SOMBER FRENCH POETS AND FRIENDLY PROSTITUTES SOUND LIKE FITTING INSPIRATIONS for a raucous, balls-out rock
album. While these characters were
part of the neighborhood color near the
studio where chic French foursome
Phoenix—comprised of Thomas Mars,
Laurent “Branco” Brancowitz, Christian
Mazzalai, and Deck D’Arcy—recorded
the bulk of Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
[Loyaute/Glassnote], their album wasn’t
the by-product of wicked indulgence,
especially on the inflated rock-and-roll
scale of indecent behavior.
A glittering slab of well-crafted
electronic pop, the band’s follow-up
to 2006’s It’s Never Been Like That is
a result of the group’s perfectionist
tendencies (they recorded over 14
hours of music in total), a long recording
process, and an attempt to be
more abstract. According to guitarist
Brancowitz, the group even listened to
a soundtrack of modern classical and
ambient music to cleanse their auditory
palette, and they used Eno’s
famous Oblique Strategies cards to
get through creative roadblocks.
“As a creator, you’re always frustrated
by your limits,” he says. “You
want to find strategies to go further. I
actually learned Morse code at one
point, and I tried to type words rhythmically
to see what kind of patterns
they would create.”
After a search for inspiration that
took them to New York and back, the
group asked friend Philippe Zdar to
co-produce Wolfgang Amadeus
Phoenix, camping out in his studio in
Paris’ Montmartre district for nearly a
year and a half. Designed in the early
’80s by audio guru Tom Hidley—a
famed engineer and studio designer—
Zdar’s studio was an ideal place for
the band to challenge its creative
process. Half of French house duo
Cassius, the producer owns a cache of
vintage gear, giving the group plenty
of equipment to work with, and his
helpful approach kept them focused.
“I think Phoenix has very good taste,”
Zdar says. “The band members are great
producers, and they just needed someone
to guide them and keep them on
track. It’s like directing Marlon Brando. I
don’t think Brando needed help—he just
needed a little guidance.”
Zdar felt strongly that the album
should sound modern, diverse, and
informed by contemporary music and
production. His whole approach was to
respect the group, give them the time
and space to compose and record, and
occasionally “make a tackle” in the
studio, providing momentary distractions
to keep them from getting too
caught up in their work.
“He would sometimes come for five
minutes a day, and arrive six hours
late with a bottle of champagne,”
Brancowitz says. “He’d say, ‘This is
great’ or ‘boring.’ He brought the
energy. We knew if a song pleased us
and pleased him, it was a solid song.”
PLASTIC GUITARS
During sessions, the band normally
recorded straight to Pro Tools|HD, preferring
minimal equipment and a very
dry sound. Many songs went through
multiple versions, so they often needed
to add and subtract layers. Plus, Zdar
wanted guitars recorded as straight as
possible so he wouldn’t be hamstrung
during the mixing process.
“We wanted to record fast and
capture the performance, instead of
obsessing about the sound,” Zdar says.
Much of the charm of Phoenix’s
tightly constructed songs comes from
the clipped, artificial guitar lines. Guitarists
Brancowitz and Mazzalai both
used Fender Bullet Stratocasters—
cheaper and less-popular models of a
guitar chosen for its unique sound.
“It’s very dry and really plays only
one specific style,” Mazzalai says. “But
they fit perfectly with our style of playing.
The sound that comes out is
almost plastic.”
For “Rome,” which opens with a
part that Brancowitz compares to the
sound of a kid playing alone in his bedroom,
the guys recorded their guitar
lines through a Telefunken V76
preamp, a Telefunken U73 compressor,
and a direct box—standard practice for
most of the album. Later, when the
tracks were mixed, they were sent
through a Helios preamp to add more
character, a UREI 1176 compressor, and
an AKG BX20 spring reverb.
SYNTHS & TOYS
As befitting a band that has backed up
Air, Phoenix deployed an army of analog
synthesizers during the recording
process, including a Roland JX-3P, a
Korg Trident, a Yamaha CS-80, and a
Jen Carousel organ. On “1901,” weird,
wispy notes from a Yamaha Tenori-
On—a step-sequencing synth that was
fed through an AMS S-DMX delay—
float in the background as big, fuzzy
chords from the Korg Trident streak
across the song. The group also used a
few toy synthesizers, often cranking up
the preamp in the recording chain to
capture the buzz and hum. It fit the
band’s philosophy of combining very
cheap and very expensive instruments.
“What’s good about these instruments
is that their beauty lies in their
limits,” Brancowitz says. “Their utility
comes from the mistakes their engineers
made.”
Zdar normally utilizes a Neve 1073
EQ and a Telefunken V76 preamp to
record synths. When mixing, he often
sends tracks through a UREI LA-4
compressor—which he feels is especially
good for making synths sound
tight—and a Massenburg GML 8200
EQ, which helps emphasize bass.
HYBRID GROOVES
To achieve the modern feel of R&B or
techno-style beats, the percussion on
Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix required the
hybrid approach of blending live and
electronic drums. Mars used an Akai
MPC sampler to trigger his favorite
percussion samples, which were often
mixed with live percussion, as well as
software samplers such as Native
Instruments Battery 3. Signal-chain
strategies included feeding the toms,
hi-hats, and crash cymbals through an
SSL compressor; running sidechains
for the snare (a Neve EQ, UREI 1176
compressor, and an AMS reverb) and
kick drums (Neve 1073 preamp,
Massenburg EQ, and Neve 33609 compressor);
and dumping toms into an
SPL Transient Designer.
Meanwhile, in the realm of bass,
Zdar sometimes aimed for a blend of
organic and electronic sounds, as on
“Fences.” For that song, a Fender Mustang
Bass part played through an
Ampeg SVT Amp was fused with the
synth bass of a Yamaha DX100 synth,
and then heavily compressed.
“I wanted to blur the real and the synthetic,
and make a big, bubbling thing—a
real magma of sound,” Zdar says.
DRY VOCALS
One of the few sounds on the album
that remained relatively straightforward
were the vocals, which were recorded
with Neumann U 67 and AKG C 12
microphones, and sent through a UREI
1176 compressor, and an EMT 252 for
slight reverb. During mixing, Zdar also
applied a Lexicon PCM42 Digital Delay
and an EAR 660 compressor.
“We love dry sounds,” says Mazzalai.
Consequently, Zdar used vocal effects
sparingly to heighten their impact. On
“Rome,” he placed reverb on the verse
and first chorus, and then cut it out after
the break. He believes this approach
made the music more poetic, evoking the
feel of walking out of a dark restaurant
into the bright sun of the Italian capital.
FINAL MIX
Ultimately, Zdar took the Pro Tools
tracks and mixed them on one of his
two SSL 4000 E mixing consoles (he
has a spare in case he needs to get one
repaired), because he favors the unit’s
analog sound. He also zeros in on the
highs and lows when doing EQ adjustments
in order to craft crystal clear,
deep bass, and a very tight sound.
“I’ll boost highs on a Helios EQ, and,
at the same time, I use the filters on
the console to take out highs,” says
Zdar. “This gives you the feeling that
you have lots of treble, while simultaneously
giving you high frequencies
that are more rounded and less tiring
to listen to. After all, if you want girls to
love an album all their life, it’s important
to mix it well.”