Surround
Professional 2003 Workshop:
“Recording solo guitar to big band to orchestra in 5.1” - Mark
Waldrep, AIX Records
Composer,
teacher, recording engineer, and producer Mark Waldrep is the
guiding hand behind AIX Records, one of the few companies actively
concentrating on building up a catalogue of brand new high
resolution digital recordings on DVD-Audio. During his Friday
morning workshop at Surround Pro 2003, he provided some fascinating
glimpses of several current projects, as well as discussing
his overall approach to recording.
Waldrep hit his main point early on, one that he is quick
to emphasize to all who will listen: The success of the high-resolution
formats depends on recording new material. Though he agrees
that high-resolution re-masterings of classic recordings are
wonderful and of great value, AIX deals almost exclusively
in new projects, because it is the most convincing possible
showcase of the technology’s capabilities. As he commented, “Every
time I’ve played a skeptic one of our new recordings,
they’ve been won over. Every single time.” He went
on to talk about some recent recording sessions with legendary
singer-songwriter Paul Williams. After a marathon session,
Waldrep sat Williams down in the center of the playback room
to hear the tracks. Williams, who has heard all sorts of whiz-bang
approaches over the years, was wondering what all the fuss
was about. According to Waldrep, after the first playback,
Williams turned around in amazement and said, “I
get it! I get it!”
While having nothing on principle against DSD, Waldrep pointed
out that he has slowly over the years built up his studio of
equipment in the PCM format, and that he can’t afford
to pitch it all and convert to DSD. “Although,” he
mischievously added, “I’m not saying I wouldn’t
accept it if Sony suddenly dropped by and offered to convert
my studio for free!” Committing to DVD-Audio led him
to decide to make the most of the medium, with one side of
each AIX disc being pure DVD-A in an aggressive 5.1 multi-channel
mix, and the other side having DVD-Video (with multiple camera
angles) in stereo, along with a conservative mix in Dolby surround,
and a DTS 5.1 aggressive mix, with instruments surrounding
the listener. Waldrep does full sound and video takes instead
of editing together snippets, and he uses neither equalization
nor any artificial reverberation. He works in 24-36 tracks,
trying to capture as purely as possible an experience in sound – though
not necessarily as a mere document of a performance. Interestingly,
he also records each discrete area with a pair of microphones
instead of a single one. He feels that this approach gives
him a greater depth of sound, even if the tracks ultimately
come out of only one speaker for that area.
To put the proof behind his words, Waldrep then proceeded
to demo some of his upcoming projects. First was an instrumental
Christmas album rehearsed and recorded in one day. It featured
a handsome clarity of sound and a remarkable warmth, attributable
not only to high-resolution technology and skillful engineering
but also specifically to the hall in California where AIX frequently
records. He also demonstrated the perspective difference between
his conservative Dolby and aggressive DTS mixes on the DVD-Video
side of his disc of the guitarist Laurence Juber.
Waldrep’s real coup, however, was his unveiling of a
track from the Paul Williams project, where Williams was joined
by the great Willie Nelson in a warm yet wistful performance
of the classic song ‘Rainbow Connection’. Waldrep
encouraged workshop participants to move to the center of the
room for full effect of the track, recorded just a few days
earlier. Nelson and Williams played and sang the song tenderly,
and the warmth of AIX’s aggressive 5.1 DVD-Audio mix
was astonishing, capturing the vibrancy and emotion of Nelson’s
craggy voice in the front left channel and the sad velvet of
Williams’ voice in the front right, with accompanying
instruments spread to the center, sides, and rear. The track
brought a smile to everyone’s face, and the album will
be eagerly anticipated.
Waldrep’s approach has already bore impressive fruit,
as his Surround Music Awards attest. It remains to be seen
how many other companies follow his lead in exploiting the
wide range of possibilities in DVD-Audio production.
Mark Jordan 21/12/2003.
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Surround
2003 Report Index
Last update:
27th February 2004
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