Thursday 9 January 2014

Microphones at The Music Production Show in London



Placid Audio Copperphone 


From Pro AudioEurope's stand



Pro AudioEurope (Funky Junk) was showing a wide variety of microphones. This included Flea’s versions of the classics U-47 and AKG C12. Worth mentioning were also a set of microphones from Ear Trumpet Labs that could prove useful for anyone working with acoustic retro-recordings (think roots, country, blues etc.) Here's what Tape Op Magazine wrote about the Edwina model.

What really caught my attention though, was Placid Audio’s Copperphone. The Copperphone sends you right back to the early part of the last century and you don’t need to add much static to sound like you’ve recorded your audio on a wax-roll! For any vintage-lover that has yet to discover Placid Audio, click on their webpage andplay the sound-samples for a discovery. If Roland Barthes was right, that early photography had a poetry to it that was lost with higher fidelity, we might just be on the trail of a lost poetry in sound here! This is not the most useful microphone I found, but probably the most exciting.




AEA N22


The new AEAN22 is a new ribbon mic aimed at the singer-songwriter and semi-professional marked. That doesn’t mean that it is particularly cheap, but for a high-end ribbon mic it is not amongst the most expensive neither. On vocals the classic ribbon-tone was there instantly—clear and open with ‘smooth’ highs. I was impressed by what I heard, even with a noisy exhibition floor in the background. On this link you can find AEA’s own promo-video, and if you look through the fact that they are trying to sell you something, it provides some interesting information. One of the engineers in the video draws a parallel to the sound of a U-47 tubecondenser. It may sound like a stretch of imagination, but it actually does make sense. I will disagree with AEA on only one thing: I don’t think this is a microphone mostly for the singer-songwriter marked. This will be a great microphone for any application that requires a ribbon mic. If it is as good as it seems it might be a clever trick by AEA to pitch it towards the semi-professional marked. Because it might just be fit to fight in the very top-league of the professional marked. And that would include competing for your attention against some of AEA’s more expensive models.

The Nuvo N22 requires phantom power which is quite unusual, as phantom normally would break a ribbon mic. The N22 contains a a small powered amplification circuit, and the microphone will hence deliver a higher output than traditional ribbons. The grill is made to decrease the chance of breaking the ribbon by sound pressure and the mic can take quite a lot of SPL. Everything considered we are looking at a very solid all-round microphone.


AEA RPQ

My impression of the AEA N22 was shaped in part by the pre-amp that was placed in the signal chain. This was a new dual channel pre-amp especially designed to work with ribbon microphones. You can also get the amp as a mono lunchbox-module called RPQ500.

AEA RPQ500


Neumann TLM 107

Neumann has just launched a new microphone in the TLM-range. The TLM 107 is a multi-pattern microphone with a very flat frequency response that is meant for a wide variety of applications. The frequency-chart reveals a lift on the graph from roughly 8 to around 13 kHz and a slight dip around 5kHz. Neumann writes that particular attention has gone towards the reproduction of ”s” sounds. It can also handle very high SPL levels.

This begs the question, do we have a contester to AKG’s 414 here? (“Multi-pattern workhorse that handles high SLPs and is meant to work for a wide set of applications, while maintaining a very flat frequency response?”) Retailing in the UK at around 1100 Pounds the price is not unattractive neither.



Neumann TLM 107



Both the AEA N22 and the TLM 107 received the ‘Best of Show Awards’ at the AESconvention last October.

Wednesday 8 January 2014

Monitors at The Music Production Show in London

 
Eve Audio SC Series

Earlier in 2013 I built an education studio in Norway and chose a pair of Eve Audio SC 207 for monitoring. Eve Audio showed up at the Music Production Show with an impressive selection of speakers. If it wasn’t their entire range it was at least very close. I have been keen to hear the SC 307 for a long while as I have considered it as a workhorse for myself. Listening at a trade show has its limitations, but here goes.

Pink Floyd’s “Money” and “Great Gig in the Sky” revealed these things:

    •    Distinctly familiar sound for those who are happy with the SC 207
    •    Lots of space and dynamics, good stereo-image
    •    Clean and detailed sound



Eve SC408

I also had time for a very swift listen to Eve’s largest 4 way speakers and got a solid impression by the clarity and deep bass extension. I’ll be looking forward to hearing them at a showroom as soon as I can. I am a big fan of keeping your main monitors as clean as possible (Eve speakers seem to do this really well), and rather keeping more forward sounding monitors closer to your working position. If you’re looking for a pair of main monitors for fairly well-sized studio and don’t want to spend an arm and a leg, I believe Eve Audio’s 4-way speakers are some of the most promising offers on the marked right now. And even if you have an arm and a leg to spend they still sound really good. (Read my Eve SC 408 review here.)

Note on flashing LED-indicators: When you play loud on a pair of Eve monitors the front panel LEDs sometimes start flashing. This looks terribly scary at first if you’re used to regular clip indicators. Eve’s indicators start flashing before you would normally expect from a regular clip indicator and I made the Norwegian distributor investigate this for me. It turned out that Eve’s flashing indicators are actually telling you that you’re exceeding the loudness-area where Eve can promise a flat frequency response on the amplifier. German perfectionism had me freaking out for a day or two when I installed them in the studio. I brought a few people with well-trained ears with me and we could hear no changes to the spectrum when the flashing started. We played quite loud in several musical genres without any notable changes in speaker-performance.

 

 

Focal SM9

Just for display, but hopefully wired up at the next tradeshow.
The Focal SM9 monitor incorporates a “passive sub.” That means there are no electronics behind it, and it swings due to the acoustical pressure inside the speaker cabinet. Different parts of the cabinet can also be isolated with an internal wall that you can position with a mechanical knob on the outside. I have heard great things about this speaker and am looking forward to trying it out.

 

Unity Audio Boulder & Rock


At the end of the day I walked past Unity Audio’s stand and got a brief listen to some of the most clear and detailed sound at this year’s show. Unity Audio have received a number of excellent reviews but come with steeper price tags than your standard home studio monitors. From what my ears could gather the price tags were justified and I hope to try out some of their products in the near future. I am especially curious about the Boulder. Here are SOS’ reviews of ‘The Boulder’ and the smaller ‘The Rock.’

 

Yamaha HS Series


Last year Yamaha released their new HS-series after a proper rework. The most significant change is the introduction of a speaker with a 7-inch bass element. This fits right in between the old 5 and 8-inch options and should deliver flatter mid-range response compared to the 8-inch, while maintaining better bass-levels than the 5-inch. Or at least, that is the idea—whether it works remains to see.

I was really hoping to get a proper listen to them, but Yamaha hadn't really set them up for music listening. The focus was on keyboards, and these supplied the only sound-source for the monitors that were scattered around the stand. I found this a bit odd after the big money they’ve spent on promoting the HS-range in music production journals, and a bit disappointing after flying in from Norway for the Show. Maybe next time Yamaha?

(From the Music Production Show in London, November 2013)

Tuesday 7 January 2014

Programming Wedding Music in Malawi

I just had the fabulous pleasure of going to a wedding in Malawi where two of my friends tied the knot! It was a two day event with a traditional ceremony on the first day, and the Church-wedding and official dinner on the second (not that we lacked food at any time outside the official dinner though! #AfricanHospitality). I did the programming of the music for the dinner and had been working closely with the couple for a while to develop a playlist that would represent the vibes they wanted. 
  
The list stretches from jazz through James Brown to contemporary R’n B, African popular music and more. I’ve attached the playlist on the pictures below if you’re looking to get married, or just need some playlist inspiration!




I also had the fun of working alongside a local DJ. Him and his crew did the music for the Berikani-berikani (if you’re familiar with it) and the dancing after the dinner. Which was great—cause then I could go and dance!


Great view from the venue for the dinner, Malawi Sun, Blantyre


Good Work Practice


Gain Staging and Pre-Mix


(Photo Credits: Rupert Neve)

For those who record and mix audio there have recently been two articles in Sound on Sound worth checking out. In an age of countless home studios, routine can sometimes be hard earned. If you do digital recordings and prepare multitracks for mix, these are well recommended readings!

  •  The first article is found in the September 2013 issue (and online with an SOS user). It is on the topic of gain structure and it is useful for anyone who is recording audio. Even, (or even especially) if you've been doing it for a while. Article: ‘Gain Staging In Your DAW.’

  • What do you do before you mix? Are you so restless that recording and mix merges into a big mash? I know I used to be! The second article is on the pre-mix stage. You'll find it in SOS' December 2013 issue or online with a user account. It covers so much ground that I recommend you take note of just a few work-practices and implement them, then go back and read it again. Article: ‘The Pre-mix: Ten Steps To A Better Mix.’ Someone has also done a nice summary of the article on this blog.