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Nick’s blog – Nick Russell http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk Nick Russell in-house and freelance engineer/producer. Mon, 13 Mar 2023 17:18:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/cropped-NR-fav-32x32.png Nick’s blog – Nick Russell http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk 32 32 “Bedsit – Dead Bands” Reviews http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/bedsit-dead-bands-reviews Mon, 13 Mar 2023 17:18:09 +0000 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/?p=24083 Read more]]>

It was such a pleasure mixing this EP by Bedsit. At some point I will do an in-depth analysis of my mixing methods for this release, but as it’s been just over a month since its release, here’s some of the reviews of the EP:

Soundsphere, Louder Than War, Our Sound Music Ltd, Aural Aggravation, The Hull Story and 3 Songs & Out.

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FREE Plugins! http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/free-plugins Sat, 20 Aug 2022 16:20:45 +0000 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/?p=24076 In my newest video, I talk about, and demo, all the FREE plugins I’ve downloaded lately. If you want to know where to get them, feel free to send me an email 🙂

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The Black Ravines – Johnny The Ghost (Production Process) http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/black-ravines-johnny-ghost-production-process Mon, 08 Aug 2022 12:32:03 +0000 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/?p=24057 Read more]]> Hi everyone! First off, I now have a twitch channel and Youtube channel, that I’ll be posting (and streaming on twitch) my production process videos, and other stuff, on. I’ll be doing this instead of my articles, that I have done in the past, because I think it’ll be more interactive, and I’ll be able to show you the stems for the sessions, as well as how the techniques I have chose have affected the sound, like a before and after sort of thing. Anyway with that out the way, lets get onto The Black Ravines track, Johnny The Ghost.

The Black Ravines Facebook

The Black Ravines Instagram

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Sweethearts – Hurt And High (Production Process) http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/sweethearts-hurt-high-production-process Wed, 16 Mar 2022 20:26:06 +0000 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/?p=24023 Read more]]> Hi everyone!

A track I recorded, mixed and mastered with Hull band Sweethearts was released on the 11th February called Hurt And High. I thought it would be a good idea to talk about my production process for it since I haven’t done a post like this for a while, so lets get into it.

The reference tracks they sent me were all 80’s/90’s punk/noise rock/post-hardcore songs, as well as some lo-fi tracks and Proto-punk songs which gave me an idea of the production process I would undertake. The track itself is a 1 and a half minute belter which gives you no room to breathe, just how I like it.

Recording Techniques

Like always we started with the drums. The track is at 140bpm, and they gave me a demo of it for Danny to drum along to. The micing techniques I used were; an inside and outside kick mic (sm57 inside pointing to the beater head, and a D112 on the outside picking up the sub frequencies), top and bottom of the snare (57 on top pointing towards the centre of the snare and away from the hi-hat to reduce bleed, and an AKG C1000S underneath pointing towards the centre, the same distance away as the top mic to keep them in phase with each other), AKG P4’s on both toms pointing towards the centre of them, 2x AKG p170’s as overhead mics in an ORTF position (placed in the centre of the kit at an angle of 110 degrees away from each other), and 3 room mics (2 Rode NT1A’s in stereo in the room and an Audio Technica AT2020 placed outside the room to get a bigger drum sound). This is a typical mic setup I use for music in a punk style. The kick and snare techniques mean I can get clarity and a lot of body as well for them drums in particular. The overhead technique I used, I like because I think it gives a clear representation of what the drummer hears when playing, and I usually prefer that sound because I like the listener to feel like they’re in the room with the band. Finally I used the room mic techniques because the stereo room mics create a wide stereo room sound, and the the mic outside the room brings an extra thickness to the room sound without sounding messy (I’ll talk more about this in the mixing stage).

Next were the guitars. For bass I used a DI, a D112 and P170 (both about 6″ to a foot away from the centre of the amps speaker) and finally an NT1a as a room mic. For the guitars I used the same technique but without a DI and a 57 instead of a D112. I used these techniques again because for this style of music its a favourite of mine. The dynamic and condenser mics mean I can blend between the dark and bright mics creating a tone that is most similar to the sound of the amp in the room, and the room mic means I can get the same effect as being in the room with the band. The extra DI on the bass means I can add extra sub frequencies if needed in the mix, as sometimes these can be lost using just the mic’s.

Finally for the vocals I used an NT1a and 57, as well as a room mic. The Nt1a picks up the full range of frequencies produced by the voice, and the 57 I used as a ‘character’ mic, to create a more lo-fi sound, blending this with the NT1a in the mixing process to create a clear yet gritty vocal production. The room mic I used again to create the effect of being in the room with the band.

 

Recording Process

After recording the drums using the techniques mentioned above, we recorded bass. Josh recorded the bass in the live room, the bass track itself is distorted all the way through. Whilst he was in the room he did some vocal ad libs picked up by the room mic (such as the “1, 2, 3, 4” at the start of the track). Next was Toby to record guitar. First he recorded the main guitar parts using his amp which he plays with live, which we then doubled. Then we recorded from the second chorus to the end of the track using a Vox AC30 and a fuzz pedal (RML Electron Fuzz) to thicken up the guitars to give the chorus more impact, which we also doubled. Lastly, we recorded feedback from the guitar amp which lasted the full track (you can hear this clearly as it starts the track), we did this to create a feeling of tension throughout the full track. The last thing we recorded was the vocals. This didn’t take long as Niall wanted to not overthink it (and not blow his voice out as it is a strenuous song to perform vocally) creating a very raw performance. We did about 5 takes of the full song (doing chorus’s and verses separate) and only kept 3 of them.

 

Mixing

When mixing the drums I wanted to keep them sounding pretty live and roomy, as mentioned before, to give an effect of being in the room with the band, therefore I chose not to gate the kick and snare, as well as not over compressing or eq’ing each drum, only taking out problematic frequencies and boosting the fundamental frequencies of each drum and adding some high mids and high end frequencies for clarity and to beef them up. I panned the drums as if the listener is the drummer, so overheads hard left and right, stereo room mics 3/4’s each way and the close mic’d drums individually to match if you were the drummer (for eg. snare slightly to the left, low tom half way to the right). Level wise I brought up each close mic’d drum with the room mics to balance a roomy drum sound, whilst still getting the clarity of each drum hit to not make it sound too messy. I only added the outside kick mic and under snare mic to boost both drums, leaving the inside kick and top snare mics as the main sound of each drum. The main drum room sound was the stereo mics, adding the outside room mic just to boost the room sound, not as the main sound. I also delayed the room mics by 18ms to reduce any phasing issues. Lastly I added a tape saturation drum bus as an effect to give the track a more lo-fi sound and adding a bit more aggression to the drum sound.

For the bass, I decided the DI wasn’t needed in the end as the mics were picking up enough low end, I blended the mics to create a similar sound to the amp in the room, only eq’ing out some problematic frequencies. For the room mic added a low and a high pass filter to take out the sub and high end frequencies as they wasn’t needed for the room sound, and boosted some low mids to give it more body. I also added a slight stereo room reverb to the room mic just to widen the stereo image. Finally I sent all the mics to a Bass bus and compressed it not too much, just enough bring down some of the bits that were too present in the mix, and added a slight side chain with the kick, just so the kick could punch through some more.

For the guitars I used very similar techniques to the bass. I blended the mics and only eq’d some harsh frequencies out, and used the same technique with the room mic whilst compressing it a little. For the fuzz guitars, as the main guitars were pretty mid frequency heavy, I decided to work round this by mid scooping the fuzz guitars to sit underneath the main guitars, yet thickening them up. For the feedback guitar, I added a low and high pass filter and boosted the mids deliberately to give it a thinner sound as I didn’t want it overpowering the other guitars, I also added a slight delay to it to give it a more atmospheric sound. For all the guitars I also added high pass filters under 100Hz as these were useless frequencies that would have just made the mix muddier. As for panning, the main guitars I almost hard panned left and right (with the room mics not so much hard panned), and the fuzz guitars were halfway hard panned, creating a nice stereo image. Lastly, for the feedback guitar, I used a binaural pan, giving it an effect of moving around you. I automated this throughout the full track just to give it a sense of unease, sometimes barely audible, then sometimes feeling like it comes right up to your ear from behind you, adding to the tension.

Finally the vocals. I eq’d the NT1a by reducing around 500Hz a little and adding some high end a low mids, whilst adding a high pass filter at about 100Hz, this produced a nice clear vocal sound. I then backed that up with the 57, which I had a distorted megaphone effect to it, creating a clear yet aggressive and lo-fi vocal production. Overall I compressed them to keep their dynamics while still making every word audible, automating the vocal level during the second verse as the vocals get almost whispered. I didn’t want to over compress the vocals as I think sometimes that squashes the frequencies of the voice too much, giving a very thin sounding vocal production. Niall wanted a very doubled sounding vocal production, so I kept the best vocal performance in the middle, and the the other two I panned a 1/3 left and right, and only had them 3dB less then the main vocal, creating the very doubled sounding vocal production Niall wanted, with a nice stereo image too. For the room mics I panned one in the centre, and the other two hard left and right to add to the stereo image, plus taking out a lot of low end, using them as a nice natural room reverb. Lastly I added a bright slap back echo to all the vocals, just to add to the lo-fi feel of the track, and to make the vocals less dry, making them sit in the mix better.

In conclusion, I thought I achieved the production sound I aimed for for this track, and what the band wanted by showing me their reference tracks. The track has a very roomy sound (because of all the room mics used) creating that effect of being in the room with the band, whilst still keeping it sounding raw and punchy and not messy, giving it that retro/punk sound we were both aiming for.

 

Mastering

For the mastering process I started with the initial EQ, comparing the track to some of the reference tracks provided. Using a mid/side eq, I used a brick wall high pass filter at 30Hz for the mid to take out some unwanted sub frequency rumble, and for the sides I used a brick wall high pass filter at 65Hz to take out unwanted sub frequencies, also reducing 120Hz by 1.4dB and adding a 1dB shelf at 8kHz, tightening the overall eq of the track and reducing some muddiness.

Next I added some tape saturation by 4dB adding some harmonics emphasis to the low and high end frequencies adding more punch and clarity. I then added a stereo imager, making the sub frequencies more mono, and widening the low and high mids, and high end. This made everything sit a bit better in the mix, giving everything its own individual space, without creating unwanted rumble when using sub speakers. I added only slight compression to each frequency band next to tighten them up. Then on a post-eq I added another brick wall high pass filter at 30Hz, reduced at around 150Hz by 1dB, and added 0.5dB at 500Hz and a 0.5dB shelf at 5kHz, all because of the extra boosts and cuts created by the tape saturation, stereo imager and dynamic eq compressor. All these techniques added to the final mix by cleaning it up and adding extra clarity when listening to it across different speaker systems.

Finally for the limiting, I had fast attack and releases to reduce a pumping sound, and I added emphasis to the transients to keep the sound of the dynamics when making it louder. I tried not to limit it too much because I wanted the track to keep its dynamic range, and not have too much distortion which tends to make it sound harsh and messy, however I still made it loud enough to sound professional. I gave the band a CD master and a Streaming Master, limiting the CD master more than the Streaming one because todays streaming services reduce the volume of overly compressed masters to protect peoples hearing, which means a less compressed master has more dynamic range whilst still sounding as loud as over compressed and ‘louder’ masters. I think this is a good thing because over compressed masters tend to sound less thick and rich than less compressed ones as the frequencies aren’t squashed together as much, making a much more enjoyable listening experience.

 

Last Notes

Thanks for reading this in depth analyses of my production process on the Sweethearts “Hurt And High” track, and I hope you’ve found it an interesting read. If you have any queries about this blog post, or any enquiries in general, feel free to comment or send me an email. Thanks – Nick

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Unit 45 Recordings and other news! http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/unit-45-recordings-news Thu, 06 Jan 2022 17:06:32 +0000 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/?p=24015 Read more]]> Hi everyone. It’s been a while since I’ve posted on here but that doesn’t mean I haven’t been active. Since the last blog post I have helped build and setup my new studio with 2 other producers, located down Brook Street in Hull city centre. We have called it Unit 45 Recordings (links at the bottom of this blog post). We rent the studio space off a Hull based Arts charity called The Creative and Cultural Organisation who are a great charity in general and have a lot of amazing things going on all the time. We have been officially open since August 2020, not a great year to start things off as you can imagine, having knock-backs due to lockdowns and a period of time where we didn’t have electricity due to matters out of our hands, however over the last few months we have been getting a lot of clients in (recording and/or rehearsing) as well as our podcast called P’s In A Pod.
123068463_121040146445921_7329772909631416509_nOur podcast “P’s In A Pod” was created during the first lockdown to keep us from going insane. Since then we have finished two series of it, the first one consisting of 20 episodes and the second series consisting of 10. We have also been getting guests to appear on episodes, from local artists to venue managers and music journalists. P’s In A Pod covers everything music based, from our favourite albums to more in depth episodes like how branding can be useful in todays music industry, and much much more.

 

As for me personally, I am now fully self employed as a music producer. Even though I’ve only had one of my clients (since moving to Unit 45 Recordings) release a track I worked on with them, I have worked with many more who are still yet to release their work. So keep your eyes peeled for them.

Finally, with my own music endeavours, I have been very active with my solo project 6:17. Recording and releasing my debut album H01E5  in 2020, recorded during the first lockdown at home on my own, which turned out to be a very stressful yet rewarding process, and it was mixed by my good friend Ben Crossland. Then in October 2021, I released an EP called Crown. It was a collaborative project with another great local artist called Alfonso Conspiracy, creating some of my favourite songs I’ve ever worked on, mostly recorded at Unit 45 Recordings as well.

Thanks for giving this a read everyone, and I promise the next blog post wont be too far in the future, cya soon – Nick

https://www.facebook.com/Unit45Recordings

https://www.instagram.com/unit45recordings/

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IMPORTANT NEWS! http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/important-news Mon, 02 Sep 2019 12:57:10 +0000 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/?p=23960 Read more]]> Hi everyone!

The Rooftop Recordings studio is sadly finished now, after having some amazing recording experiences in there I’m sad to see it go. However, I now have a new and much bigger studio which isnt quite finished yet but is still usable so you can still contact me about recordings!

More news will be coming soon about the new studio so stay tuned…

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To the Strongest (EP) Production Process http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/strongest-ep-production-process Fri, 02 Mar 2018 12:53:05 +0000 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/?p=23958 Read more]]> To start pre-production I discussed what type of production the band wanted from the tracks, which they wanted to sound as professional as possible, yet still capturing the rawness of their punk sound, similar to a band called The Story So Far.

For the recording process, I started by finding a good room sound. I used 3 mono room mics at different positions and distances from the kit. This was because it would let me choose the best sounding one when mixing, or use a mixture of all of them to benefit the kit as a whole. I used a ribbon mic at waste height 4 feet away from the kit because this would pick up the body of the kit, as well as the mic having a lo-fi quality to it popular within punk music. The other two mics were large diaphragm condensers at head height (one at the other end of the room, and one in the hall outside the studio). I used these because they pick up a large frequency pattern, which would capture the different sections of the kit clearly. As for the positions, the hall mic would have a longer delay to the drum sound which could be used for a big drum sound, whilst the room mic would be used to pick up a more live sounding drum sound. I would decide on which one, or, use a combination of them in post-production.

I used SM57’s on the top and bottom/inside and outside of the snare and kick, whilst only single micing the toms with a similar sounding mic. This was because they are clear sounding dynamic mics, which are also versatile and have a high SPL needed for the hard hitting punk drum style of To The Strongest’s drummer.

Finally I used C451’s for the overheads, in an ORTF technique. I chose to do this because them mics give a very crisp high end tone to the cymbals which I felt was needed when thinking of the other mics used, mostly which were dark sounding mics. Secondly I used the ORTF technique because I was planning on hard panning the guitars; therefore the ORTF technique offers a narrower stereo sound, whilst giving a representation of what the drummer would hear. This would give a personal character to the sound, which I felt was necessary to the style of music it was.

For the bass, I used a common technique of using a dynamic mic (D112) on the edge of the cone and a small diaphragm condenser (C451) in the centre. I did this because the mics would pick up the low end and high end of the bass, which I would then blend together in post-production. I used the exact same technique for the rhythm guitar (swapping the D112 for a 57) because this guitar had some parts where it needed a thick sounding tone to it.

For the lead guitar I used an Albini technique, using a ribbon (Coles mic) and small condenser (C451) placed towards the centre of the cone, which I would then blend as well in post-production. I used this technique because it captures a very natural sound, which would represent the vintage, mid-frequency present, amp the guitarist had. Using these two techniques for the guitar would be useful in post-production as the technique for the rhythm guitar would create a mid-scooped sound, contrasting with the lead guitar technique. This would therefore make each guitar distinguishable, reducing the need to EQ.

Finally, for the vocals I used a 57 with a small diaphragm condenser (C451), this creates a lo-fi sound from the 57, because of its frequency pattern, whilst the condenser picks up the wide frequency range of the voice, which then can be used to back up the 57 so it still creates a professional and usable sound. I used this technique as I thought the lo-fi sound would work well with the style of music this was. Lastly this song included ‘gang vocals’. I used two large diaphragm condensers (panned left and right) and doubled it. This resulted in the perfect sound I was going for as it sounded like a big crowd.

For the mixing stage, regarding the drums, I heavily compressed the room mics, along with slightly compressing the overheads and the close mic’d drums. Doing this created a punchy yet live/room prevalent sound, which benefitted the track as it would follow the genres themes. I also used side-chain compression on the room mics (using the snare and kick), which in turn made the drums sound even bigger. I did not gate the kick and snare, leading to a natural full sound from them, reducing the ‘robotic’ gated sound that can happen when gating. I EQ’d the drums going in using an analog EQ because It creates a warm tone to the drums. However I did have to increase some low end to the kick as It was lacking when played with the other instruments.

For the bass I raised the low mids and reduced the sub low end because it was clashing with the kick. I heavily compressed the bass because of it being a very dynamic bass guitar, which for this music genre is not useful, as it needs to be powerful throughout. Lastly I side-chained the bass with the kick so the kick could still be punchy whilst the bass was still prevalent. As mentioned before, I did not have to process the guitars because of my recording techniques. I did however hard pan them, minus some lead parts, to create space in the mix.

For the vocals I compressed because of the dynamic vocalist, leading to a strong performance throughout. I slightly distorted the dynamic mic to add to the lo-fi effect mentioned earlier, whilst EQ’ing the condenser mic around it, creating warmness in the vocals. Lastly I only slightly compressed the gang vocals to keep their dynamics needed to create the affect, of being in the same room, I wanted. Overall I added slight delay and reverb to the vocals to help them sit in the mix, whilst still being dry enough to fit into the genres style.

When Mastering, I added sub low end and reduced high end because I believed the mix to sound too harsh at points as well as lacking sub needed for contemporary music in similar genres. I compressed the low and low mids to tame some frequencies creating muddiness and creating a messy overall sound. Lastly I heavily maximised the track because many music in this genre do have a consistently loudness to them.

Overall I believed this EP lived up to the expectations of the artists whilst sounding as professional as other songs in the same genre. All the instruments remained their clarity, whilst the drums and bass still sounding punchy. The vocals sat well in the mix without standing out too much. If I recorded this track again I would take more time getting the right bass tone as I had to heavily EQ it to make it sit in the mix right.

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NOUR Recordings http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/nour-recordings Fri, 02 Mar 2018 12:29:55 +0000 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/?p=23955 Read more]]> For a good part of last year I worked with the band NOUR on their EP (released November) and their Sleeping Beauty/Happiness Punch double single (released January). All the tracks where recorded at Rooftop Recordings. This band were a pleasure to work with as they had come into the studio with all the songs fully practiced and ready to go, with a clear vision of what they wanted (yet still open to ideas from me), thus helping me produce them in a way that pleased all involved.

We recorded the drums with a very simple method as to create the lo-fi/punk sound they wanted, only using 7 mics (close micing on each drum, 2 overheads and 1 room mic). The bass was recorded using a technique I almost use all the time for rock bands as it is simple but effective, close micing using a dynamic on the outer cone of the amp to pick up the low frequencies, and a small diaphragm condenser on the centre of the cone to pick up the higher frequencies and clarity of the bass.

I used a new technique for the guitar because the amp they used was a stereo amp and they always had some degree of chorus effect on, therefore I used 2 dynamic mics pointing to the middle of each cone (off-axis) to pick up the chorus effect happening. I also used a small diaphragm condenser facing inside the back of the amp because this picked up a very mid frequency tone (adding to the lo-fi sound) and picking up the full amp. When mixing, I hard panned the dynamic mics and kept the condenser mic panned in the middle. By doing this, one guitar take sounded like it was doubled, giving a very unique sound to the tracks, and emulating how they sound live (which I always like to do when producing bands). We only doubled/overdubbed guitars when we felt was necessary to the track to prevent it sounding too messy and losing its clarity. Plus most of the overdubs was done using more conventional guitar micing techniques, but when mixing the original guitar takes was much higher in the mix to keep the unique sound.

For the vocals, I used a technique which I have used before for punk influenced bands and lo-fi bands as it always works well for them genres. I used a large diaphragm condenser to pick up the full frequency range of the vocalists voice, however I also used an SM57 which creates a lo-fi sound to the voice. When mixing I slightly distorted the 57 and then mixed both mics to find a nice tone, creating a lo-fi sound yet still sounding professional.

When mixing the tracks I used different reverbs and delays for the vocals as most tracks were varying in sound and emotion. For example I used a longer reverb and a delay with more feedback for Sleeping Beauty as it was a more delicate song than the others, benefiting the softer tone of the vocals, however I used less reverb and a slap back delay for songs like Pyramids and Lessons as they were more aggressive songs. For Addicted, we decided on having a distortion and chorus effect on the vocals because it benefitted the style of the song and the vocals, creating an almost un-human sound which the band and I liked.

The end result of the tracks were really positive as it sounded professional yet still raw sounding, which the band was looking for at the start of pre-production.

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Little Blue Thula – Live Session EP http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/little-blue-thula-live-session-ep Tue, 26 Sep 2017 18:26:03 +0000 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/?p=23940 Read more]]> It was a pleasure working with Little Blue Thula on their Live Session EP. The country/folk duo were really well rehearsed making the recording process easy. They wanted a really raw and live sound to the EP so recording entailed using minimal and simple micing techniques, plus a heavily used room mic to capture the sound of seeing them live.

For the mixing technique, I used slap back delay and spring reverb emulators to recreate the vintage sound they were looking for. I also used minimal compression to capture the dynamics present in their style of music. Im looking forward to seeing them live again, and hopefully working with them again too!

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Masters for Henrietta Lacks, System Paralysis and NOUR http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/23934-2 Tue, 26 Sep 2017 18:12:13 +0000 http://nickrussellmusic.co.uk/?p=23934 Check out the new EP’s by Henrietta Lacks, System Paralysis and the ‘Disappointment’ single by NOUR, all mastered by me. Recorded and produced by Edward Alan Logie at The Warren (Hull).

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