EQ Magazine - January 2008 - (Page 22) DIABOLUS IN MUSICA It was a big challenge for Mustis to create these parts and make them sound realistic. It sounds awesome, but does it sound totally like the real thing? No. This is where being thoughtful with your mix will help a lot. I envisioned where the players in an orchestra sit, for example. Horn players are always far back, so I put a lot of reverb on the horn tracks to make them sound farther away. And the tympani is usually to the left, so I panned it that way. How did you record Mustis’ keyboards? Just through a DI box into Pro Tools. I prefer this method to running the signal through a cabinet and then miking the cab. You get the true sound of the keyboard through a DI. A keyboard is a very fullrange instrument, so running one through a guitar cabinet will limit its sound. Now, some say that miking a cabinet makes for a fuller sound, and I think it sounds cool for some bands, but it’s not appropriate for Dimmu Borgir. How digital is In Sorte Diaboli? The last time we spoke, you were recording to tape, dumping the tracks to Pro Tools, and then mixing on an Amek Angela II. Everything was done in Pro Tools HD3, and mixed using the Icon D-Command, so that I wouldn’t get “mouse arm” [laughs]. We used two Digi PREs and two 192 I/Os—that’s it! I call it an upgrade, though purists will argue that. I think each generation of Pro Tools just gets better and better. Perhaps it sounds too good. Maybe that’s everybody’s problem with it? I figure I can always use the Lo-Fi plug-in the D-Fi bundle to make things sound more retro. Or Crane Song’s Phoenix, which rules for tape emulation. I record vocals through a Tech 21 SansAmp to get a dirty sound, and I use Waves SSL 4000 G and E EQ, which sounds very hard and icy when you crank the treble. It’s perfect for black metal. What mic and preamp combinations did you use for Shagrath and Vortex’s vocals? For Shagrath, we used the Shure SM7. We call that the “Metallica vocal mic, because that was James Hetfield’s ” sound on those old Metallica albums. For Vortex, we used a Neumann U67 because his parts are all clean, and that mic matches his voice perfectly. Both signals were run through the channel strips from my old Amek Angela II. What equipment did you use to get the guitar tones on the new album? The guitar sounds can be attributed to the Engl E670 Special Edition amps I have in the studio. We would match each guitar with an Engl 4x12 cabinet, and then slave the preamp signal from the heads to an Engl Savage 120 and an old Marshall 4x12. I put a Shure SM57 straight on the cone—about two inches from the grille—of the Engl cab, and another SM57 right on the grille at a 45-degree angle from the cone of the Marshall. Each was assigned to a separate track. The straight-on SM57 sounds very bright, and the off-axis SM57 is very dark. Galder and Silenoz each did two tracks on each song, for a total of four. All their effects came from the Roland GP-8. The guitars sound way better than what they did on Stormblast—that sounded like they ran their distortion pedals straight into the console [laughs]. What about Vortex’s bass? It’s only one track. His Warwick bass ran through an old DI box I stole 20 years ago [laughs]. Real simple—which is good, considering how difficult it can be to record Hellhammer’s drums. His kit makes Neil Peart’s look minimal! His kit is all close-miked, heavily gated, and he has DDrum triggers on everything, as well—two kicks, six toms, two snares. All in all we had 30 tracks of drums on this album. We did record the drum shells, but most of what you hear are the triggers. He plays so fast that it’s impossible for him to hit hard, so we’d run the trigger signals directly into SoundReplacer, and get our sounds in the program. We only had four mics as overheads—two Neumann KM 184s, and two KSM 141s. If you place them equidistant from the source, then everything is okay. In this case, each mic was about 50cm above the cymbals. The only immediate issue is that the roof of the live room is very low, and that creates a peak around 3kHz that needs to be immediately cut with EQ. What about the close mics? I used a Sanken CU31 for the snare, and Shure Beta 56s on each tom. There were no mics on the kick drums—they’re 100-percent triggered. Each mic was placed within a half-inch of the head. We did this because—as I said—he hits quite soft. This can be tricky— especially with the cymbals. He keeps them real tight so they don’t move much, so he can hit them multiple times very quickly. That’s why the overheads were only 50cm from the cymbals. We had to make sure we were picking everything up. We’d keep a certain amount of the miked tracks, as that adds a human quality to the recording. It’s maybe 20 percent real drums on the album. Is it a concern that so much triggering and replacement of the acoustic drums might not sound natural? Triggers won’t make you sound bad if you know how to use them, and the drum plug-ins of today are really good about giving you optimum control of your sound. You just need to know how to handle them. If you understand drums, then you will be fine. You just have to understand the instrument you are emulating. Same goes for things like GigaStudio. Mustis understands how strings are played, so he can compose with that tool, and make it sound good. Beyond that, there are many practical reasons for triggering, or using a program like SoundReplacer in the studio. I don’t think EQ works all that well for changing the sound of certain drums without making them sound unnatural in the process. If you’re lacking bottom end on a snare track, boosting the low frequencies doesn’t magically fix the problem—it usually just makes it sound muddy. In that case, you’re better off substituting the track you recorded with one that has more low end built into it. For example, just today I recorded a snare that was very short and crisp. It had tons of attack, but no ring or ambience. So I found a sampled drum that was mostly ring, and almost no attack. Blending the two tracks together made for a very live sound. It’s about picking the right samples, and making them complement the song. Records keep getting louder and louder as mastering engineers continue to crush the mixes to death in an attempt to appease the label guys who only care about getting radio airplay. What do you do to your mixes to try to keep the mastering engineers from killing your dynamics? I try to give them limited room to work by getting the mix as hot as I can before sending it off. I’ve been using the new TC Electronics MD3 plug-in before I send the mix off. I’ll run the final mix through a tape emulator to give it some warmth, and then I’ll throw that through the MD3. It’s pre-mastering. You can get the meters to stand on 0, and it still sounds good. The mastering guys can’t do anything to surprise you after that [laughs]. 22 EQ JANUARY 2008 www.eqmag.com http://www.eqmag.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of EQ Magazine - January 2008 EQ Magazine - January 2008 Contents Talk Box Sounding Board Robbers On High Street Rafter RTX Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings Toolbox Rahim Dimmu Borgir Wu-Tang Clan Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians Guitar Trax Bass Management Key Issues Drumheads Vocal Cords Mix Bus Cheat Sheet Cakewalk Sonar 7 IK Multimedia Virtual Instruments Yamaha MSP7 Shure KSM137/SL K+H O 300 & O 800 Sonica Livetracker Apple Logic Studio Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track EQ Magazine - January 2008 EQ Magazine - January 2008 - EQ Magazine - January 2008 (Page Cover1) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - EQ Magazine - January 2008 (Page Cover2) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - EQ Magazine - January 2008 (Page 1) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - EQ Magazine - January 2008 (Page 2) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Contents (Page 3) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Talk Box (Page 4) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Talk Box (Page 5) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sounding Board (Page 6) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sounding Board (Page 7) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Robbers On High Street (Page 8) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Robbers On High Street (Page 9) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Rafter (Page 10) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Rafter (Page 11) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - RTX (Page 12) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - RTX (Page 13) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings (Page 14) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings (Page 15) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Toolbox (Page 16) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Toolbox (Page 17) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Rahim (Page 18) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Rahim (Page 19) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Dimmu Borgir (Page 20) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Dimmu Borgir (Page 21) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Dimmu Borgir (Page 22) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Dimmu Borgir (Page 23) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 24) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 25) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 26) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 27) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 28) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 29) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 30) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 31) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 32) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 33) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 34) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 35) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 36) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 37) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 38) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 39) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 40) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 41) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Guitar Trax (Page 42) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Guitar Trax (Page 43) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Bass Management (Page 44) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Bass Management (Page 45) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Key Issues (Page 46) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Key Issues (Page 47) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Drumheads (Page 48) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Drumheads (Page 49) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Vocal Cords (Page 50) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Vocal Cords (Page 51) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Mix Bus (Page 52) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Mix Bus (Page 53) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Cheat Sheet (Page 54) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Cheat Sheet (Page 55) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Cakewalk Sonar 7 (Page 56) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - IK Multimedia Virtual Instruments (Page 57) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Yamaha MSP7 (Page 58) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Yamaha MSP7 (Page 59) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Shure KSM137/SL (Page 60) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Shure KSM137/SL (Page 61) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - K+H O 300 & O 800 (Page 62) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - K+H O 300 & O 800 (Page 63) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sonica Livetracker (Page 64) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sonica Livetracker (Page 65) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Apple Logic Studio (Page 66) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Apple Logic Studio (Page 67) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Apple Logic Studio (Page 68) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Apple Logic Studio (Page 69) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 70) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 71) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 72) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 73) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 74) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 75) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 76) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 77) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 78) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 79) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 80) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page Cover3) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page Cover4)
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