’s boosting everything below 100Hz, notice how with this particular shelf slope, it is boosting frequencies all the way up to around 1k (1000Hz)!!! Even with a steeper slope this boost would still be boosting frequencies upwards to 500Hz or so.

The reason this is so important is that when you are using a shelving EQ to alter one end of the spectrum you are also affecting frequencies closer to the mid-range. This really came to light last week when I was mastering a Big Band jazz album. I was using the the low shelf boost on an A Designs EM-EQ to push a little more power into the acoustic bass, but the client and I were both amazed how much my 60Hz boost was affecting the tone of the horns. The good news is that on most of the songs it actually helped the horns, but on a few tunes, because of the range the horns were playing in, it started to muddy them up a little so we had to choose a lower frequency, and in one song actually switch to another EQ all together for the low boost.

Even on individual tracks shelving EQs can affect the sound in ways beyond what you were planning for.  Once you start to get a feel for this, it will make EQ an even more powerful tool for your mixes.