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EqMag.com >> This Month >> Doing Drums
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Doing Drums| September, 2006From fusion-heads to the metal maniacs; prog rockers to pop stars, EQ catches up with some of the most exciting drummers of the past 30 years — and the people who help shape their sound — to delve into the underlying philosophies behind why, and how, they record drums the way they do. KEEPING IT REALDonning dark shades and flashing a million-dollar smile, Taylor Hawkins struts into the New York offices of Red Distribution like a star. The drummer for the multi-platinum band Foo Fighters is rock-star royalty but his recent solo debut, recorded with his band the Coattail Riders, is a garage band tour de force. “When you are making a Foo Fighters record you know it’s going to be on the radio,” Hawkins tells EQ. “Everything is ‘bigger.’” From classic Genesis/Latin-influenced ride cymbal patterns, layered percussion, to cowpunk country backbeats and bubbling, close-miked toms, Hawkins’ performance might shock Foo fans. “You can hear everything,” says Drew Hester, co-producer and engineer. “It is a very organic, warts-and-all record.” The lo-fi recording allows us to hear Hawkins’ raw ability. “The drums were literally set up in my garage,” Hester says, who explains that most of the songs were completed in a day (with eight drum inputs via Digi 002). “We didn’t do this record in a big studio with a lot of gear,” adds Hawkins. “It didn’t even feel as though we were even making a record. It was just [like] demoing.” Hawkins tackled one song at a time — which is not the way he is used to recording with the Foo Fighters, but he didn’t care. “Otherwise you lose perspective,” says Hawkins. “You go in the studio for two weeks to work on getting the perfect drum tracks, then we’re on to the guitars. The process gets too long.” “If you get one of the top mixers to do your record, they’ll get it done, but the drums will be completely artificial,” says Taylor Hawkins. “It’s like, ‘Why do you actually spend time getting drum sounds the way you want them if they are just going to get sampled and compressed?’” PERSONALITIES SHININGMessage to engineers: Don’t bury a drummer’s identity. Drummer Mike Wengren, of the band Disturbed, wanted to retain the primal, dry, thunderous tone of the band’s debut for the band’s latest record Ten Thousand Fists. “We experimented with the birch shells in the beginning, but we just kind of gravitated back to my 6-ply maple Pearl Master Custom drums,” Wengren says. “I hit hard and that thickness has become part of my sound.” John Novello, keyboardist and B3 organ player for instrumental fusionoid band Niacin, captured drummer Dennis Chambers in Novello’s converted triple-car garage studio (2B3). “Dennis wanted the drums to sound the way he hears them when he plays,” says Novello. “We retained the ‘crashy, bangy’ natural sound of his drums through close miking.” “People always say to me, ‘I love your snare sound. How did you get it?’” says Bill Bruford (Yes, King Crimson, Genesis). “What is heard on a record, especially a live one, has almost everything to do with what the musicians actually played, and almost nothing to do with pushing faders up and down and altering balances artificially.” Robert Frazza recorded Bruford’s “mini” big band — the Earthworks Underground Orchestra live in New York. “I did not close mic any of the drums,” says Frazza. “I put a little air in between the drums and mic, which retained the ‘woodiness’ of the kit.” “My general feeling about drum kits, particularly when you are recording a drummer who does not have a ‘production’ drum sound, is to simply capture what they are doing,” says Paul Northfield, who engineered and mixed Neil Peart’s instructional DVD: Anatomy of a Drum Solo. “The starting point is always how Neil sounds when he plays,” says tech Lorne Wheaton. “That tonal ring is part of Neil’s character on the drums.” OPEN MIND, OPEN SOUNDCarl Palmer, former Emerson, Lake, and Palmer drummer and now with the Carl Palmer Band, comments on his two new live records, Working Live — Volume 1 & 2, produced in collaboration with engineer Paul Kennedy. “By using Paiste metal alloy drums, because of the ‘liveness’ of the metal shell, the drums had extra zing” (Palmer was using 57s on the toms, an AKG D12 in the kick.) “I have some of my drums flat so I can hit rimshots,” Palmer says. “I am a kind of balls-to-the-wall prog drummer. I am very un-English when it comes to that. So, we kept the tuning as I liked it, and where the drum would ring we would just gate it.”
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