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Location recording pilgrimage for Qivittoq

Milan-based renowned pianist, composer and sound recordist, Andrea Manzoni is part of a movement aiming to redefine the musical landscape with an approach that blurs the boundaries of traditional music styles. He recently made a transformative journey into Icelandic wilderness for the sound design of Qivittoq, a theatrical production set in the North Pole of a world rapidly depleting its resources.

Working from a draft script from the director, Manzoni secured a 30-day residency in the remote town of Isafjordur in the Westfjords, in order to make 12 excursions to locations devoid of human presence. Here, he was to capture raw environmental sounds with shotgun mics.

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The Nature of Spatialisation

Early March saw sound designer Simon Honywill using TiMax SoundHub and TiMax TrackerD4 performer stagetracking to bring spatial treatment to the Paraorchestra performance of The Nature of Why.

Composed by Will Gregory and choreographed by Caroline Bowditch under the artistic direction of conductor Charles Hazelwood, the production is an interpretation of the interview with physicist Richard Feynman asks in empirical terms why certain physical properties occur. Performed within the confines of a 14m circular space on the Lyric Stage at Theatre Royal Plymouth, with 100-120 audience members mingling amongst the players and dancers for each performance this is the first occasion that it has called on TiMax spatialisation.

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Theatro Marrakech upgrades with L-Acoustics

In 2003, Theatro Marrakech was the first music hall to open in Africa. Today, it ranks among Morocco’s best nightclubs and reckons to offer one of the most exceptional nightlife experiences in the world in the setting of its mainly original décor – a mix of dramatic theatrical and dynamic Moroccan themes.

The 2,000-capacity venue recently installed a L-Acoustics K2 sound system to attract leading international artists inspired by a visit to Omnia Las Vegas. The Theatro management worked with Paris-based nightclub consultant Timothée Renard of the Fox Agency and L-Acoustics Certified Provider Integrator Potar Hurlant for the upgrade.

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Britannia Row sheds new light on Cirque’s Alegría

Widely regarded as Cirque du Soleil’s most iconic touring production, Alegría iwas recently staged at London’s Royal Albert Hall as Alegria: In a New Light, before moving on to the Big Top at the L’Hospitalet de Llobregat in Barcelona. For this latest tour, its music has been re-arranged and modernised, and with different instrumentation.

Alegria is also Cirque du Soleil’s most streamed and purchased album of all time – a tribute that is down to Cirque du Soleil Head of Sound, Francois Lanteigne.

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Number Nine counts on Prism Sound’s Dream

Musician and producer Sebastian Omerson, the man behind Number Nine Studios, had added a Prism Sound Dream ADA-128 modular conversion system to his commercial recording facility in Belgium, following a series AB tests he conducted with support from Joystick Audio. ‘

The team at Joystick Audio were great – they let me take my time and compare products so that I could find what was best for us,’ he says. ‘The Dream ADA-128 came out on top, not least because the audio quality is so good. The sound is very focused, and even when I have noisy guitar bands in the studio, I can still hear each guitar individually. It is also ideal for string sessions where we need a lot of inputs.’

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Revox B77Tim Goodyer was absolutely right when he described the uptake of MP3 and other audio compression formats as an ‘uneducation’ problem in a recent Facebook discussion.

Although I’ve seen it happening over a long time, I’ve only started to realise the magnitude of the problem over the past few weeks. And the past month or so has solidified my thinking on it.

The Facebook exchange began in response to a Fast-and-Wide post on a limiter for encoding files for compressed-audio formats, promising ‘Mastered for iTunes’ status. This ties into a number of issues, from the problems surrounding ‘loudness’ in its different applications to the widespread use of MP3 files for music delivery – and prompted comment from a number of different areas. There was interest from those looking to iTunes delivery but on the technical side, mastering engineer Cliff Jones was quick to point the way to the recommendations made in BS.1770-3.

For me it’s not just an MP3 problem. The push towards smaller active close-field, two-way monitors with ported enclosures and/or subs is another driving force and, parallel with that, a belief among newcomers that you only need one pair of monitors for reference.

Listening lessons

AIM SSL StudioAbout five weeks ago I started offering a weekly session at the Australian Institute of Music (AIM) called Mix Critique. This is totally separate to their existing studies, with the intention of offering yet another opinion on their mixing. Here, students bring in their mixes, and I pull them apart and show them how to make them better. I hold these sessions in the SSL room at AIM, monitoring through a large pair of Tannoy monitors in a large control room. The students sit at the back of the room where the Tannoys sound rather wonderful. It’s a great classic ‘hi-fi stereo’ scenario. With big speakers you always hear bottom end and reverbs better, of course.

For a ‘warm up’ at the start of every Mix Critique session, I sit the students in the sweet spot, turn down the lights (to remove visual distractions) and play a couple of well-recorded tracks. It is clearly obvious by their reactions that for most of them it is a ‘first time’ experience. That alone is kind of scary, but also very illuminating...

First of all, it surprises me how many students have never heard good old-fashioned true ‘stereo’ – the kind of thing your dad had and you envied, and dreamt of owning one day. We have at least one entire generation who have not grown up in a house with such a thing, who have never sat in the ‘sweet spot’ and enjoyed the full dimensional experience of nicely reproduced stereo through nice big speakers (none of this Toyland 5.1 satellite/subwoofer rubbish).

Second, there is an increasing belief among younger engineers that you only need one pair of monitors. I am not sure what has driven this logic, but it is prevalent among newcomers. As I often tell my students, you really need at least two pairs, to cross-reference and so on. But most of them still want to believe that they only need one pair.

No wonder mastering engineers have become so much in demand these days.

Tannoy DMT 215Third, the students never use enough reverberation in their mixes. From these Mix Critique sessions, it has become clear to me that this is due to their excessive listening to MP3s. One of the first things to go in most MP3 conversions is the reverberation, leaving the converted file sounding drier than the original. That’s the sound they emulate in their own mixes. When their own mixes are converted to MP3, they sound drier still – and they wonder why their mixes don’t sound like commercial recordings.

Fourth, they use way too much compression on their mixes. This is almost certainly because their only points of reference are contemporary mastered recordings, so they have no idea what the original mix sounded like before mastering added the last few dB of loudness. They are mixing to emulate a mastered reference; that approach worked well all the way up to the 1990s, but these days a mastered mix could be quite a long way removed from the original mix, and therefore not a good point of reference.

Finally, forums such as GearSlutz and similar have a lot to answer for. Often I have pulled up a student’s mix and seen that they have launched straight into parallel compression, multiband compression and all sorts of other advanced things all over the place – long before they’ve got their fundamental balance right. When I ask what made them do that, the answer usually comes down to something they read in a forum such as ‘the pros always use parallel compression on the drums’. They read this little snippet and think it’s the whole drum sound.

It’s a very sad state of affairs.

With hindsight, I recognise we’ve been witnessing this happening slowly over the past decade or so, ever since the introduction of the iPod, the proliferation of smaller satellite/subwoofer entertainment systems, the rise of the active ported two-way, close-field monitor and the spread of the internet.

At least now I am able to somehow quantify it, and help my students get around it. The Mix Critique sessions have been very successful in this respect...

Greg Simmons is a Lecturer at the Australian Institute of Music in Sydney. He is also a self-styled guerrilla ethnomusicologist, documenting the vanishing musical traditions of ethnic groups in Asia.

See also:
Music Wars: Attack of the Phones (Digital audio and music on the move)
ITU BS.1770-3 (Algorithms to Measure Audio Programme Loudness and True-Peak Audio Level)
Loudness Wars: Level Up (New loudness standards)

TC Electronic

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