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Topics - Psycho Bass Guy

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61
The Outpost Cafe / I found some of my work on Youtube!
« on: January 19, 2010, 09:08:08 AM »
I know, I know. Youtube: big deal. ... but I didn't upload this stuff and I'm pretty proud of it. I found this stuff when I was looking up an old promotional spot from 1982.  For those of you who don't know, I work as broadcast engineer, but (obviously) my first love is audio. The station where I work, WBIR, is #1 in the country for market share per capita, but East Tennessee is not a big market, and we're not a huge station or anything. We have a local variety show called Live@5@4 (don't ask about the name- the story is stupid) and from time to time, we have local and regional musical acts perform live.

 For those of you who have never been involved in TV studio work, it's nothing like stage production. Everything MUST be mic'ed in some capacity or the audience will never hear it, there is NO PA or built-in monitoring system, and no audience to play to and feed off. We've all heard too many instances of shitty performances done on TV by bands that kick ass, even from the "big boys" who have dedicated entire live music production setups larger than my entire station. Well, that pisses me off, because 90% of the time, it's not the band's fault, so whenever we have a band on our show, I'm the go-to audio guy.

Since our TV audio board is set up for anchor mics and line-level sources and has next to no headroom, whenever there is a band, I submix from another mixer in the studio and feed a line-level output back to the main board. My studio setup consists of a 16 channel Mackie mixer, two JBL Eons for monitors, and an old Yamaha SPX 990 reverb that I got when it was decommissioned from the Commercial Production Department. I have a really crappy AKG condensor mic suspended roughly 15' above the set where performances take place, two SM58's, three SM57's, a few EV 267ND’s and two Whirlwind Imp passive DI's run through a 100' snake to another set so that I can use headphones to mix, which are either Sony 7506's or Sennheiser HD280's. That's it: no graphic EQ's for the monitors or compression other than my fingers on faders. Occasionally, bands will bring in their own mics, but that’s it.

Now for the part so you know this is me talking: even with such a relatively modest setup, I’ll put my results up against the networks and the like any day. Here’s an example of the on air-product as the home audience gets to see and hear it:



You’ll notice that it is somewhat overcompressed: this is the compressor chasing the output of the main audio board which was set for a much too slow attack and too long a release. It worked OK for voices and it kept things from hitting the transmitter too hot most times, but there is definitely the ‘compressor set wrong’ pumping going on.  That was beyond my control that day; I didn’t set it, nor did I have access to it. Still, the end result isn’t bad.

This next example is resume material. It was taken from a recording sourced before the broadcast output compression and then tweaked /mastered at my home studio. The band uploaded it from a DVD I made for them. Everything in it is 100% live, with no dubs, no comps, no edits, and no re-takes. It was the first time they performed the song the whole way through. There are even a couple of minor rhythm guitar clams you should be able to catch.




So what do you all think? There are some others, but these two are the first ones I found on Youtube.

 

62
The Outpost Cafe / Looking for an old Bass Player magazine column
« on: November 24, 2009, 11:15:18 AM »
I'm looking for a column that ran several years ago in Bass Player by David Hungate about translating 'studio speak.' It appears BP online has no archive past their most recent publishing buyout two years ago. Anybody here have that column saved or know where I could find it?  ???

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