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1) The song and the vocals was what producers wanted and perhaps
that hasn’t changed much. Bands were recorded with live vocals
back then. Even overdubs were a band thing. Much of the signature
of both the British or American sound were the vocal harmonies.
Same today.
2) It was only practical to record as a band, as a group. They rarely
used a click, except for TV & film scores. The “groove”, as today,
was  important,  but  it  was  a  little  less  rigid.  It  sometimes  meant
MANY band takes with different tempos and stylings.
3) Arrangements were often written in stone. It was cool to walk in
with  a  working  rehearsed  arrangement.  Sometimes  professional
arrangers were hired. The fewer the instruments, the easier it is to
make each one sound great. They ‘featured’ instruments by writing
musical rests for the other parts rather than moving a fader. Big and
powerful dynamics could mean more players, more chairs.
4) The mixes were critical because the word re-mix wasn’t created
yet.  Remember,  each  “bounce”  had  to  be  a  real  mix  and  these
submixes were the basis of the final mix. This is where they EQed
most. Part of the British sound was dipping a bit between 200 Hz and
1K on some instruments . It was the “proper” way to clear space for
each instrument. Bass was hinted as the secret of rock and roll. Part
of the American sound was both the bored union engineers and the
young rookies. There wasn’t much gear so they stretched it and
pushed it hard. Simple shelf EQs and filters were the norm and “bell
curves” were rare until the mid 70’s. However, they sometimes had
5 to 7 band graphic EQs. They could and did cut tape so they mixed
in sections and spliced - no automation.
5) Not much effects in dem days; tape slap, live chamber reverb and/
or EMT plates. Some were OK and some were plain bad. They did
focus more on creating an acoustic space with the mics. It wasn’t
until 16 track that it became fashionable to focus on separation and
dead rooms. Then we heard a lot of overdubs and double tracking
and we got the 70’s sound.
6)  DI  boxes  and  synths  were  very  rare,  percussion  was  normal,
“unusual”  instruments  were  cool.  Song  “structure”  often  leaned
toward a few standard patterns (ABABCAB). It was a more innocent
era but more likely to be censored. On the other hand, the phrase
“politically correct” would have been viewed as a joke, an oxymoron.

Some of these techniques may be useful to you whether you are
attempting to resurrect the 60s or the get the cool grunge of the 90’s.
Some tricks like the editing of mix sections can be transposed to
workstations with all the advantages of both. It sure can be a better
alternative  to  an  long  automated  homogenized  mix.  Limiting
overdubs may inspire getting that perfect band groove and may spur
creativity. Limiting yourself to shelves and filters or old gear may be
a silly way to get the 60s sound. When you want to lean on shelves,
the Mini Massive EQ shelves are about as good as it gets. In other
words, an old analog engineer will feel right at home - well “hear”
right  at  home”.  Now  if  you  could  just  remove  that  computer
screen.......

Individual Sounds

: There just isn’t a general EQ that works on all

snare drums, or kicks or vocals. Too much depends on the player, the
instrument, the room, the mic, and a hundred other variables. We
heard of one producer that insisted on cloning a guitar sound he once
got by insisting on using this elaborate chain that he had documented
of amps, mics, several vintage compressors and several old EQs.
There were 3 problems. This producer insisted that only the exact
settings he had so carefully noted were used. It was a different studio
with  different  individual  units,  like  mics,  like  rooms,  consoles,
engineers.

The last problem was that they only had a few weeks to shout at each
other. Avoid that technique. You gotta be creative, play it by ear, use
your own variation if it works out that way this time. Only the final
result counts. There are many ways to get a killer sound and too
damn few that work every time. You may know most of this already.

General Suggestions:

 If you are recording acoustic instruments,

the most important first step is going out to the studio and listening,
evaluating and memorizing. Next step, if there is a way you can fix
a sound physically, like changing a drum skin, or tuning a tom, this
is the time and place. If you can, you should attempt to improve the
mic choice and positioning. There’s always room for improvement,
but most often the obstacle is “available time”. EQing is usually
faster  than  experimenting  with  mics  unless  the  producer  wants
“perfection”.  EQ  is  maybe  more  dangerous  though  and  a  poor
substitute for great mic technique.

Vocals

: There is something that makes EQing vocals very difficult.

Human beings have evolved hearing fine tuned to other human’s
voices. Not many people know precisely what a drum sounds like
but almost everybody can recognize when the vocal sounds weird or
natural. Another common factor is the goal of making a mediocre
vocal  sound  awesome  through  the  miracle  of  electronics.  The
toughest one is when the singer deeply desires to sound like their
idol and thinks that the only difference is the gear and settings. With
luck, you may work with a great singer and discover you need no EQ
and it sounds incredible. Same is true with spoken words. Some of
the best paid guys are those professional voices that do narration,
voice-overs and character voices. They don’t do it with EQ, it's in the
voice. If the singer is having headphone adjustment problems, try
flipping the phase of the mic and asking the singer which they prefer.
Some mics are out of phase with some people’s bone conduction or
the headphones are 180 degrees out, but there seems to be 50-50
odds that flipping the phase will sound better to them and about 99%
likely it will sound the same to you (until you put on their phones talk
into the mic and check it out).

We commonly chop off the lows while recording voice to kill room
rumble and “pops”. Some use a HP switch on some mics, some angle
the mic so its not directly facing the mouth, some use the mic pre
filters and some use their console EQ. The Massive Passive HP
filters are as good or better than anything you have been using for
filters. The other most common technique is boosting highs. Part of
this is because somebody used a dull mic because it was advertised
as “warm”. The other reason to boost is a bright, airy voice may be
needed with massively over-dubbed, over-synthed mixes just to get
above the track. Watch out for boosting too much esses as you try
to get it bright. Conventional high shelves (even if set for 16K) will
boost the esses and possibly the mids. The Massive Passive was
designed to not have that very common problem and allow some
unusually gorgeous highs. Some engineers, avoid EQing to tape
while recording, but use it in the monitor or mix channels as needed.
This  way,  they  still  get  a  good  working  mix  and  may  hear  if
headphone leakage will end up being a problem. On the other hand,
as the tracks add up, some engineers find it more practical to EQ
tracks while recording, so that speedy fader mixes are simple for the
months of overdubs. In the mix, if you find yourself wanting to boost
a lot of highs, try dipping the mids and boosting the highs less. If you
still need a de-esser use it as the last processor in the vocal chain in
the mix. Wanna know one of the least expensive and best de-essers?
“A bit of chewing gum or wax filling the gap in the singer’s front
teeth.”

21

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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