Really interested in how they deal with bands in the control room, I’m having major issues recording just two of us in the same room, and mixing afterwards is a nightmare.
I notice they use screens, for isolation, but I’m interested in how you can get a decent balance recording and playing in the same room.
They are very large rooms with very high ceilings that have been very skillfully treated acoustically.
You can hear from the stand-up interviews (apparently using a camera mic some distance away!) that they are pretty dead spaces. None of the instant strong reflections issues you inevitably suffer in a typical domestic room!
Technical Editor, Sound On Sound...
(But generally posting my own personal views and not necessarily those of SOS, the company or the magazine!)
In my world, things get less strange when I read the manual...
Re: Real World Studios, recording in the control room.
Zukan wrote: ↑Tue Sep 21, 2021 3:10 pm
I was there for a session and Gabe was sitting on the floor eating hummus. That is my contribution to this thread.
*coat - ticked to Islamabad*
I thought for a second there you said ‘humans’ - it put a different complexion on your comment.
SOS FOR ARTISTS - our brand new service designed to support independent artists, producers, and collaborators at every stage of the music-making journey.
Zukan wrote: ↑Tue Sep 21, 2021 3:10 pm
I was there for a session and Gabe was sitting on the floor eating hummus. That is my contribution to this thread.
*coat - ticket to Islamabad*
Kudos. I was there (not for a session) and I sat on the SSL to calm down. IIRC everyone called him Pete?
Zukan wrote: ↑Tue Sep 21, 2021 3:10 pm
...Gabe was sitting on the floor eating hummus.
Sure it wasn't Baba ghanoush? How close were you to him?
It could have been, but there was no way I was going to interrupt him and ask. He looked very focused and passionate about his Hummus. In the Middle East we have a saying 'never interrupt a man eating his Hummus'. The Gulf war kicked off because Khomeni interrupted Saddam during a Mutabal eating session.
The 'wood room' at Real World sounds quite different from the main room though. It's got quite a bit of wood and stone and is rather more lively. Somewhere I have the multitrack of something that was tracked live in the wood room and there is a ton of spill - not that that's necessarily a bad thing.
I think unless you’ve got a big room, with lots of screening, I’m going to stick with straight to stereo, close mic’s, as close as I can to get decent stereo.
Our room is about 25ft by 15ft, the best sound we got with piano and Marimba, was two mic’s underneath the Marimba, and two mics on the piano,
There was just enough separation to raise or lower each instrument, I had them spread across four tracks, that’s the sound we got for that BBC recording, and it sounded OK, it doesn’t sound obviously like a small room.