God
Creator of the Universe
ill o.g.
When I used to work solely on tracks rather than biz side shit - I was indoctrinated by an AE that worked with me to view EQ as a literal artform. He was a British cat, and said that Americans have a different way of trying to correct mixes - whereas he used to sit down and try to fix mix problems with EQ.
Now, I know we all fix our problems with EQ. But he taught me early on (when PT wasn't the dominant thing) to listen to tracks at the SSL desk and literally turn the knobs to pull out offending frequencies ALL THE TIME while the recording was running to "print". So the EQ on one distinct track changed sixty times. If there was a multilayered chorus, we would sit there and fumble with multiple tracks changing the EQ's to what we had surmised were the "right" frequencies - for hours.
I remember him saying: "the 'eeee's' you have to notch that at 2050 Hz". And if there was a phrase where the singer would say "See you again." We would try to "automate" the notch for the "eee" in "see" at 2050Hz, the "oooo" in "you" at xxxxHz and the "gain" (which sounds like "ghen") at another frequency.
Each fucking phrase was eq'ed. We'd twiddle the knobs until it came out right in print (meaning 'recorded to tape.')
It was a laborious and crazy task, but it made the tracks sound stellar.
With PT it's a lot easier now -- but do any of you really overproduce your tracks and have your EQ automating in constant flux versus other tracks that are also being EQ'ed automatically?
I guess budgets are a lot smaller these days, so you didn't have the luxury of a year to work on 11 tracks and do some insane shit to the tracks.
Now, I know we all fix our problems with EQ. But he taught me early on (when PT wasn't the dominant thing) to listen to tracks at the SSL desk and literally turn the knobs to pull out offending frequencies ALL THE TIME while the recording was running to "print". So the EQ on one distinct track changed sixty times. If there was a multilayered chorus, we would sit there and fumble with multiple tracks changing the EQ's to what we had surmised were the "right" frequencies - for hours.
I remember him saying: "the 'eeee's' you have to notch that at 2050 Hz". And if there was a phrase where the singer would say "See you again." We would try to "automate" the notch for the "eee" in "see" at 2050Hz, the "oooo" in "you" at xxxxHz and the "gain" (which sounds like "ghen") at another frequency.
Each fucking phrase was eq'ed. We'd twiddle the knobs until it came out right in print (meaning 'recorded to tape.')
It was a laborious and crazy task, but it made the tracks sound stellar.
With PT it's a lot easier now -- but do any of you really overproduce your tracks and have your EQ automating in constant flux versus other tracks that are also being EQ'ed automatically?
I guess budgets are a lot smaller these days, so you didn't have the luxury of a year to work on 11 tracks and do some insane shit to the tracks.