Archive for the ‘Recording Sessions’ Category

This Old House Pt.1

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Tomorrow I have the guy coming to finally remove the paint. I’m really happy to get this step out of the way. Today was pretty crazy. I had to dig a trench around the entire house to expose all the paint that is below grade. It was not easy. It was raining and I encountered all sorts of huge rocks, bricks, and broken glass buried in the ground!
Plus I am a weak little man and I have the bad back = @1:14:) This guy too.  We all need this.  Ok let me stop…

I must admit at this point I feel far more like Bob Villa than Steve Albini.

paint1

paint2

paint3

paint4

paint5

paint6

If you’re wondering what’s up with the big black tape everywhere, that’s what is presently stopping the rain from coming in.  It’s Gorilla tape and has stayed on the house for almost 2 years!!  I definitely recommend it if you need something that will last!

I had a recording session on Tuesday with PT Burnem’.  It went well despite a few problems.  We are working on his first official full-length release entitled Paper Cranes.  I’m very excited to be working on this project with him.

Blasting

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Today I had 2 guys come to the house to look at the paint removal situation and give me an estimate.  Dealing with people in the construction business is very difficult.  The first thing to know is that they are all crooks and they just want your money.  You can’t trust anybody.  I realize this is probably the deal with all business but it’s still worth mentioning.  Nobody follows laws, rules, or codes because nobody enforces them.  We have the  MHIC (Maryland Home Improvement Commission) that is supposed to enforce code and go after people that do things wrong but they are  full of shit.  I had a conversation with them once about a problem I was having and the guy basically said to me, “I’m not going after somebody for YOUR problem.”  So If you’re in the state of Maryland do your research cause you are on your own!

I talk for a while to the first guy that came.  He was filled with ideas and other things that he thought I should try other than removing the paint.  This made him seem  genuine and thoughtful which is rare, but I still don’t trust anybody.  He mentioned calling his friend who does something called concrete injection, which I need to research but I’m pretty sure it’s not needed.  When you mention a flooding basement people have a tendency to think of certain problems and solutions.  He told me about gutters and grading and all the things that I already know about.  My problem is unique to this style of house and I’ve researched it thoroughly so I pretty much know what needs to be done.  Still, discussion with people can never hurt, you never know what you can learn.

I was hesitant about having the second guy come because when I talked to him on the phone he said that he would charge me $250 just for an estimate.  He explained to me that in order for him to give me an accurate estimate he needed to set up his equipment and actually test an area to see how long it would take.  I really don’t like this idea and I still kinda feel like it’s a rip off but it’s not an absurd idea, it does make sense.  Better that he does this and gives me an accurate price than to go in blind and half way through the project tell me that he miscalculated and it’s going to take twice as long and be twice the price.  I’ve never payed for an estimate before, though a chimney repair company tried to make me pay once and I started yelling at them and they backed down and said they made an error.  In the end I did agree to the $250 though… this has been such a looming problem that I’m willing to pay the money to get the end result that I need.  This is not something I can skimp on.

First he tried baking soda which worked well but was slow.  He then tried glass and that worked a lot faster.  It was amazing because the pressure of the spray broke away some of the loose concrete and blasted it to the ground.  This reaffirmed that this really is a problem and that it needs addressing.  Once I saw that there is basically going to be a crack all the way around the entire house that needs to be filled I knew that this was exactly what I expected it to be – a big deal and why I’ve been dreading doing it for such a long time.  I just need to keep my eyes on the prize and picture everything done and having an awesome studio for people to work in.

Now I need to line up a concrete person to immediately follow the paint removal.  Once the paint is removed even more cracks will be exposed and the last thing I need is for it to rain while I’m looking for a contractor.  So the plan is to have somebody all ready to go, they can start the second the other is finished.

Heres a picture of the test spot.  You can see the pieces of concrete that the spray blew away:

wall1

Do you see the crack in the beige mortar below?  That is where the water gets sucked in.  It is like this at various points all around the perimeter of the house.

wall2

In other news, I did a session with Height last night and it went really well.  We recorded vocals for 3 songs and made a really minimal beat out of scratches and cuts for a cover of a Schooly D track.  I’m really amazed with the Hamptone.  It reacts very differently to different voices.  When I recorded Jones it had a very clean tone but when I recorded Height it had a very saturated agressive sound.  The difference in their voices is night and day so it makes sense that it would react differently.  I’m looking forward to using the pre more and getting familiar with it’s vast tonal palette.

Build Pt. 5 aka Complete + BIG BIG BIG

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

I know it’s been a while since the last post but I really haven’t had anything substantial to write.  Like always (for me at least) lots of big things happen at once so I can now warrant a new post – not another one just about the progress of the mic pre build:)  But since we are on the subject of the mic pre build, let’s talk about it.  The unit was fully assembled and completed a while ago.  But there were some problems (one channel wasn’t working) and then the holidays happened and all progress slowed to a crawl.  I talked to Scott at Hamptone and he helped out a lot with the unit and I’m pleased to say It is now fully working:)  I’m very happy and will post more on it as soon as I get to really run it through its paces.  I do want to mention that Scott really went out of his way to help me so if you are considering purchasing the pre from him but are a little concerned that you might get stuck building it – fear not – he will make sure you end up with a working unit.

At last, the Hamptone HVTP2, in all it’s glory:

hamptonefin

 

I’ve been looking for a nice versatile EQ and had an awesome find of a CLM Dynamics DB500s Expounder Dynamic Equalizer (whew that’s a name).  This thing can do so many things it’s absurd.  Aside from being a 4 band stereo parametric eq, it has 24db analog tracking filters with resonance so you can get some crazy filter/ wah effects!  Apparently this unit is highly revered in Hip-Hop circles so it should have a full and busy life in its new home.  Now if I could just get the company to send me a manual for the unit.  More on this later when I (hopefully) get the manual and some time to use it.

expounder

 

Even though the studio is no where near completion I’m happy to say I’ve already had the pleasure of working with an amazing client.  Abstract rap extraordinaire Jones was itching to get in the studio and lay down some tracks for a new EP he’s been working on.  We recorded some vocals and also did some mixing.  The tracks are wild – found sounds, dubed out effects and feedback loops in abundance + freeform rhymes.  One session is in the pocket and we will be concluding in the near future.

Jones spitting flame in low-lite mode:

jones

In case your wondering, I decided to rename this site and my studio to Baltimore Analog.  I think it will help people find me a lot easier.  Thanks to my bro for the idea!  I’m still going to hold on to vanguardfiles.com for a while, I really think it’s a good name and I have some ideas for it too.

till soon…