MWTM Q&A #27 - Andy Wallace
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- Опубликовано: 2 июл 2024
- Exceptional Weeklong Music Production Seminars
www.mixwiththemasters.com
The MIX With The MASTERS Seminar Series is a chance for recording and mixing engineers to work closely with A-List record producers, engineers and mixers and improve their skills in music production. The events take place at Studio La Fabrique in the South of France.
At the end of his Weeklong Seminar in November 2016, Producer/Mixer Andy Wallace took the time to answer a few questions from the MWTM Facebook Page. - Видеоклипы
This man is responsible for bringing about 90% of everybody's childhoods to life.
⁰
He’s 3 years older than my mum and he’s mixing Gojira. Incredible back catalogue
Insane catalog indeed. Legend.
this man is a legend
Amen! Blind Melon "Soup" is one of the greatest albums ever in my opinion.
100th Like, and it's fitting, because I agree 100%.
And the Legend is his sound!
Sure he is!!!
Ya, but Steve Albini makes a great point... What happens in 20 years when your Pro Tools session is no longer able to open because of version number, computer cant read the old format, license on a plug in is expired or out of business...
I can't believe a legend like him went the route of in the box.
Questions:
1) 0:48
2) 2:30
3) 4:55
4) 6:34
5) 10:48
6) 12:26
7) 14:12
8) 16:24
9) 19:41
10) 21:57
You’re a true hero, really appreciated
The world needs more like you
This is a man who's work I've been madly in love with for many, _many_ years. Yet, I had no idea who he was. It wasn't until recently that I discovered the secret ingredient behind many of Rock's GREATEST band's for the last 30+ years. The incredible Andy Wallace.
Engineer's receive so little credit, yet play such an integral role in all of the music we know and love.
Exactly. I've seen so many interviews with Butch Vig re Nevermind, even ones where he was moving faders, but Andy Wallace was the real sound guy? Weird.
Well said! My sentiments exactly.
This man is so humble.
You think so? I think he's super confident of his skills because of experience, Gregory Scott is humble :)
@@Tomix098 he is pretty humble. You will never hear him say that the way he does things is better or call out certain ways other people tend to do stuff "wrong". Someone can be humble and confident at the same time.
@@TheRealCowlick Agreed
Love the "quick mix" and "ride the faders" aproach. I hope I can master this jedi level one day.
i didn't really know who this man was and had to check his discography. impressive as hell
I LOVE the sound of "King For a Day..." album by Faith no More, maybe my favorite mix in a rock album,
specially the bass and guitar sound.
Nicolas Grisanti
Don't you look so surprised
Happy Birthday... fucker!
diregremo You blow that candle out we’re gonna kick you! Kick you! 😂
Totally agreed
Chorus on "What a Day" always stands out to me
Absolutely yes me too it's my favorite sounding rock album ever! And my favourite band too.
Love these...keep them coming.
Absolute teacher. I have nothing but gratitude.
Holy shit.. the records he’s done all on only an ssl.. no fancy 1176 or neve compression or vacrac. Christ al classic records that I adore and listened to every day of my life.. #respect
So great of Andy, and all of these folks, to share some insight into their process. Such great sounding records..
A great and generous interview by Andy. Thanks!
bought tons of records with his name on it. now that ive finally see how he looks like. legend
Nevermind’s mix is fantastic.
God I know it’s so sick.
Cobain hated it
@@cellulose6322 doesn't make it not fantastic.
If he didn’t mix Teen Spirit the Butch Vig version doesn’t make it famous.
@@cellulose6322your mom hated it too 😏
Thanks so much!! Your discussions are tremendously insightful, very helpful and so inspiring!!
I'm SOOO glad I came across this clip. Learning from such a legend made me feel more confident in the mixing process. Thank you Sir!
So good to see this video, I was lucky enough to work with Andy in the 90s and see what he does, it was a great inspiration to how I approach any song in Pro Tools now.
My favourite mixing engineer of all time.
Awesome, Awesome interview. Amazing engineer.
The Gandalf of rock mixing
Andy is a true gentleman, I could listen to him talk about mixing all day.
With regard to the down-beats on the intro/chorus of Smells Like Teen Spirit: If you listen to the isolated drums (readily available online), you can distinctly hear that Dave Grohl is playing the first beat of each bar slightly late. The tiny deviation from perfectly gridded time makes the start of each bar punch out and gives it an extra impact that it would otherwise not have.
Dod Rick Beato sent you here?
And today it would be aligned in Pro Tools and RUIN IT.
@@BobbyGeneric145 or you can just align drums to be late on th grid
@@BobbyGeneric145 The beauty of using a DAW, for editing, is that I can literally place a note wherever I want to put it. I can even quantize it to a grid, if that's what I'm going for. Just because I can't play every note the way I hear it in my head (because I'm a human being), doesn't mean the final product can't still sound like what I have in my head.
"riding faders is a lot of what i do"
that is a dying art that most people overlook
Thanks, Andy! You're awesome and your a pioneer!!!!
Another superb video in the series featuring a legend with mind-blowing credits. Thanks!
Thanks guys. That made my day!
Thank you MWTMs! When I see audio things that involve Andy Wallace (or Max Norman or Toby Wright or Greg Fidelman, but I digress), I know my ears will be happy! Though I would be extremely nervous and anxious, I can only imagine how much my playing could benefit from a few hours session with Andy's ears and his seasoned feedback (no pun intended).
A well-spoken Grandmaster
Most worshipfool
This guy is pure class!
Simply the Best!!
Oh man, I'm old college friends with Andy's son and he used to come up now and then when there were performances at the college - we were all music majors - and it was like a big event for us when he'd visit. Of course, he was just someone's dad when it happened, we'd maybe have a few words over a beer at the local dive bar, but he'd be gone as fast as he came.
I love this man.
Always enjoy watching this episode. 🙃😊😉
So glad I get to live & create in the same era as Andy Wallace.
This was marvellous. Many thanks to all involved : )
Really enjoyed this one!
I could listen to this being speak for months...
Legend!
Concise and articulate answers. Lovely!
I don't know much about mixing engineers, names and who did what and so on. So I had to check his discography.. holy @3!"# respect! :)
Excellent Q&A! Thanks.
"whAT frEQunCieS WerE auGmeNTEd iN jeFfs vocAlS????"
"Ummmm... I think we used a pop filter."
I know, it's like they're hoping he'll say they actually used magic or something.
Looks like your caps lock button is a bit sticky. Try some contact cleaner. Cheers.
What OP wanted to hear:
"If I recall correctly, we record in stereo with 2 different mics which then we'll mono at different gain levels inside the console. In terms of the chain, I think the first part is we double up the preamp. One set to HPF the other adding 3db of air. Then the L channel goes to an LA2A doing about 4db GR, and the R channel goes to an 1176. We do that because it creates a subtle sense of tension, particularly in the chorus section. We run that line to the Massive Passive for 8 db boost to the mids, then it goes into an old warehouse transformer that Jake found in storage at his old studio, it just adds some saturation to the bottom section and tightens the highs. Finally, we run it through a Fairchild 670 with no reduction, just on, for that touch of mojo. I hope that answers your question."
@@jonsubs9998 Excellent...
This guys doesn't use much outboard gear at all, and never really has. He is pretty much in the "box" since the early , early 90s.
Great opportunity to learn a few tricks of the trade from a master.Thanks!
This out of 4 or 5 "masters" I've watched in this format of Q&A so far has been the only one I'm happy to have watched. I will leave it at that.
Amazing, thank you! :)
This is the vibe. I just put this on while working on other stuff just to stay locked in
This guy is my Santa :)
Whenever I would hear an album that sounded phenomenally mixed, it would never surprise me to see Andy Wallace in the credits. It's great to finally hear him talk about some of his processes. Great channel!
QUITE impressive mf'er!!! Upper percentile sonic approach indeed...Enlightenment is often palpable, and on full display here Master Wallace! Time well spent!!!!!!!
Thank you Mr. Wallace. Good to get to know you a little!
what a LEGEND!
Mr. Wallace is an OG
This man literally mixed Nu metal itself by raiding faders, hardly compressing, gain and phase staging in half an hour and with just "no big deals" of ambience and samplings.
I mean, dude
This fuckin guy is responsible for Nu Metal? Aww fuck him.
@@BobbyGeneric145 Understandable, have a nice day kid
True legend!
Fascinating. The sound arts have never been better despite Dr. Luke and Max Martin.
Such a classy gentleman. Andy has such insight and experience. :)
The one thing on the Smells Like Teen Spirit drums that backs this up is how you can hear the snare drum has detuned from the beginning of the song, to the end.
Adam Smith Very true. Anyone who says that the drums on Nevermind are completely sample replaced don’t know what they’re talking about
You know, it's funny because I read this, went to the song, and flipped back and forth between the end in both the verses and the intro and outro to see if I could hear any difference, and although I could, it seemed more like because the mix was just more dense at the end was why the snare sounded more buried. Not that I believe it was sampled replaced anyways (MAYBE sample *augmented*, as so much stuff is - even from "the good old days" which most don't realize. But I didn't think it was outright sample replaced) but was just curious about the detuning throughout the song and how audible it was. I was about to comment along the lines of that and add that I don't hear the detuning.
And then I remembered it's 2022 and there's probably an isolated drum stem that I can listen to somewhere (Spoiler alert: There is, lmao) and sure enough it absolutely is "detuned" at the end compared to the beginning, but because it's only the batter head that's detuned from him beating the shit out of it, and not the resonant head - it still has mostly the same fundamental note when it's sitting in the mix, it just sounds sloppier because of the looser top head. Really interesting to hear.
Also goes to show how important the dynamics and performance itself is, with regards to giving the proper energy to a respective song. Most professional drummers (at least from what I've seen) would probably not have that intense of result despite playing an aggressive song like that with "appropriate" energy, but the song is an imperfect, grungy and angry wall of sound and it absolutely serves the energy of the song despite not being the "cleanest" way to play. Besides actual rhythm, ability and taste, I think the intuition and ability to give a performance like that is was sets great drummers apart from the rest. It's that extra little "Oomph" that you can't really hear per se but you can feel it 100%.
@TheSpartan_G well said my friend.
Thank you Andy.
The man the myth the legend.. I also like the guy that work with Hendrix. Eddie Kramer.
Very nice class.. Thank you.
Andy and Chris Lord-Alge made the sound of the 90s.
I would also say Brendon O’Brein. That guys name was on almost everything in one way or another back then
And of course Chris's brother, Tom.
CLA killed rock with his "one size fits all" corporate radio sound.
@@nikdrown Brendan O' Brien got the best drum sounds ever!
Invaluable speshally to a novice the end was spot on BE IN THE STUDIO WITH me Andy
greatest of all time!
george carlin is actually a great record producer.
walter white really does a great mix
I'm glad I'm not the only one who sees & hears the resemblance!
My thoughts exactly. Looks and sounds just like him.
@@Adam-hs1ft R.I.P. :(
😂😂
He's a class act
What an inspiration.
thanks for uploading... it was awesome to hear these answers from a true master..
Love his response on P Compression, alot of people seem to think it's the solution for everything now adays, when if you just get it right in the sound it's generally unecessary.
Seany06 I was going to rant on that myself, but deleted it. If also there were no vocal auto-tune I'd be happy. Not a fan of digital drum replacements either. Just record it right to begin with, yup.
He still uses it quite handily; every channel on the SSL, for example. SSLs aren't exactly subtle.
Then you have the guys like CLA and Joe Barressi who's sound it's central to, so saying it's "generally unnecessary" to them would get you laughed out of the room.
Your Hybrid Theory mixes are still insane
he made Slayer's Seasons In The Abyss sound AMAZING
Great advice. Thanks a lot.
Fantastic.
This is the good stuff
At 7:30 and that is one of many reasons why he is who he is and can do what he does.
Utmost respect here
i suspect the question about the vocal sound on "hallelujah" was more about that glorious reverb. wish he would have addressed that.
I had no idea Harold was a mixing engineer, mad respect
good stuff!!
I remember the first time I saw his name was Ned's Atomic Dustbin's 2nd album..
Rock on!
This is the coolest dude
Andy Wallace is a legend, no argue.
Favorite piece of gear ? SSL Console.
Right
Where is my credit card…
12:30 people who ask that may never have listened Grohls playing style (super strong hits) even at the bloody conservatory they know about Grohls strenght, and recommend NOT to play so loud or you will break the patches (we shared the shool drum kits)
This old man has mixed some of the best music that ears have ever heard. He acts like its no big deal.
great man
legend
Remember only top singer and musician can help great sound engineer, especialy with Jeff Buckley, he sounds good, because he was a good performer ^^ just a regular studio standard mic and tape recorder, no magical secret trick behind this, you should listen him on rare stage video, is realy impressive also the band who play with him.
well, you could say so. but it is kind of magic because he covers every primary color of sound engineering here. Granted, he might not have had his process as intellectualized when he was working with Buckley, but clearly had integrity.
Genius.
i have much to learn from this guy
Smells like some great tips
The Mixing God
Who would think this guy mixes some real HEAVY shit?..
Cool!
GOAT 🐐
What is your opinion of Barefoot Sound monitors. I have a pair and can not use anything else (/with Grace etc...) I saw where earlier the Genelec were a favorite which I also use. I have attached some subs which aren't necessary but for impressing clients. I want your professional opinion. They were $$$...
sounds like he takes CLA's path towards volume balance and speed 2 completion.
HellaHipHop this guy is old enough to be cla's father mate. Andy is a living legend, just as Warren Huart etc
He produced The End of Silence and Faith No More. What more does he need to do? Legend
“What’s your favorite piece of gear? An SSL console.” LOL I’m guessing the SSL preamp for Buckley?