Showing posts with label metal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label metal. Show all posts

22 March 2020

[audio and video] Wolves in the Throne Room live in San Diego, 19 July 2014

Wolves in the Throne Room live at Ché Café at UCSD, San Diego, California, 19 July 2014.

Mirrored here-


I don't think this is the complete show. Their songs tend to be very long, and I think they only played three this night, and I think I missed the first one. Still, the second and third songs go for more than 30 minutes, so I thought it was worth posting.

I think what happened was this-

Ché Café is just a small room on the campus of UC San Diego, and is student-run. At the time of this recording (I think they've since closed down), they had some very old equipment, and the main mixing board didn't have any way for me to record except to use the headphone jack. It had no RCA outs, no 1/8" group outs, no XLR outs, no nothing except some outputs to get the signal to the main PA speakers. That's not ideal, but I've used the headphone jack plenty of times before and I can get perfectly useable audio that way, but I would never do that without asking the person mixing the show if it was OK if I took that output, meaning that the mix engineer wouldn't be able to listen on headphones.

So, that's what I did, and no doubt the mixer guy said 'ya, no problem, I won't need headphones, I'll just listen to the PA.'

And of course, once the show starts, he realizes that he, in fact, does need them, so he doesn't even hesitate to unplug my cable so he can listen and mix the show on headphones. It's little consolation, but at least he set the mix during the first song and then plugged my cable back in for the second and third songs.

I video’d both songs. View them here-



11 March 2020

[audio] Corrections House live in San Diego, 6 January 2014

Corrections House live at Soda Bar, San Diego, 6 January 2014.

Supergroup of underground music nobility-

Mike Ix Williams of EyeHateGod on vocals
Bruce Lamont of Yakuza on saxophone
Sanford Parker of Nachtmystium on drums and electronics
Scott Kelly of Neurosis on guitar

Mirrored here-



Couple videos I shot this night-

Hoax the System


Drapes Hung by Jesus

25 March 2015

The Humorless Productions restorations of a few tracks from Metallica's …And Justice for All

(edit March 2015)

With the recent headlines concerning Metallica's 1988 masterpiece …And Justice for All and the assertion by mix engineer Steve Thompson that it was Lars who ordered him to 'bring down the bass so you can barely hear it in the mix', I thought it a good opportunity to share with you these reconstructions I did of a few tracks from that album.

I could have sworn that I posted these tracks to my blog when I did the reconstructions two years ago, but apparently I was mistaken about that. Better late than never I guess.

TL:DR version- some video game has Jason's parts isolated for five Justice songs: the title track, Blackened, The Shortest Straw, One, and Dyer's Eve. I re-inserted the bass tracks into those songs and mixed/mastered it properly. Other people had attempted to do the same thing, but invariably went totally overboard with the bass parts, pushing them way too loud in the mix. My mixes sound exactly how the album should have sounded, before Lars' interference.

Two of the five songs were rejected by Soundcloud immediately over copyright concerns, but for some reason three of them didn't trigger any flags, so those three are below.

Full technical details and exhaustive wordage follows the tracks.
 

(original text from Spring 2013)

Proper progressive thrash, mixed properly. I'll tell you the story-

As we all know, …And Justice for All has no bass guitar in the mix. There's no disputing it. Of course, rumors have swirled over the years as to why this is, the most prominent theory having something to do with the rift between Jason and the rest of the band at the time when they were recording the album, and that the other guys in the band dropped Jason's part out of the mix and as big FU to him.

Now, I don't know any better or worse than anybody else, but I don't buy this at all. I think it was a purely technical decision.

The problem originates in the kick drum, which in the album version, sits way down at 60 to 100 hertz. I don't know if that's intentional, but every music producer, every mixing engineer and every mastering and remastering engineer should know that that's gonna spell trouble, because that's the range normally reserved for bass. You can sometimes get away with it in electronic music, but for rock music, the kick drum should be centered a little higher, say at 150 hz, which will give the bass guitar a little bit more breathing room down at the bottom end.

I think what happened, was that when they mixed the album, the drum faders go up first (as is standard procedure for just about any audio engineer on the planet), and everything else fills in their own spot in the mix. When it was time for Jason's faders to go up, all that low end accumulated right at 60-80 Hz, and no doubt it sounded like crap. The only way around it was to drop one of the faders, and we all know who hit the chopping block.

The thing is, there's not only one way around it. Because it's really the simplest of procedures to throw an eq on the kick drum and drop the 60-80 Hz and (if needed) boost the upper low end which gives plenty of room for the bass to live beneath it. Why they didn't just do this I have no idea. The fact that they didn't sorta gives credence to the whole 'FU Jason' theory. But at the same time, bands know that their names will forever be stamped on their releases, and because of that, won't want to release anything with such monumental imperfections. But perhaps I'm being naive.

But whatever the reason(s), I've made an attempt to fix it. I started with Shortest Straw. And it's funny, because I started working on it on a whim by applying my own synth bass part, which sounds like a weird idea, but actually it sounded pretty damn good. But then (for one reason or another, I really don't remember) I came across a YouTube of Jason's isolated bass part for the song, as uploaded by user metfan4l here. I thought 'how does this person have access to this?' In doing some research I discovered that some songs from the Justice album were included in some music video game where the individual parts could be isolated and exported, is this correct? Well, I'm not a gamer at all, so this was news to me. I don't know if that's where these bass parts originated, but it's what I ended up using. We all know that YouTube's sound quality ranges from questionable (even on the high definition uploads) to utter garbage (on just about everything else), but this sounded good enough that, with a little processing, it would sound good enough for my purposes.

So here it is, the fully restored remix/remaster with Jason's bass part slotted back in place. The result? Instant awesome! Seriously, once you get accustomed to these versions, you'll never go back to the originals ever again. Coincidentally, the album came out 25 years ago, so I guess you could call this my attempt to commemorate the original's 25th anniversary, and hopefully to improve upon it.

And now I'm thinking, how have I not run across other people's attempt to restore these songs? Quite frankly, I've not really been interested in Metallica since this album came out 25 years ago, so it's not like I'm just gonna hear any remixes unless I go looking for them. But when searched around the internet, I only found a couple, and it seems like those who attempted to do it got all hyped up on finally hearing Jason's part and got all carried away and ended up totally overloading the mix with low end. Am I the first one to make an actual proper mix of these songs? The mix that should have ended up on the album itself? How is it possible that the internet isn't flooded with And Justice for All remixes? I dunno, but I couldn't find any.

Couple notes-

1. The way I did it is I had the cd mix on one stereo track and Jason's part on another. When mixing, I was really tempted to try and warm up the cd mix even a little bit, to try and move away from its very clinical, sterile sound. I tried a couple things, but nothing worked to my satisfaction, so in the end I left the cd mix untouched, outside of dropping some of the low end to make room for Jason's bass as I described above.

2. I'm well aware of all the 'loudness wars' controversy that exploded all over the internet surrounding Metallica's later releases. Even though this version that I've uploaded looks totally brick walled, it's just Soundcloud's visual representation that makes it look like this. Everything I've ever put on Soundcloud ends up looking a lot more blocky than it actually is, and this one is no different. For the band part of my mix, I used an aiff that I pulled straight off my original release cd. I did all he arranging/mixing in Presonus Studio One 2, and the final master in Soundtrack Pro, all on a MacBook Pro.

Comments, critiques, suggestions? Throw 'em at me.

29 September 2014

[audio] Tool live in Kalamazoo, 15 July 1998


OK, so this one is a bit of a departure for me stylistically, but it's another board tape I felt like fixing up. Post-metal alt-metal prog-metal style with a Tool performance from Kalamazoo, Michigan in 1998. Not my original recording, but I did all the post-production.

Am I the only one doing this? Fixing up board tapes, I mean? Does nobody else hear the potential in them? Does nobody else have the know-how or the tools? I guess nobody cares as much about them as I do.

The original recording sounds better than decent, but with a couple obvious areas which required my attention. The best news is that it's in stereo, and that it's not distorted. The bad news is that the kick drum is way too loud and has way too much low end in it, way down in the 10-60Hz subwoofer range. Beyond that, the vocals and drums can be heard clearly, but the bass and guitar aren't nearly loud enough in the mix. I'm sure it sounded fine in the arena, but the board tape needed some help.

I threw on some plug-ins- eq (the new Fab Filter Pro-EQ 2 is hardcore), multiband compressor and maybe some other stuff, I forget. Killing all that massive low end in the kick drum rectified many of the problems, and from that point on, it was just a matter of fine-tuning.

Then there was the issue of the crowd sounds. I've been recording shows for so long that I have quite a library of my own crowd/audience cheering sounds. But most or all of those sounds I recorded are from smaller clubs or theatres or warehouses; not anything as big as anywhere Tool would play. So what did I do? I downloaded a pretty good sounding bootleg of Tool from San Francisco in 2007, then isolated those crowd sounds and used them for this show. Turned out nicely.

It's a real shame about the intro, with the first half of Flood being cut off. Oh well. I also rearranged the last couple songs. They played Ænema second to last, and then the final song, Jerk-off, as the encore. But in the intro to Ænema, Maynard delivers the good ol' 'OK, this will be the last song for tonight' spiel. But then they go on to play two songs. It would have been obvious that Jerk-off is an encore song if all the dead space between the ending of Ænema and the beginning of the encore had been left intact. But with an audio recording, that's totally unnecessary to leave in, so whomever edited the board tape wisely cut that part out. So I switched it around so that the song he said would be the final song actually is the final song. Actually, Jerk-off is a much better choice for a set closer with that ferocious, frenzied ending, but I prefer the continuity of my order.

06 May 2014

compilation of punk/goth/new wave/metal bands in 70s/80s horror movies

OK, so here's that video compilation of bands in horror flicks that I put together. Turned out rather well. I love the wipe style. I remastered every bit of audio, so it sounds extra sharp. The Siouxsie song is from a movie called Out of Control which isn't a horror flick, but I included it anyway.

You may be asking yourself why I did this. It's a good question, and I don't have a reasonable answer. It's just that I watch so many of these types of movies, and it always strikes me as so funny when a band gets some screen time to play one of their songs with the idea that the music is supposed to be in some way threatening or scary or underground-y or ominous or dangerous or something like that. Obviously, as we're now 30-40 years later, none of this music comes anywhere even remotely close to being scary, so I guess it's just the silly campiness of it that I find funny.

Anyways, enjoy it or not. Here's the tracklist-

(0:00) intro
(2:08) unknown artist 'Revenge' from Deadline (1984)
(5:16) Shadow 'New Years Evil' from New Years Evil (1980)
(7:00) Siouxsie & the Banshees 'Cities in Dust' from Out of Control (1986)
(8:21) Shadow 'untitled blues jam' from New Years Evil (1980)
(8:45) 4 Out of 5 Doctors 'Waiting for Roxanne' from The House on Sorority Row (1983)
(9:33) Tony Coca-Cola and The Roosters 'untitled song' from The Driller Killer (1979)
(13:55) Samson 'Vice Versa' from The Incubus (1982)
(16:14) Made in Japan 'The Cooler' from New Years Evil (1980)
(17:05) Paula Sheppard 'Me and My Rhythm Box' from Liquid Sky (1983)
(20:10) Shadow 'Temper Tantrum' from New Years Evil (1980)
(21:56) Felony 'Gangster Rock' from Graduation Day (1981)
(29:30) Made in Japan 'Dumb Blondes' from New Years Evil (1980)
(30:25) unknown artist 'unknown song' from Horror Hospital (1973)
(32:20) unknown artist 'unknown song' from Savage Streets (1984)
(32:56) Made in Japan 'Bonsai' from New Years Evil (1980)

(33:27) unknown artist 'unknown song' from The Driller Killer (1979)

03 August 2013

BAAL, UteroZZZAAA and djoto videos from cEvin Key's Japanese Cyberpunk Invasion Tour in Los Angeles, 21 July 2013

cEvin Key presents BAAL, UteroZZZAAA and djoto live at Complex, Los Angeles, 21 July 2013.

Audio recorded, mixed and mastered by Brian Albers at Humorless Productions, as well as all video capture and post-production.


Stereo board mix 
Nady stereo condenser mic for room/audience 
Focusrite Saffire Pro24 preamp/interface 
Presonus Studio One 2 for recording 
Logic 8 for editing and mixing 
Soundtrack Pro for mastering 
Macbook Pro 

Canon Vixia HF G10 (tripod)
Canon S100 (handheld)
Final Cut Pro X

Visuals by Tim Abad.