Calling him the God of sound manipulation and capture would be more appropriate. My hero since about 1975, and his gear stands the test of time, people pay good money for a 40 year old console and are extremely happy with the sound...not the electric bill, but it will pay for itself.
Simply genius, not because i have no idea what he’s really talking about, but because his knowledge is channeled and focused by an honest search for beauty and musicality. That’s what genius is.
I could listen to this revered English gentleman speak for hours and hours. His intelligence and commitment to excellence and quality is a true reflection of his integrity. Bravo Mr. Neve, bravo!!
As an electronic engineer, I love to hear the creator of the company talk electronics. You know when he talks opamps, slew rates etc he is not just some business man but an engineer. Is that something we miss these days?
I love the Neve sound. You just can't beat his EQ and even his compressors are sensational. Beautiful rich warmth and the sparkly high end is amazing. A true legend.
10/10! Thanks again Sound On Sound! I would be blessed to have even a fraction of the intelligence and clarity of thought that Rupert possesses when Im older!
A true genius. It's a pleasure to listen to him when he talks about electronics, the physics behind sound and the passion he has for music. Thanks for everything... for sharing your knowledge that goes much beyond ours.
I had occasion to talk with Rupert a number of times over the years, usually at AES or NAB, NAMM, etc. He was always very soft-spoken and reserved. His knowledge was quite unparalleled. I've never known anyone who knew as much about the electronics of audio as he did.
A living legend! I had no idea how much I owed to this man but it turns out that I use his philosophies every day. Can't wait for the day my music actually gets put through some of his hardware.
Rest in Peace Mr. Neve. Talking one to one with you about circuit design was a high point in my life. You gave me your card. I didn’t call you back. It would have seriously changed my life. But I had solemn commitments that I just couldn’t break. Best wishes forever Rupert. Your dedication to audio will always be part of musical history.
Noooot quite. :-) Zappa had a Harrison desk in his studio. Abba, Micheal Jackson (Thriller and bad) ,Sade, Paul Simon...Led Zeppelin, Genesis, Ramones, The Cure, Gary Moore, Thin Lizzy, Motorhead, Smashing Pumpkins, Garbage, Killdozer, Nirvana oso...All Harrison consoles
@@Funkywallot A lot of those large format consoles aren't being used for recording anymore. Walk into any Pro commercial studio you will see a ton of outboard. The Neve 1073 and ISA pre amps were used on nearly every hit record. Nowadays everything moving more in the box and Hybrid Digital/Analog setups. You see a lot of Argosy Console desks in control rooms these days.
So sad to hear that Rupert had passed. A total audio legend. Its funny to think that all the famous rock stars and musicians of the 70s/80s owe a huge dept to Rupert, there work was greatly enhanced by Neve circuitry. He differed from other clinical engineers in the sense that he used his ears to what he thought was a good sound, so in a way he was a great musician himself. Shame he never wrote a book describing his circuits for amateurs to make them self. RIP Rupert.
A true gentleman, passionate about his craft, a soft-spoken genius. A TRUE engineer... Makes me want to reconsider how I've been referring to myself professionally for the past 30 years. Am I truly an audio engineer? Not if Sir Rupert is in the same room... or even on the same planet.
Is it just me or does mr Neve speaking reminds you too of Steve Albini? I mean, their (a tiny bit unnecesserily) technical way of talking about simple things, their pauses, their talking speed and overall calm and "problem fixer" character. Watching those talk just puts a smile on my face
Genius! Very Nice! Sou amante da arte musical, com alguma formação em áudio, eletrônica e softwares. Estou a vida inteira perseguido o "perfect sound" e a "perfect music". É revigorante poder estar na presença, mesmo que virtualmente de um mestre maravilhoso do áudio de primeira qualidade. Muito Grato a Rupert Neve por seu esforços de vida nos universos do áudio profissional e música. Parabéns a Sound and Sound por mais um ótimo conteúdo. The best regards Cheers from São Paulo- Brasil :)
I believe there are many engineers currently waiting for the right time to show what they know and many of them will certainly be able to do it the right way. What I doubt is that more so ever in the world of electroacoustics the fact that someone is so passionate about what he does, with consequences so brilliant for the industry.
Do you guys not check the mixes of your audio in these documentaries? The music is way too loud the VO is way too quiet. And if you are interviewing a subject , perhaps it would be wise to make his voice loud enough to hear it. I wouldn't care , but I've watched a couple of your other docs and they were mixed similarly.
Interesting summarization at 7:33 If the cue is too steep (Hi-Q) it will spoil other instruments with similar frequencies within that bell. If the cue is too wide (Lo-Q) it won't be very effective. That right there is an interesting note that could carry a lot of effect on it's own.
first time i came to this video i have no idea what he was talking about. the more i learn and occasionally return to what he was talking about the more i understand
Arthur Rupert Neve (31 July 1926 - 12 February 2021) was a British-American electronics engineer and entrepreneur, who was a pioneering designer of professional audio recording equipment. He designed analog recording and audio mixing equipment that was sought after by professional musicians and recording technicians. Some of his customers were music groups The Beatles, Aerosmith and Nirvana, and recording studios Sound City Studios and Abbey Road Studios. Companies that he was associated with included Neve Electronics, Focusrite, AMS Neve, and Rupert Neve Designs. He received a Technical Grammy Award for lifetime achievement in 1997. -Wikipedia.
Amassing man and designer.. he was smart to see that Pultec was the way to go.. with Neve transformers very nice combination. I like the 80 console the way it broadens the fq span and changes curves if you now the tricks to move other fq knobs and cut filter.
I'm just a noodler of knobs. Like an animal grubbing about trying to bend sound into a point that I want it to go. This man. I cannot comprehend how he gave us such tools. It's as though he was the electron riding through the circuits themselves.
This guy basically designed what everyone uses today for audio recording (especially the concept of the modern sound chain: opamp->EQ->AUX->BUS, etc). However, I thought that it was sort of funny that when they asked him about modern, digital technology, an what he'll do next; that there were digital artifacts in the audio in the interview (as if someone was nearby with a cell phone on during the recording: a HUGE no-no when recording audio). Hopefully, what he does next is make it impossible for those artifacts to happen! I can build most of his designs, but they never quite sound as good as a real NEVE EQ or opamp. Strangely enough, it comes down to the quality of the transformers (you simply cannot get a transformer on the market like a NEVE transformer; trust me, I've tried). Transformers--as he mentioned in this interview--are his specialty and were his primary concern when designing his circuits.
I guess that few people have the necessary persistence that Mr. Rupert Neve has to reach so many sides with such effective results. Today's world has perhaps a little different goals. Immediacy is paid at a price that today's public finds natural, even if the studies that led to a product to appear on the market obviously were not seriously considered. What is a shame.
Wonderful interview. -- What's with all the background noise? It's a real shame this wasn't recorded cleaner. -- EDIT: As I listen further I hear someone opening a drink off camera and phone interference?! This is also mixed really poorly, the voiceover is blasting compared to the interview. I'm shocked. Such an important interview with one of the greatest pioneers in sound and little to no care was taken with the sound.
he makes a good point. cheaper and smaller tech is one thing, but this is sound and music we're talking about. Why sacrifice the potential for it to be as beautiful as it can be?
Rest In Peace. Calling him a legend among the audio engineering industry is an understatement. He will be greatly missed ❤️
@@paytonmilan2892 Not sure this is the best kind of post to put something like this, but there we go
Can't believe it's been 2 months already. Seems like it was just last week.
Calling him the God of sound manipulation and capture would be more appropriate. My hero since about 1975, and his gear stands the test of time, people pay good money for a 40 year old console and are extremely happy with the sound...not the electric bill, but it will pay for itself.
Rust in pieces old pal 🫡
Why no knighthood for this amazing man ?. A true groundbreaking genius.
David Carruthers totally agree!
I bet hed just shrug and say he wasn't interested in all that nonsense - such an inspiration.
Totally deserves it, but I'll bet his moving to Texas has something to do with it.
not as popular as the double for Sir Paul wife beater McCartney...
@@nickparas7170 🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲💯🍻
Met Rupert on a number of occasions while working with Malcolm Toft. The most reserved legend I've ever met. A true gentleman. RIP Rupert.
Rupert Neve is proof that music is healthy for the brain. What an amazing individual...
My Hero - thank God for his integrity, intelligence and commitement . . .
Would you, by any chance, be Tom 'Bulk Erase' Newman?...
Simply genius, not because i have no idea what he’s really talking about, but because his knowledge is channeled and focused by an honest search for beauty and musicality. That’s what genius is.
I could listen to this revered English gentleman speak for hours and hours. His intelligence and commitment to excellence and quality is a true reflection of his integrity. Bravo Mr. Neve, bravo!!
As an electronic engineer, I love to hear the creator of the company talk electronics. You know when he talks opamps, slew rates etc he is not just some business man but an engineer. Is that something we miss these days?
Father of Audio Engineering, The Legendary Neve !! Truly inspirational, All sound Engineers admire your legacy!
I love the Neve sound. You just can't beat his EQ and even his compressors are sensational. Beautiful rich warmth and the sparkly high end is amazing. A true legend.
10/10! Thanks again Sound On Sound! I would be blessed to have even a fraction of the intelligence and clarity of thought that Rupert possesses when Im older!
A true living legend. Thanks very much for this great interview, and thank you Mr Neve for the sound!
My condolences to the music world those that knew him and his closer friends and family.
Hear, hear.
A true genius. It's a pleasure to listen to him when he talks about electronics, the physics behind sound and the passion he has for music. Thanks for everything... for sharing your knowledge that goes much beyond ours.
I watched the Sound City documentary a few years ago & was blown away by this man's genius. Just heard he passed. RiP Sir !!
this man is truly a legend among audio designers
Hearing him talk is a soothing experience in itself.
I had occasion to talk with Rupert a number of times over the years, usually at AES or NAB, NAMM, etc. He was always very soft-spoken and reserved. His knowledge was quite unparalleled. I've never known anyone who knew as much about the electronics of audio as he did.
A living legend! I had no idea how much I owed to this man but it turns out that I use his philosophies every day. Can't wait for the day my music actually gets put through some of his hardware.
Any recommendations to start with? Apropos Hardware?
Just awesome. The best ever. Thank you Mr. Neve.
RIP Rupert Neve. What a man, terrific stuff. I learn more and more each time I see this video
I love how he thinks his “older stuff” is just okay and the whole audio world gushes over it haha. So funny. I love Ruperts interviews :)
I guess you and Rupert are now in heaven? No Jones, No Stones.
RIP, Rupert Neve. What a genius mind for the recording arts!
Rest in Peace Mr. Neve. Talking one to one with you about circuit design was a high point in my life. You gave me your card. I didn’t call you back. It would have seriously changed my life. But I had solemn commitments that I just couldn’t break. Best wishes forever Rupert.
Your dedication to audio will always be part of musical history.
What a genius. I’m just now discovering his gear and the Shelford Channel Strip sounds astoundingly brilliant. Amazing.
I find his personality and voice very relaxing.
He is a legend, but sombody get him a glass of damn water!
He never drank anything incase he spilled it over PCBs.
Never heard his voice before. I could have listened to him talk for hours.
A legend, a true genius. He will be missed so much!! Keep making lovely gear in heaven
Mr Neve is the father of all audio engineers.
All of your favorite songs are recorded with this mans creations.
Noooot quite. :-) Zappa had a Harrison desk in his studio. Abba, Micheal Jackson (Thriller and bad) ,Sade, Paul Simon...Led Zeppelin, Genesis, Ramones, The Cure, Gary Moore, Thin Lizzy, Motorhead, Smashing Pumpkins, Garbage, Killdozer, Nirvana oso...All Harrison consoles
@@Funkywallot A lot of those large format consoles aren't being used for recording anymore. Walk into any Pro commercial studio you will see a ton of outboard. The Neve 1073 and ISA pre amps were used on nearly every hit record. Nowadays everything moving more in the box and Hybrid Digital/Analog setups. You see a lot of Argosy Console desks in control rooms these days.
@@Funkywallot fwiw, both Nirvana Nevermind and In Utero were both on Neve desks. 8026 and 8068 respectively.
@@Funkywallot he was talking to me, not you
So sad to hear that Rupert had passed. A total audio legend. Its funny to think that all the famous rock stars and musicians of the 70s/80s owe a huge dept to Rupert, there work was greatly enhanced by Neve circuitry. He differed from other clinical engineers in the sense that he used his ears to what he thought was a good sound, so in a way he was a great musician himself. Shame he never wrote a book describing his circuits for amateurs to make them self. RIP Rupert.
Totally agree - a posthumous Knighthood is well overdue.
The embodiment of a commitment to excellence. An inspirational artist and boffin.
Thanks for the great interview with a true legend, Sound on Sound. 👍
I love how he keep coming back to the art of listening, not looking at specs.
Rest in peace master Rupert. Thank you for your work,
A true gentleman, passionate about his craft, a soft-spoken genius. A TRUE engineer... Makes me want to reconsider how I've been referring to myself professionally for the past 30 years. Am I truly an audio engineer? Not if Sir Rupert is in the same room... or even on the same planet.
The guys I learned from, back in '82, had degrees in engineering. Good to point that out.
He was a great Electronics Engineer that understood audio/harmonics extremely well. I love hearing him discuss the relationship of music to EE.
Humbling to listen and learn from Mr Neve!! Indeed im lovin the education and all this information from the masters. RIP King!!!
RIP Mr Neve. Thanks for everything! Namaste.
Is it just me or does mr Neve speaking reminds you too of Steve Albini?
I mean, their (a tiny bit unnecesserily) technical way of talking about simple things, their pauses, their talking speed and overall calm and "problem fixer" character.
Watching those talk just puts a smile on my face
Genius!
Very Nice!
Sou amante da arte musical, com alguma formação em áudio, eletrônica e softwares.
Estou a vida inteira perseguido o "perfect sound" e a "perfect music".
É revigorante poder estar na presença, mesmo que virtualmente de um mestre maravilhoso do áudio de primeira qualidade.
Muito Grato a Rupert Neve por seu esforços de vida nos universos do áudio profissional e música.
Parabéns a Sound and Sound por mais um ótimo conteúdo.
The best regards
Cheers from São Paulo- Brasil :)
The level is great. It´s called dynamic. Not overcompressed. Just perfect!
er, no. don't be daft.
+Bollog Nyessy He's right about the dynamics and nor being over compressed, but it could do with a bit of additional gain on the master fader!
+EgoShredder dynamic range - fine. overall level - unprofessionally low.
Great vid - lovely to get an insight into what moved Rupert Neve to do what he did the way he did it. Thanx. And good to have this for posterity.
great interview! Thanks Sound on Sound
Love watching Rupert's interviews...always on point when he explains things...pure class!
Thanks for your contribution to the audio world!
I believe there are many engineers currently waiting for the right time to show what they know and many of them will certainly be able to do it the right way. What I doubt is that more so ever in the world of electroacoustics the fact that someone is so passionate about what he does, with consequences so brilliant for the industry.
I love this man. Have 3 of his products and they changed the way my music sounds. Love Neve.
Do you guys not check the mixes of your audio in these documentaries? The music is way too loud the VO is way too quiet. And if you are interviewing a subject , perhaps it would be wise to make his voice loud enough to hear it. I wouldn't care , but I've watched a couple of your other docs and they were mixed similarly.
Interesting, informative and inspiring! Thanks for the interview!
Been home and dry ever since. I got the 5043 and it is killer. I had a pair of 542 for a couple days. Jesus, those are where it's at!
Thanks for such informative insight Mr. Neve! So humbling to hear how he has constantly pushed the envelope (pun...) all these years.
R.I.P Mr. Rupert Neve your legacy with #Focusrite, #AMS/Neve and #RND will live on forever. Thank you for your time.
What a legend... Thanks for this interview!
I've been watching this video at least once a year since it was released.
He understood the "art" of electronics applied to music. An engineering great is an understatement.
I can not thank him enough for my 1073 and 33114 in 32 year recording. and I will thank him for the rest of the life.
Interesting summarization at 7:33
If the cue is too steep (Hi-Q) it will spoil other instruments with similar frequencies within that bell.
If the cue is too wide (Lo-Q) it won't be very effective.
That right there is an interesting note that could carry a lot of effect on it's own.
Undeniably the epitome of fine engineering. Agree with @david below. This man requires the highest possible recognition for his contribution.
so cool to hear the main man himself talk about pro audio! god among men.
RIP to the legend Rupert Neve 😞. His gear and inventions will live forever. 🙏
"That was - the origin I suppose, of the EQ" 🪂
Thankyou Mr Neve 💫
this was a very fun watch!
first time i came to this video i have no idea what he was talking about. the more i learn and occasionally return to what he was talking about the more i understand
If I could afford his equipment, I would use only Neve equipment to record my music!
Scott Finnell “If there’s a will there’s a way!”
Arthur Rupert Neve (31 July 1926 - 12 February 2021) was a British-American electronics engineer and entrepreneur, who was a pioneering designer of professional audio recording equipment. He designed analog recording and audio mixing equipment that was sought after by professional musicians and recording technicians. Some of his customers were music groups The Beatles, Aerosmith and Nirvana, and recording studios Sound City Studios and Abbey Road Studios. Companies that he was associated with included Neve Electronics, Focusrite, AMS Neve, and Rupert Neve Designs.
He received a Technical Grammy Award for lifetime achievement in 1997.
-Wikipedia.
Mr.Neve, a man created by God to make a unique difference in what we know as the world of audio....only Mr.Neve could know the frequencys in his mind.
I have such a knack for finding about awesome people just after they're gone.
Amassing man and designer.. he was smart to see that Pultec was the way to go.. with Neve transformers very nice combination. I like the 80 console the way it broadens the fq span and changes curves if you now the tricks to move other fq knobs and cut filter.
RIP Rupert, true legend!
You are interviewing RUPERT NEVE and had the audacity to have the audio of this video mixed so terribly..Wow... rest in peace Rupert 🙏
Wowww.. Mr rupert 😍
RIP..... completely changed music FOREVER
What a gift from him this is
RIP Mr Rupert Neve, we miss you
My condolences. Rupert Neve, rest in peace.
Great video. A living legend!
I'm just a noodler of knobs. Like an animal grubbing about trying to bend sound into a point that I want it to go. This man. I cannot comprehend how he gave us such tools. It's as though he was the electron riding through the circuits themselves.
fantastic interview but PLEASE sort out the audio level. i have to turn everything up to 11 to hear what he's saying.
+Bollog Nyessy You may have to get more powerful amplifiers for your speakers ;-)
+Bollog Nyessy Looks like it's you mate
+Bollog Nyessy
Can't take a joke?
+Bollog Nyessy I put it through my trusty 1073 preams on line level and boosted it about 6 dB. Long live Neve!
Nice!
This guy basically designed what everyone uses today for audio recording (especially the concept of the modern sound chain: opamp->EQ->AUX->BUS, etc). However, I thought that it was sort of funny that when they asked him about modern, digital technology, an what he'll do next; that there were digital artifacts in the audio in the interview (as if someone was nearby with a cell phone on during the recording: a HUGE no-no when recording audio). Hopefully, what he does next is make it impossible for those artifacts to happen!
I can build most of his designs, but they never quite sound as good as a real NEVE EQ or opamp. Strangely enough, it comes down to the quality of the transformers (you simply cannot get a transformer on the market like a NEVE transformer; trust me, I've tried). Transformers--as he mentioned in this interview--are his specialty and were his primary concern when designing his circuits.
Why is the video so quiet? Have to turn phone volume up full to barely hear it. Great mix from an audio magazine...
Throw your phone, buy a pc and just WATCH this Video carefully - you might learn something from it.
I’m listening through my iPhone speakers just fine
@@louissanderson719 Probably corrected and re-uploaded in the 7 years since my original comment.
clear reasoning of terms, thanks
RIP Rupert Neve. True Sonic Hero
I guess that few people have the necessary persistence that Mr. Rupert Neve has to reach so many sides with such effective results. Today's world has perhaps a little different goals. Immediacy is paid at a price that today's public finds natural, even if the studies that led to a product to appear on the market obviously were not seriously considered. What is a shame.
Wonderful interview. -- What's with all the background noise? It's a real shame this wasn't recorded cleaner. -- EDIT: As I listen further I hear someone opening a drink off camera and phone interference?! This is also mixed really poorly, the voiceover is blasting compared to the interview. I'm shocked. Such an important interview with one of the greatest pioneers in sound and little to no care was taken with the sound.
this guy introduced the use of electrical components into music-making process. i sometimes think this is as groundbreaking of the invention of AI
Amateurs like me just don't realize how much the sound industry owes to Brits like him. Rest.
Well he's been working with Yamaha on consoles & SE on mics. Reckon he's talking about Yamaha.
very good! Thank you!
What an Interesting place to end up on
Inspiring Genius
This man is walking dictionary!
Rupert Neve, the father of the modern recording gear, RIP (1926-2021).
Master !
he makes a good point. cheaper and smaller tech is one thing, but this is sound and music we're talking about. Why sacrifice the potential for it to be as beautiful as it can be?
Very interesting interview. But when Rupert says that a 3dB/octave shelf is 'steep' (@9:11), is that really considered a steep EQ curve?
I was thinking the exact same thing, perhaps he has a more trained ear?
I wonder who the guitarist was that received the first test.. The guitar started his EQ! “Goldenears”!
A legend.