Author: tyeiser@bluemarble.net

July 2017

July 2017

As my birthday was approaching, thoughts about how I would like to celebrate the day settled on taking pictures of our dogs and recording “I Can See Clearly” My thinking was clear, you can never have enough good pictures of your dogs, and it was […]

I Can See Clearly Now

I Can See Clearly Now

As my birthday was approaching recently, thoughts about how I would like to celebrate the day settled on taking pictures of our dogs and recording “I Can See Clearly”  My thinking was clear, you can never have enough good pictures of your dogs, and it […]

Personal Headphone Mixes

Starting in April of 2017 Sweet Owen Sound has started using personal headphone mixers controlled by the musician in the studio.  My previous system has great sound quality but had to be mixed from the control room.  The new personal mixing system greatly speeds up getting the headphones right and allows much finer control.

In my consulting work I’ve recommended and installed headphone systems in churches that have a band on stage. They really solve a problem for modest acoustic spaces with drums, electric guitars and vocalist who want to hear themselves. However for my studio the high cost and unremarkable sound quality kept me from investing.

Recently the Behriger Powerplay P16-I and P16-M components came to my attention. They have a great feature set and are easy to use. The mains section has a 3 band EQ (with a parametric mid-range), a limiter,  and master volume. The channel selector has an illuminated button for each of the 16 channels, stereo pan and volume. You can solo and mute channels. The best feature of all is that they sound great.

Book some time and see how well it works!

 

What microphones were used in Adam Cantors Sceyence?

Adam Cantor recently asked me what microphones were used in his recording Sceyence.  Here is the recording chain including the microphones, premaps and digital converters used. Warning don’t try this at home or you will make an incredible recording of your refrigerator and every other machine […]

Adam Cantor artwork for Sceyence

Here is the album cover art work for Sceyence, and album of original music performed by Adam Cantor.  You can find detailed information about the artist at Adams Facebook page.  

Rationalizing priorities in choosing a room to record in

Let’s assume that you are a mature musician who is fully in command of your musical skills. You have the ability and depth to express music, and you are ready to make a recording. What is the single most important recording decision you can make? Is it the type of recording equipment, the engineer you choose, the brand name of the microphones, preamplfiers, digital converters, the phase of the moon or something else that will play the largest role in determining how good your recording will sound?

Since we live in a consumer world music stores, on line retailers and the manufacturers of recording equipment will suggest that purchasing the newest computer, recorder, microphone, software, or desktop device will allow you to create an amazing sounding recording in the privacy of your own home without knowing what you are doing. So like sheep we go and buy equipment.

The first ‘recording’ mic I bought I brought home, set it up in my beautiful front room of a 1927 craftsman style home and made an incredible recording of my foot tapping the floor, cars driving by and the refrigerator turning on and off. It was a great experience which I learned a lot from. After I turned off the refrigerator and placed put a rug under my feet I made an even better recording of cars driving by. A slightly less obvious problem was that my voice and guitar didn’t sound right no matter where the microphone was placed or how much post processing I could apply.

Way back in the 70’s when I attended IU School of Music I took a graduate level course on Acoustics that John Nagaoski taught. The subject of the class was Sabines’ formula RT60, which explains how interior architecture affects the way sound sounds in a room. As I started researching what it took to build a great recording studio I found books by F. Alton Everest including the ‘Master Handbook of Acoustics’, and several other relevant titles. It turns out that the basic design tool was Sabine’s RT60 formula, and understanding the relationship of room dimensions, materials, and the use of passive architectural devices to tune a room was what made a great room to record in. Rooms turn out to be just like the body of instruments. Take the strings off of one guitar and put them on another guitar and they will sound different. Take an instrument into two different rooms and it will sound different in each room.

So I think the single most important choice you have to make regarding how good a recording will sound is what room are you recording in. To pick a room start with a few simple questions. Does the room keep outside sounds out? Does the mechanical systems of the building create noise inside? Most importantly does the room alter the way music sounds in it? With these questions in mind you will find that it is hard to retrofit acoustic improvements into inadequate structures, and that the sexy equipment that manufactures advertise to ‘home recording artist’ simply cannot alter the fact that your room does not sound good.

For audio recording purposes residential structures simply fail. They are too light to keep outside sound out, the mechanical systems are too noisy, and the relationship between internal dimensions and the acoustic properties of the materials used guarantee failure. Churches and Concert Halls also generally fail. Building code requires these rooms to be able to get people in and out quickly in case of emergencies. Lots of doors means lots of noise. The heating and cooling systems are designed to recover quickly when the room fills or empties and tend to be noisey. The expense of adding an acoustical consulting firm and the additional materials required to build a great sounding room means there are very few great sounding rooms built. Modern churches in particular could care less about good acoustics since they are going to buy huge sound systems that simply overpower bad acoustics.

If you read this far you ought to come visit Sweet Owen Sound. It is not huge like the big studios that are falling like dinosaurs, but it was carefully designed to reject outside noise, has extremely quiet mechanical systems and has a frequency response that is balanced and neutral. By design the RT60 (reverberation time) is appropriate and optimized for the recording of a string quartet. It is a superb room to record in.

Petar Jankovic Ensemble

The Petar Jankovic Ensemble (PJE) has performed all over the world! They have been featured on NPR’s Performance Today, and they recorded ‘from Spain to Tango’ at Sweet Owen Sound. Here is a link to some of the rave reviews it has received! This recording […]

Nemanja Ostoich

Nemanja Ostoich

Classical guitarist Nemanja Ostoich recorded his CD ‘first born‘ at Sweet Owen Sound.  This album features music by Barrios, Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Morreno-Torroba, Bogdanović, Brouwer, and Koskin. This album was produced by Tom Yeiser at Sweet Owen Sound, and it was a particular pleasure to read the […]

Things you won’t find at Sweet Owen Sound

Audio quality is mostly a function of the room, microphone, preamplifier, and converters in use that create the digital files that audio workstations manipulate. The audio workstation either does the math behind the scenes correctly or does not. With this in mind things you won’t find here include a large mixing console with cheap preamplifiers, equalization and summing circuitry, or expensive software that does not offer real audio and workflow advantages.

Adam Cantor “2010 Hoosier Guitar Idol” records at Sweet Owen Sound, whoa….

Who would have thought such a high quality studio could be found in the heart of Owen County?  As I take a break from the process of editing the tracks we recorded yesterday, I reflect on what a perfect environment Sweet Owen Sound is for […]