Owned and operated by Brazil-based jazz pianist and composer Ricardo Bacelar, Jasmin Studio in Fortaleza, Brazil, in late 2021 as a world-class residential facility combining analogue and digital workflows and supporting music production in any monitoring format – from stereo to immersive 7.1.4. The studio’s technical design, which boasts a fully wired Dante network, was facilitated by São Paulo-based audio expert Daniel Reis.

Recently, the studio completed its first Dolby Atmos project – a full-length album entitled Congênito, which will be released on Bacelar’s label Jasmin Music. Meanwhile, the album’s first single, ‘O último por do sol’ is available on all major music platforms around the world.

Jasmin StudioRecorded by Melk and mixed by multiple-Grammy award winning engineer Beto Neves, Congênito is a milestone for Bacelar – not simply because it exemplifies the uptake of immersive audio production, but because it was written and produced with immersive audio in mind entirely at the studio.

An internationally recognized jazz pianist, composer and touring artist, Bacelar is something of an over-achiever. In addition to his creative forays into musical composition and immersive audio production, he is Honorary Consul of Belgium, President of the OAB National Culture and Art Commission and is also a copyright lawyer. Prior to starting work on his Congênito project, he engaged acoustic design firm WSDG to build the multi-room residential recording facility with a 7.1.4 Dolby Atmos-certified control room and seven isolation booths.

‘Working with Ricardo requires a portion of time dedicated to researching and experimenting with sounds,’ Melk says. ‘As he is a multi-instrumentalist, his creation process is dynamic and demands creative and innovative solutions from the technician to get the best results.’

During the recording, which included capturing the most intricate sonic details of Bacelar’s piano work, Dias employed a complement of high-end tools including a pair of Sennheiser’s Ambeo VR ambisonic microphones, Neumann D-01s and KM 184D digital microphones, a Neumann KU 100 Dummy Head binaural microphone, and a Neumann U 47 Fet among

Mix engineer Beto Neves has worked on dozens of Dolby Atmos projects since 2014, mixed the project on the studio’s 48-channel Solid State Logic Duality Delta SuperAnalogue Console. he appreciates the added dimension that the immersive and ambisonic microphones imparted to the final mix. ‘On one song, ‘Paralelas’, which only included a piano and a vocal, I ended up using only the Ambeo mics in the mix,’ Neves explains. ‘For me, this song is actually the most intimate experience on the album because you have the impression that you are right in the centre of the piano.’

Pianist and composer Ricardo BacelarFor Bacelar, recording and mixing in Dolby Atmos brought an extended canvas of possibilities to his compositions: ‘Composing and recording in immersive introduces new possibilities in the creative process,’ he explains. ‘For example, when you go to make a counterpoint on a melody, you have this extra space in your head. Now you can spatialise these, and it can have a very favourable impact on the composition and the arrangement. Music is a form of perception, and now that we have a 7.1.4 system we can make this perception more powerful.’

Aside from having such a distinct vision of what the album could achieve compositionally, Bacelar actually played all of the instruments himself. ‘As an instrumentalist, Ricardo knows what he wants,’ says Neves. ‘When he sits down to play something, if he needs to play it one hundred times to achieve what he wants, he will do it.’

Sometimes tracks were recorded with just a piano with Bacelar adding other instruments later, and other times drums were recorded to a click track – one by one – before other instruments were added. ‘All in all, it is a beautiful album with beautiful playing and amazing arrangements,’ Neves observes. ‘Jasmin Studio is something of a musical laboratory.’

Bacelar says that moving forward at Jasmin, he intends to record and produce other musicians in addition to his own material. ‘The studio has been designed to produce a proprietary catalog and is the engine for my label Jasmin Music – and our Dolby Atmos integration will help bring our creativity to the next level.’

Forthcoming projects include solo albums, jazz trios and big bands.

More: www.wsdg.com

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