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EQ TECHNIQUE

One of the best things about almost all EQs is that you don’t really
need an instruction manual. You plug it in, turn a few knows and
when nothing happens you take it out of “bypass” and the rest is
easy. You just keep twiddling until it sounds like you want it to. Most
digital devices like synthesizers and reverbs tend to get a lot of use
from the included presets. Most guys just don’t want to get into that
kind of “programming”. EQs are the opposite where most guys will
ignore the presets and start from scratch or flat. This section may be
most helpful for the musician non-engineers, and may be applicable
to EQs in and music engineering in general. There are no real rules
here, just hints, suggestions and bits of other peoples wisdom.

Not so long ago, in order to get your chance at the console, you had
to  follow  the  path  from  cleaning  toilets,  to  making  coffee,  to
assisting,  to  engineering  to  producing.  It  cost  years  of  micro-
paychecks and humble pie. Not so anymore. If you want your turn
at the console, you buy a console or be the main employee at a private
studio. There were some benefits of watching the old pro’s make the
gear sound great and being able to ask how and why. What we hope
to  do  here  is  be  a  small  substitute  for  those  who  didn’t  get  that
opportunity.  Specific  settings  for  EQs  are  different  for  different
situations. Some of these examples drift a bit from just EQing but we
include them for reference and to make EQing less of a fixer.

Live Sound

: In this author’s experience, live sound usually required

the most drastic and heavy handed EQ. Every factor contributes to
this:  Not  the  greatest  mics,  lots  of  leakage,  feedback,  strange
sounding stages and rooms, questionable house speakers. No luxuries
like mic positioning, just a quick sound-check (sometimes) and the
doors open. Tapes from live shows are almost as tough. If you are
accustomed to studio recording and clean tracks, you may need to
adjust your techniques in a hurry. Sometimes, you get these wonderful
clean tapes with a lot of  energy. These tapes should be easy. Other
tapes can be pretty messy. Some of your usual studio tricks are not
working this time. With these tapes, you just might try taking the
“house mixer” approach. Pull down the effects, there’s too much
leakage, and dig in with those EQs. It might help to start out with a
good “fader only” mix and avoid using those “solo” buttons until
you get the EQ roughed out. Gates may help, but may be audible and
disconcerting if the leakage is gruesome. You might have to write
mutes early and avoid too much compression. EQing the vocals may
cause a lot of leakage problems if you boost lows or highs significantly.
If you get a raw tape with virtually no EQ or compression when it was
recorded you  may need to use "unusual" and more EQ on many of
the tracks. Usually, the best approach is to try to smooth it out but
not kick it into submission, but remember, this is raw and may need
more help than studio tracks.

Tracking the band

: (in the studio) A bunch of musicians, a bunch

of mics, and typically not a bunch of budget. Well, at least you have
some good mics. By far, the best way to EQ at this stage is to use
those good mics to your advantage. With the right mic and the right
position, very little console EQ is needed. Use the rooms appropriate
to the instrument and use separation to control unwanted spillage,
get the instruments physically sounding awesome (we wish), then
use the mics to create a natural picture with real room ambiance. The
better the mic technique, the less EQ that will be needed. In fact, with
less fix-it EQ, the easier it will be to finesse your available EQ . Hit
"Record", finesse it in the mix. More important to get the vibe, than
to burn out the band doing sound checks and tweaks.

If mic choice is a mystery, you might want to research some Steve
Albini or George Massenburg interviews. Rather than guess wrong,
some engineers compare 3 or 4 probable choices. Some choose the
mic that minimizes EQing later, some hear the mic’s transient or
dynamic character and anticipate what some EQ should add in a nice
way. Some guys have been there, done that, and know exactly what
they like and don’t, (but always seem to be ready to learn more) and
bring in their own mics to get thier trademark sound.

The closer you have the mic to some instruments, the more likely EQ
will be needed and less likely you will get both some great leakage
and some not-so-good leakage. Close miking is better when you
intend to sculpt the sound. Distant miking is better for documenting
(recording)  the  music.  On  vocals  and  room  mics,  many  use  big
diaphragm condenser tube mics where you want smoothness and
richness.  Some  tube  mics  may  add  a  bit  of  “attitude”  and
aggressiveness  and  some  are  very  “real”  sounding.  The  biggest
differences  in  this  family  of  mics  is  the  two  lowest  and  highest
octaves and what the back of the mic sounds like. Small diaphragm
condensers can be fast, bright, clear but sometimes brittle, hard or
thin. Some are quite good for acoustic instruments, cymbals and hi-
hats. Watch out, there is a wide variation in maximum SPL and noise
with  these.  Of  course  most  engineers  favor  large  diaphragm
condensers and typically use FET types on drums and guitars. The
pattern choice is an important tool. Remember that the proximity
effect (low boosting) is biggest in “figure 8”, moderate in “cardioid”
and non-existent in “omni”. It is worth listening to both the “room
tone” and instrument in the 3 main patterns - it's often surprising.
The  low  roll-off  (HP)  should  be  used  where  ultra-lows  are  not
needed or wanted and the filter kills some of the room noise and air
conditioning rumble. Dynamic mics are more commonly used close
for guitar amps, drums and sometimes horns.  Ribbon mics have
their resonance in the deep lows and typically have a softish top end.
They seem to have a more “ear-like” dynamic range. This makes
them a superb choice for raunchy guitar amps, horns and anything
that may be too edgy. Some are cardioid and some figure 8. Try using
2  figure  8's  as  a  stereo  pair    (rotated  90  degrees  ala  Blumlein).
Officially, miking technique is not EQing but it does some of the
same things and does it in the beginning. This makes EQing easier
and elegant.

When you do have to EQ, the band tracking session is the time to be
careful  and  conservative.  Most  experienced  pro  engineers  don’t
wing  it  here.  Safe,  fast,  ready,  recorded.  It  may  not  sound  as
“slamming” as it could be, but wait, it still gets overdubs and a real
mix. Engineers who don’t play it safe at the right time tend to find
other  occupations  like  accounting.  You  can  fix  the  EQ  and
Compression later particularly if you are working digital. You may
want to save those initial more-or-less flat tracks though, for a few
days or weeks, just in case.

Another little detour. There always seems to be some fascination
with re-capturing some of that 60’s and even early 70’s sound. These
were the days of 4 track and 8 track analog machines and no time-
code  or  sync  systems.  They  didn’t  have  a  lot  of  gear,  so  it  was
important to have the good stuff. Much of it was vacuum tube or
passive. Overdubs were a luxury but they could mix those 4 or 8
tracks to mono or stereo and bounce them over to another machine.
It was analog tape so you couldn’t do it more than a few times. So,
what are the priorities when you record that way?

20

Summary of Contents for Langevin Mini Massive

Page 1: ...SIVE MINI MASSIVE MINI MASSIVE STEREO EQ STEREO EQ STEREO EQ STEREO EQ STEREO EQ MANLEY LABORATORIES INC 13880 MAGNOLIA AVE CHINO CA 91710 TEL 909 627 4256 FAX 909 628 2482 http www manleylabs com ema...

Page 2: ...UPER PULTEC 10 THE PASSIVE PARAMETRIC 11 WHY PASSIVE WHY PARALLEL 12 PHASE SHIFT WHY TUBES 13 CURVES 14 16 TRIMS and The GUTZ 17 MAINS VOLTAGE SETTING 18 EQUALIZING EQUALIZERS GENERAL 19 EQUALIZER TEC...

Page 3: ...vintage EQ a few good digital EQs the Mini Massive holds a place in your arsenal for it s unique flavor and capabilities Some sections of this manual have been directly borrowed from the Massive Pass...

Page 4: ...is hot or and Pin 3 is low or These outputs are not the typical pseudo balanced or cross coupled type which automatically compensate for unbalanced inputs but are often unstable and may significantly...

Page 5: ...B controls which allow you to just boost or cut a little bit if desired filters never have these controls The High band also has a special setting labelled BELL 2 that only operates on the 4 highest f...

Page 6: ...wide bell on conventional EQs with more energy boost or cut and at first impression the Massivo seems to work backward compared with that and narrow bandwidths give more drastic results On the Massiv...

Page 7: ...s where subtlety is required like vocals and mastering 9 Of course the Mini will get compared to the Massive Passive which gets compared to vintage Pultecs and to Manley s Enhanced Pultec EQs so maybe...

Page 8: ...t want a processor or preamplifier that doesn t leave its thumbprint on the sound Typically mastering is one place for a transparent EQ especially when the mix is already pretty damn fine Other situat...

Page 9: ...s and eyes open Of course some of you know that the we have contributed to some non Manley plug ins that are highly regarded Meanwhile progress continues and we are continuing to listen and maybe some...

Page 10: ...with these goals modern parametric like operation passive tone techniques through out and features different from anything currently available and it had to sound spectacular The Super Pultec Manley...

Page 11: ...ith center detented pots Mechanical center and electrical center are rarely the same The Passive Parametric For years we had been getting requests for a Manley parametric equalizer but it looked daunt...

Page 12: ...cing to get some hum bucking action but avoid magnetic coupling with careful positioning Some kinds of interaction suck and some are beneficial Why Passive If you hate tech talk just skip this section...

Page 13: ...Thisisprobablythemostmisunderstoodtermfloating aboutinthemixingcommunity Lotsofpeopleblameornamephase shift for just about any audio problem that doesn t sound like typical distortion We ask that you...

Page 14: ...most EQs a 100Hz low shelf doesn t reach max until about 10 Hz 14 FREQUENCY RESPONSE BANDWIDTHSETTING AT1 1 00 LOWFREQSHEL VES 22 33 47 68arenew 20 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18...

Page 15: ...ELF BOOSTING THE HALF WAY 10 dB POINT HAS SHIFTED TO 50 Hz THESE CURVES SHOW ONE OF THE IDEOSYNCRACIES AND IT IS POSSIBLE FOR A LF BOOST TO SOUND AS IF IT HAS LESS LOWS DEPENDING ON THE FREQUENCY AND...

Page 16: ...andwidth Bandwidth at 12 00 Narrow Bandwidth dB set at max 20 dB and changing the Bandwidth Max Boost Narrow Bandwidth 12 00 Boost Narrow Bandwidth Max Boost Wide Bandwidth 12 00 Boost Wide Bandwidth...

Page 17: ...Manley Langevin dealers are capable of making the change if needed Part of the reason we did this is to discourage some grey market sales However the following page does show this section of the boar...

Page 18: ...8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 FOR 100 VAC CUT THE TRACES BETWEEN 5 7 AND 7 8 A PCB TRACE SHOULD EXIST FROM 1 2 SOLDER JUMPERS FROM PADS 4 6 AND 6 8 FOR 117 VAC PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD TRACES SHOULD EXIST ON THE BOT...

Page 19: ...lug in digital EQ with the same 3 predictable knobs per band as the analog EQs The only significant digital variation on the parametric concept has been the linear phase equalizers These are the first...

Page 20: ...will be to finesse your available EQ Hit Record finesse it in the mix More important to get the vibe than to burn out the band doing sound checks and tweaks If mic choice is a mystery you might want...

Page 21: ...vidual units like mics like rooms consoles engineers The last problem was that they only had a few weeks to shout at each other Avoidthattechnique Yougottabecreative playitbyear use your own variation...

Page 22: ...n Percussion There are two big tricks The first is don t trust VU meters usepeakmetersanddon tgettooclosetofullscale Thekey word is percussion and the peaks or transients are very short and impressive...

Page 23: ...o you understand the difference its not just attitude 3 Therestofthegearinmajormasteringhousesisalsosoimportant that cost is no object The engineers regularly shoot out new gearandwillalwaysbuyifitISb...

Page 24: ...what adventures you are having with the Mini Massive The Circuit The Mini Massive is a not a particularly complicated circuit The audio comes in is converted from balanced to unbalanced and DC servo...

Page 25: ...the most forgiving and automatic method to interface given that the ouput is floating and either leg can be grounded without a loss of headroom and with less groundloop difficulties Technicalities asi...

Page 26: ...a lot of freestyle sports but in audio it often runs the risk of painfully bright or screaming highs Telephone Sound First try deep shelf cuts using the two bands set approximately for 470 and 3900 E...

Page 27: ...amps from left to right a pair at a time and verify whether one is not at all well retired early a little dead and arrange to swap the bad amp with your dealer or Manley Another possibility is a powe...

Page 28: ...that donotagreewithanothercompany sDAT Onecannottrustthemtotrulyindicatepeaksorovers Outboarddigitalpeakmeters with switchable peak hold that indicate overs as 3 or 4 consecutive samples at either Ful...

Page 29: ...ut the conversion should only be done by a qualified technician 29 Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment WEEE Information for customers The European Parliament and the Council of the European Unio...

Page 30: ...ref to 30 dBm Input Impedance 20 K ohms Output Impedance 60 ohms transformer 300 ohms Power Consumption 15 watts 100 mA 115VAC Fuse 1 Amp Slo Blo 120VAC 0 5 Amp Slo Blo 230VAC Size 1U 19 x 1 75 x 10...

Page 31: ...20 P B EQ IN POWER BELL BELL HZ HZ HZ HZ NJOJ BY MANLEY LABS FREQUENCY 22 33 47 68 100 150 220 330 470 680 1K LEVEL 0 8 20 P B NBTTJWF BOOST OUT CUT LOW FREQUENCY EQ BANDWIDTH SHELF BELL 560 820 1K2...

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