Early Oasis really opened my eyes to lots of interesting mixing and production techniques in rock music. Great video and research, looking forward to future videos
Owen is well known for using a TC finaliser for mastering, I happen to know Tim Wheeler from the band Ash who confirmed that this was also used on their 1977 album.
I'm a home recorder. I don't know many tricks. I try to record stuff as close to how I want it to sound as possible so I don't have to engage in mixing gymnastics. Not that I'm against mixing gymnastics. I've heard of your technique before. Yes, like davidrowe said...basically parallel compression.
Me and my old band grew up in Cornwall and a school friend of mine worked at Sawmills. We recorded there a couple of times for free in 1992/93 when there was nobody else using the place but it wasn’t as good as Definitely Maybe unfortunately 😂
Oasis is probably a band I could give more of a chance to. As of June 20024, I haven't honestly listened to them past "Wonderwall" and "Some Might Say".
Back in the mid to early 90s, @thesingingaccountant1 I was beginning my teenage years and feeling increasingly disenfranchised with what was in vogue at the moment. The year that Green Day came out with *Duko* and Kurt Cobain ended his own life, I was fast becoming a Carpenters fan. I was so opposite to what was considered cool that I did not even fit in with other outcasts.
Great video, there’s no such thing as a Marshall JCM200 by the way as quoted as Boneheads amp, the picture shows a JCM2000 but he can’t have used these as they weren’t released until 1997. He probably used an earlier 70’s JMP Marshall head and 4x12 or the Marshall Artiste combo, he then went for n to use JCM 800’s at Maine Road
The thing Oasis and their producers and record Company had to learn. Is that Oasis just played at max volume all the time. Very little dynamic. Thats why the max compression worked in the studio as Well. That was how They played live…
@@mixingmasteringonline Yes, I know their history. But Liam joined The Rain, then founded Oasis (by renaming them). Your video infers he and Noel were not in Oasis from their genesis. Noel wasn't, Liam was. Cheers.
Owen Morris is a mad genius
Awesome insight, can't get enough of studio techniques and working methods.
Thank you! 😀
Nor me especially oasis stuff I find really interesting
Early Oasis really opened my eyes to lots of interesting mixing and production techniques in rock music. Great video and research, looking forward to future videos
Thank you! Definitely (not maybe), lots more videos to come..
Great video for us, Oasis fans and amateur musicians!
Thank you!
Had very fond memories of Monnow Valley. Used to be a real nice place to write and record. Pity its gone now.
Yeah, it’s a real shame it’s no longer a studio 😞
Would have loved to have recorded there!!
wow never knew so much went into mixing it
Owen is well known for using a TC finaliser for mastering, I happen to know Tim Wheeler from the band Ash who confirmed that this was also used on their 1977 album.
Cheers for the info! I heard he used it on ‘Definitively Maybe’. Just not sure how, maybe some multi-band compression?
any home demo recorders out there, I found that duplicating and then compressing the master track is a simple but good trick
Parallel compression?
Interesting idea Cheers mate
Can you explain more? What do you mean exactly?
So there are 2 masters playing alongside each other...?
I'm a home recorder. I don't know many tricks. I try to record stuff as close to how I want it to sound as possible so I don't have to engage in mixing gymnastics. Not that I'm against mixing gymnastics. I've heard of your technique before. Yes, like davidrowe said...basically parallel compression.
Great video. Interesting recording mixing techniques.
Thank you!
Quality video 🫡
Thank you!
Me and my old band grew up in Cornwall and a school friend of mine worked at Sawmills. We recorded there a couple of times for free in 1992/93 when there was nobody else using the place but it wasn’t as good as Definitely Maybe unfortunately 😂
Great video mate
Cheers! 🙏
Really cool vid!!
Thank you!
Interesting to see use of cassette
Very good “wall of guitars” sound in your example.
Did you do two tracks of each guitar amp sound, then hard pan, or some other way of doing it?
Thank you! I think I ended up doing 3 parts for 2 of the amps, 2 hard panned and one centre. Then the third amp just 2 hard panned.
@@mixingmasteringonline Oh, very cool. Thank you for letting me know! Once again, great sound you got there.
@@SecretsofSaturn Cheers! 🙂
Good question - I just worry about phasing
They’re not different recordings of the same performance, they’re all different performances (same part) so phasing isn’t a problem.
Oasis is probably a band I could give more of a chance to. As of June 20024, I haven't honestly listened to them past "Wonderwall" and "Some Might Say".
Definitely a lot more to them than those two songs so it’s worth investigating for sure.
Great band but maybe you had to be there then
Back in the mid to early 90s, @thesingingaccountant1 I was beginning my teenage years and feeling increasingly disenfranchised with what was in vogue at the moment. The year that Green Day came out with *Duko* and Kurt Cobain ended his own life, I was fast becoming a Carpenters fan. I was so opposite to what was considered cool that I did not even fit in with other outcasts.
@@ericbgordon1575 ha fair enough mate - I've always had very eclectic taste but also got on the oasis bandwagon back in the 90s
@@thesingingaccountant1 Actually I think, with the huge amount of new Oasis fans nowadays, that they're a very timeless band.
Great video, there’s no such thing as a Marshall JCM200 by the way as quoted as Boneheads amp, the picture shows a JCM2000 but he can’t have used these as they weren’t released until 1997. He probably used an earlier 70’s JMP Marshall head and 4x12 or the Marshall Artiste combo, he then went for n to use JCM 800’s at Maine Road
Thank you and cheers for the info on the amp! 🙏
Cool video. I've never been impressed by these guys' music though 😂 they were not a photogenic lot either 😂😂
The thing Oasis and their producers and record Company had to learn. Is that Oasis just played at max volume all the time. Very little dynamic. Thats why the max compression worked in the studio as Well. That was how They played live…
Lucky they had Sony money to keep re-recording so many times.
It is the imperfections that make it what it is… I love to hear the hiss and pops of effects. I hate over-polished music…
Do for Be Here Now
It’s on the list 👍
Nice one Mate
Nice one mate
0:40 That wasn't Oasis was it.
Liam was one of the founding members of Oasis, in fact he named the band. Put some fookin respect on his name.
😂 Chris Hutton was on vocals before Liam joined the band (then called ‘The Rain’).
@@mixingmasteringonline Yes, I know their history. But Liam joined The Rain, then founded Oasis (by renaming them). Your video infers he and Noel were not in Oasis from their genesis. Noel wasn't, Liam was.
Cheers.
7:21 David Bau-eee? Who’s that?
A really popular artist with hits such as Heroes, Let's Dance and Starman, You should check him out, he's really good!
you can say songs made them big ..but man its been proven if wasnt for Morris..oasis would just had been a dream in noel's head alone
Sawmills in 1991?
Until now I had just about managed to forget about these dullard Dad-rockers... cheeeeers....
Big fan then? 😂
Why did you click on it? I mean, if I saw something about a band I hated I just wouldn’t bother.
@@Dreyno It's called self-expression
@@jeffsimon9594 No, it’s called a bit pathetic.
@@Dreyno I am tired of hearing about them.. it's not 1996 anymore.. and I will say so if I want. Cheers