Author Archives: Damian

I Am Thankful

I am thankful when I :

  • wake up next to love
  • have coffee
  • turn the light on
  • rev up my computer/gear
  • turn on microphones/cameras
  • capture sounds/images
  • eat
  • get to work with friends
  • share knowledge with others
  • create
  • sit still
  • move
  • breathe
  • have a place for rest
  • get to do what I love

everyday.

Thank You!

 

 

Eyeless Equalization

This is no surprise to experienced audio engineers. Mixing with our ears should be the only method. Like I tell students,”…nobody watches music.” However, with DAWs, it’s difficult to ignore all the visual data that potentially influences one’s mix decisions.This can be especially overwhelming to amateurs in regards to equalization. Solutions range from closing your eyes to mixing in the analog domain. Digital control surfaces offer compromise. Of course making a conscious decision to acknowledge, sift through, utilize pertinent visual data is possible and should be encouraged.

It applies to equalization because of the proportional properties of frequencies. Once you get passed recognizing Low/Mid/Hi and get into frequencies there’s harmonics. Harmonics are multiples of a fundamental frequency and give instruments their timbre. Timbre is why the same note(fundamental frequency) played on a piano sounds different than  on a trumpet, guitar, etc

.Piano EQ for "What I Know"

      1. Piano Without EQ
      2. Piano with EQ

In this example I used four mics to record this live piano at Windmill Valley Recording played by Ricky Hernandez on Bekah Kelso‘s new album Within the Shifting Shade.

I did some fine EQing on the individual tracks  then routed the four tracks to a stereo bus. This is where this equalizer come in.The goal here was to clean up the piano’s midrange to improve clarity. This all happened intuitively while I avoided looking at the EQ while tweaking. I would bump the gain about 4db and sweep left or right after looking at the band’s original position. So I did not set out to mathematically equalize this track. I did the math after I was satisfied with my eq decisions.

I found 645hz (yellow)for the fundamental.  Here’s where the proportional part of frequencies and harmonics are useful and visual data can be helpful. I went to the 213hz (orange) below the fundamental. After cleaning the mids I used 1.23k(green) to tame the “honky” high mids.

 

The Math:

Fundamental 645hz.

645hz divided by 3 gets you 215hz. I landed on 213hz

645hz multiplied by 2 gets you to 1.29khz. I landed on 1.23khz

There are many ways to understand and utilize equalizers. An Equalizer can be a scalpel or a machete.The most important one is listening to real instruments in person, listen to a lot of music and build your sonic vocabulary.

Happy frequency hunting!

M/S Mic’ing for Drums

With a simple kit set up, a simple mic set-up can be the most rewarding come mix time. The purpose here was to have these drums sound like a cohesive unit. The pattern was simple and as you can see so was the kit.

For the remainder of Bekah Kelso‘s new project I decided to go with a M/S set-up on Ryan Kelso’s great sounding Gretsch kit. A Nuemann TLM 193 cardioid(Mid) and a AKG 414 B-XLS in a figure 8(Side) I added Kick(AKG D112), Snare(Earthworks SR 30HC), Tom(Audix D4) for a little more definition.

This is the sum of all tracks. With a touch of EQ and Compression. The MS was decoded using Waves MS Matrix.

      1. Mid Side Ryan

Stay tuned for more music…

Synth-o-mania

What a great day getting to try some rare analog synths with some really cool people. This event was hosted by SYNTAUR owner Sam Mims. Syntaur was also celebrating their “Almost 25 Year” anniversary.

Keyboards on hand included Oberheim Matrix 12, Yamaha CS-50, Minimoog Model D, Moog Taurus II, Moog Micromoog, Korg Polysix, Crumar Orchestrator, Roland Juno-6 and Juno-106, Ensoniq SQ-80 and Fizmo.

Outside were some “not-yet-working” rarities “such as a Soviet Aelita, Moog Polymoog, Arp 2600, Arp Odyssey, Arp Pro Soloist, Sequential Circuits Prophet 5, Moog Minitmoog, Yamaha CS40M, Korg Poly Ensemble, and a 360 Systems digital keyboard.” Sam has been collecting and meticulously refurbishing these gems over the years.

A nice treat were the two working Korg prototypes where you can see a piece of plywood holding the Pitch and Mod Wheels.

There was little talk about software synths here. Mainly in how,”we don’t talk about softsynths here.” Manipulating electricity via oscillators and filters to create some big sounds was really ear opening. You know what they say, “If you’ve heard one analog synthesizer…you’ve heard one synthesizer.

Enjoy the pics!

 

 

 

Polysynthfusion-Mastered

I had the pleasure of working on Polysynthfusion’s “NYC”, due to be released 10/13/12. This is an analog dream controlled by a theremin incited by Mike Randolph. The tracks focus on aspects of New York City life as well as some spoken word history tours through sonic landscapes.

      1. Voice%20Right%20Here-POLYSYNTHFUSION-NYC-Mastering

Polysynthfusion CD release show Saturday October 13th at 107 Gallery. 107 Lonestar Blvd. San Antonio, TX. 6-9PM

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Forced Rewire

My current studio set up will get a rethink/rewire. So as it took me a long time to get here, I will take advantage of this opportunity to maximize my set up.
What will get disconnected? 16 channels I/O, 1 patchbay, 10 channels of mic pres, 6 side-chain connections, 4 channels of compression, and lots of monitors.
The biggest challenge will be hiding the cabling.

20120310-113629.jpg
Looking forward to it and the new floors!