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In the Studio

Brian
Hazard of Color Theory gives us some insight into the process of
recording Color Theory presents Depeche Mode
Where
was the album recorded?
The
entire album was recorded, mixed, and mastered in my studio, 11th
Records Studios, located in Huntington Beach, California.
Can you tell us what gear you use? What mixer, microphones, synthesizers,
and so on?
Everything
is recorded to hard disk using Steinberg's Cubase SX2 software.
I built the computer myself, but any desktop computer you can buy
these days is capable of running at least 24 tracks right off the
shelf. The audio comes in through an Aardvark Q10 audio interface,
and out through Mackie HR824 monitors. All effects processing
is done by the computer with the help of two Universal Audio UAD-1
cards, so I don't need an external mixer. Everything stays in the
digital domain throughout the entire recording, mixing, and mastering
process.

Mixing
"But Not Tonight" in Cubase SX2
I
own a few expensive microphones, but I chose the $200 Rode NT-1
for my vocals. It flatters my voice and blends well into an electronic
mix. On my previous album, which I recorded with all acoustic instruments,
I used an AKG 414B-ULS. It just depends on the project.
I
own a grand total of one synthesizer - the Yamaha An1x. It's
a physical modeling synthesizer, which means it creates sound by
mathematically approximating the circuitry of real analog gear.
Specifically, it's modeled after the Prophet 5, but it seems
like it can produce any sound I'm looking for. I don't use any of
the onboard effects, because the software plug-ins are much higher
quality.

The
Yamaha An1x is a big part of the Color Theory sound
Piano
duties on "But Not Tonight" and "World Full of Nothing"
were handled by my Yamaha P80, a digital 88-key stage piano.
The piano on "Sister of Night" was recorded using the
GigaPiano by my good friend Keith Gillard of Fidgital. I
played the part into Cubase and e-mailed the MIDI file to Keith
in Vancouver, Canada. He ran it through his software sampler and
transferred the resulting audio file to the FTP server I host on
my studio computer.
Everything
else you hear on the album is sampled. The samples (short audio
recordings) come from a variety of sources, from commercially available
sample CDs to recordings I made myself.
As
you can see, I'm a minimalist. I work best when I give myself a
limited number of options to choose from. Too much freedom can be
crippling.
What's the story behind "I Am You (GameBoy mix)"?
I
had a bit of a false start in recording "I Am You". I
thought it might be fun to experiment with software synthesis, so
I started building up the mix with the A1, one of the software
synths that comes installed with Cubase. After the music bed was
complete, I decided that it just didn't have the weight and power
that the song demanded. It reminded me of Donkey Kong. So I started
again from scratch to create the mix that you hear on the album.
Aftewards, I stuck the vocals in the old music bed and dubbed it
the GameBoy mix, because it sounds like a video game. Or maybe it's
electroclash.

The
A1 is to blame for "I Am You (GameBoy mix)"
Can
you tell us about some of the special effects you created for the
album?
One
of my favorite parts of the album is the bridge of "World Full
of Nothing". I created a haunting, spinning, echo of the lead
vocal with the Doppler, a neat plug-in by Waves. You may
remember learning about the doppler effect in physics class. Sound
waves expand or contract depending on the motion of the sound source.
That's why the ice cream truck always sounds out-of-tune. The plug-in
simulates the effect on any sound source, giving you full control
over direction and speed.
Click
to listen to short mp3 files of Brian's voice without
effects, and with
the Doppler

The
Waves Doppler plug-in transforms Brian's voice in "World Full
of Nothing"
I
said earlier that "I Am You" demanded a powerful mix.
The chorus explodes in a wash of what sounds like electric guitars.
The effect was created by running the An1x through an amp simulator
- the Universal Audio Preflex. The Preflex has all sorts
of controls that only a guitarist would understand, so I just fiddled
with the knobs until I found what I was looking for. Recording engineers
often mic amps and record synthesizers through them. This plug-in
provides a handy shortcut.
Click
to listen to the An1x without
effects, and with
the Preflex

The
UAD-1 Preflex makes synthesizers sound like guitars
My
wife and I are blessed with a beautiful 6-month old boy. I'm often
asked if fatherhood has affected my music. Of course it has, in
many ways, but now I can point to something concrete - the breast
pump. The breast pump holds down the groove in the bridge of "Sweetest
Perfection". It stuck out too much without effects, so I ran
it through the Preflex and added a long reverb to blend it in.
Click
to listen to the breast pump alone,
and in
the mix

The
infamous breast pump

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