TMTYL
Carl Edlund Anderson
cea at CARLAZ.COM
Fri Jun 20 10:20:24 EDT 2008
On 20 Jun 2008, at 04:59 , iain ferguson wrote:
> I like rather a lot of it, but like yourself find some too Digital
> - maybe because this was recorded on a MAC using Logic I believe,
> which
> the band had to learn how to use, and have commented on the whole
> process.
> working in the analog world you add Dirt and warmth throughout the
> recording, mastering and pressing proccesses, giving you a warmer
> sound, recording in the digital world you have to add that dirt
> back in or it sounds clinical, harshly bright etc, maybe what you
> hear in parts is where not enough dirt was added back in.
I am a musician (though not a drummer ;) -- albeit a very amateur one
-- and most of my home recording is on a Mac using GarageBand, which
is basically Logic's little brother. And I think that the digital
vs. analogue issue to which you refer is not the "problem" in the
production on Hawkwind's recent recordings.
Honestly, the whole analog vs. digital recording (or playback) debate
is a bit silly these days; with the right equipment and (perhaps more
importantly) skills one can make extremely good recordings on either
analogue or digital equipment. Much of the perceived "analogue is
better" argument, I think, goes back to the early days of digital
recording when people simply weren't used to it. They are different
beasts, and if you spent all your life engineering analogue
recordings, you could easily run into some difficulties if you
expected digital to act like analogue (the famous example are a
suppose the differences between what happens when you overload the
signal on an analogue medium like magnetic tape, which tends to
produce a sort of natural compression effect, and what happens when
you overload signal to a digital medium, which tends to produce an
awful noise :). But since digital recording was introduced in the
late 70s, the cumulative benefits of more experience and better
equipment have lead to progressively better digital recordings.
(And, actually, one of the criticisms in early digital recordings was
that _more_ "dirt" in the form of ambient background noise, etc. was
being picked up than was typically with analog recordings.)
So I don't think the perceived problem in Hawkwind's case is
necessarily that of digital vs. analogue, even though surely Brock &
Co. probably have more years of experience in the analogue realm than
the digital. I think it's more that recording with a system like
Logic makes it incredibly easy to apply fantastic amounts of tweaking
and processing to everything, to add new layers than then tweak and
process them into the middle of next week as well. This is an
awesome temptation for the musician! And I think this is what
results in the kind of "muffled" sound Mike refers to -- it's
something I've noticed more an more of over the last decade or so of
Hawkwind records, particularly in the most recent studio outputs. I
think they (or Dave anyway) are just overcooking everything,
producing everything to death with piles of tweaking and effects.
When you've been working on a track for a few months and have become
way to familiar with every part in it, you adjust a few extra things
here and there and slip some new bit in -- and suddenly it sounds
great to you again .... But to the casual listener who never heard it
before, and may never hear it until they buy the disc, rip the song
to some relatively low bit rate MP3 and crank it through their iPod
earbuds ... it just sounds glossily muffled.
'Course, this is _all_ subjective. If one thinks that TMTYL is the
greatest thing ever, then "right on"! :) But IMO Hawkwind have been
progressively overcooking their recordings. If I were ruling the
world, I'd inflict a producer on them who would get them back to
basics -- or rather take away their control over the sound. :)
It's certainly possibly to use a zillion ingredients in the
production of an awesomely subtle curry that balances fire and
flavour on that scintillating knife edge of perfection. And it's
also possible to end up with a mess of confused ingredients -- in
which case, you may be better off just chucking a steak on the grill
(or, if one prefers, the vegetarian equivalent of such simplicity)
and having done with it. :)
But, ya know, mileage varies!
Cheers,
Carl
--
Carl Edlund Anderson
http://www.carlaz.com/
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