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Virtual Vintage

 George Petersen Editorial Director

Mix, Jan 1, 2006

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Walk around any pro audio/MI convention, and you'll see lots of vintage gear — or vintage-looking gear. Some of it is close to the real thing, from museum-quality, custom-shop reissues of older Strats and Les Pauls to meticulously hand-wired Vox AC30s or Universal Audio 1176LNs. Other stuff has a vintage style or flavor, putting modern components into a retro package like Shure's 55SH “Elvis” mic. At the same time, you can see a lot of gear with a classic appearance — at least in onscreen emulations of huge bakelite knobs, rounded VU meters, etc. — in the form of plug-in software. In fact, with a little careful editing, a video tour of this month's NAMM show could look more like 1966 than 2006.

We audio types are all tire-kickers at heart. When checking out a new console, the first thing we do is move a couple faders or knobs to determine their feel. In fact, years ago, a young Greg Mackie was disappointed with the gain pots on his Tapco Model 6100 mixer design and experimented by squirting various types of goop into the controls to give them a smooth rotation. It worked, but over time — or in colder climates — turning those knobs became a real chore.

Ironically, if feel is so important, then why are we so willing to give it all up when we substitute a control surface for a console or a mouse for a fader? If feel meant nothing to guitar players, then companies such as Benedetto, D'Angelico and Paul Reed Smith would cease to exist.

I was recently watching the (highly recommended) DVD Tom Dowd and the Language of Music, a brilliant documentary on the career of one of the industry's legendary engineer/producers. In the film, Dowd recalls the experience of working with rotary controls and how he was liberated by the transition to linear faders, which allowed him to create a dynamic, fluid mix as nimbly as a conductor works an orchestra.

These days, with the availability of automation on every console parameter, creating a mix can take weeks rather than minutes, especially when each cowbell clank can be tweaked to absolute sonic perfection. Certainly, nobody wants a bad mix, and the ultimate power of automation can allow the creation of works that previously would have been impossible, but when you're running 80 inputs on a metal power trio — or a cappella madrigals — maybe something's wrong. With all the tools at our disposal, technology can sometimes get in the way. All too often, a little time spent on non-technical attributes — such as re-examining the lyrics, reworking a bridge or polishing the arrangement — will make a far greater contribution to the song than four hours of editing a hi-hat pattern.

But let's not toss out the technology with the bathwater. Sure, I wish I had a 9-foot Bosendorfer Imperial Grand in my studio; however, it's nice to know I've got some affordable (virtual) options. And a walk down the floor at this month's NAMM show will demonstrate that there's room for both emulative and actual products in our musical lives. Yet, somehow, a little more tactile reality wouldn't hurt at all.



© 2008, Primedia Business Magazines and Media, a PRIMEDIA company. All rights reserved. This article is protected by United States copyright and other intellectual property laws and may not be reproduced, rewritten, distributed, redisseminated, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast, directly or indirectly, in any medium without the prior written permission of PRIMEDIA Business Corp.

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