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Aussie Mark

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Nov 9, 2003
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5,646
Location
Sydney, Australia
I just got back today from 3 days at an improvised recording studio in a country farmhouse with a really cool engineer who really digs vintage gear.

It's the middle of winter here, with the temperature at the farmhouse down to just under 30F at night, so we had the fireplace going non stop.

I took a Nash P, the Dark Star P and the Big Al, and as expected, when I mentioned I'd brought 3 basses along, the engineer asked "I hope one of them is a P bass?" I used the Nash on the first four tunes, and then used the Dark Star for two bluesy power trio songs, and by that stage I was feeling comfortable enough with the engineer (and he with me) that I brought out the Big Al for the next song, and ended up using it for the rest of the session. It recorded really nicely - I used my favourite neck + middle + active setting for 3 of the tunes, and the "all buttons off" secret setting for the other.

He recorded me clean direct into an Avalon tube preamp, and after we had a bass track that we were happy with, he would run the clean bass track recording straight into my Ampeg SB-12 absolutely cranked and record that, so he then had a clean track and a dirty tubey track that he can blend in the mix. It sounded really sweet. Although, it's kind of weird to be standing around in the kitchen with the rest of the band having a beer while your isolated, warts and all clean bass track is blaring away in the next room through a distorted tube amp being recorded with a mic.

Here's some pics ...

No noise problems here:

DSCF2189.jpg


How cool is this place?

DSCF2190.jpg


The view out the main room window:

view.jpg


The main room:

corner.jpg


The SB-12 cranked:

ampeg2.jpg


Big Al resting on his laurels:

bigal.jpg


Drummer at the base of the stairs:

curtis1.jpg


The very cool engineer:

syd.jpg


A productive session:

firebeer2.jpg


DSCF2184.jpg
 

DTG

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Ireland
looks pretty cool and with bottles of stella what could go wrong :)
 

five7

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Very cool. What a way to enjoy the country! Good luck with the recording!
 

drTStingray

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Kent, United Kingdom
Sounds like a great 3 days, Mark.

as expected, when I mentioned I'd brought 3 basses along, the engineer asked "I hope one of them is a P bass?"

Does anyone know why there are so many of these guys around these days? Is it an 'Engineer training issue?' - i.e they only learned to get a bass sound with a P Bass - possibly spending more time learning to record other instruments? Just curious really - imagine Eric Clapton turning up to record a session and the engineer saying I hope you're gonna use an SG (as in 1970 ish!)
 

Aussie Mark

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Joined
Nov 9, 2003
Messages
5,646
Location
Sydney, Australia
Here's two extremely rough mixes of bed tracks from the session - they only have drums, bass (Big Al), a guide rhythm guitar track, and a shaker or two.

ReverbNation Player


And BP, that's a fair question about the Pro Tools recording rig. The guy uses some 80 year old radio station mics and really favours the "old school" approach, so it was an interesting counter balance between old and new - using a modern digital recording interface to record using classic gear - a bit like me running the Big Al through a 1967 Ampeg SB-12.

Yes, this is a 10 song album, being released once the vocals/horns/strings/keyboards are done. Richard is aiming to get it done within a few weeks.

This is Australia, no Fosters for us, thank you very much.
 
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