6/4/2021 1 on 1 with King Buffalo's, Sean McVay on recording their new album with a pair of LBA Trinity channel strips.Read Now
Mike: Fire those girls up yet? (Trinity's)
Sean: Sure did! I did end up using em on kick and snare to much success (new version on kick and old on snare). I ended up going super clean with the kick with no EQ or anything. And a touch of EQ on the snare with a little bit more input gain. Sounding killer so far. Mike: That EQ should come in super handy for dialing in the guitar. Sean: Yeah, I'm stoked to try it on other things. I've been extremely conservative with the EQ simply because I'm monitoring in the same room as tracking. So it's a little tough to know exactly what's going on. But, I think I really want to run stuff back through it after tracking to really juice stuff and experiment with the EQ more. Sean: Drums are sounding sweet. Tomorrow we finish drums. In all my editing work though I've been very stoked on the kick and snare sounds from the strips. Mike: Well, you are one of a few people giving me feedback, so bring it on. Sean: Best descriptions so far would be. Thick. "Vibe". Didn't use much EQ on kick (just a little lo boost and mid cut). Little treble and brilliance on snare. Really nice. Sean: Dude, so the Trinity strip has really been kicking ass on bass. I haven't A/B'd the 2 units on it yet cuz I've just really been digging the mid control on the newer one. I've found for my purposes, a small/medium boost of all 3 bands is really sweetening it up. I experimented with the Thunder control and it sounded super bad ass, but I found with Dan's bass it was a little too much (he plays a Music Man with active pickups, so it's coming in pretty hot). I actually found there was PLENTY of "vibe and dirt" without needing the Thunder or Ribbon settings. We ran one song super clean (input around 2.5-3) and it had plenty of spank with a smooth upper mid/highs. We ran another song on the more dirtier side (input only around 12:00). It sounded nice with a mild bit of rasp/throatiness when he was in the middle registers of the bass, but really brought out a nice growl when he moved down low and laid into his low D (we tune down to D standard). It's all been sounding super silky and smooth (even when slightly dirty). But the way it butters up the low end is suuuuper sweet. Mike: What were your favorite frequency selections for Bass EQ? Still not tasting the brilliance? Sean: I know I have a touch of brilliance going (maybe like 2:00). I think 200Hz for the low boost and boosting the mids at 2kHz. Again prolly around 2:00. Just giving it a little bit of clarity and attack. But nothin crazy. Mike: Have you tracked guitar? Sean: Haven't done guitars yet, but should be sometime next week. I have gone pretty conservative with EQ so far cuz some of the songs are gonna have real thick walls of guitar and I don't wanna get myself in trouble. I plan on running stuff back through the unit once I have more of the layers in. Then I'll get more aggressive once I have a better idea of how much room I'll have. Mike: Understood. Depends on the mics too. Sean: I went fully DI so far with bass. I reamped live and recorded an amp track with a 421 mostly just for reference. Mike: Was the bass through the TI Box? Sean: Nope. Straight into Trinity. Split back out via the interface control with virtually no latency into a reamp box, then pedalboard and amp. Mike: I love the bass sound direct into a Trinity. Sean: I honestly don't think anyone would need anything more from a channel strip for bass. It just nails it. I mean of course there isn't one solution for every audio need in existence. But it's certainly kickin ass. It definitely has a vibe and signature which is super cool and extremely useful. There's a very real possibility that almost every single instrument will go through the Trinity at some point on this record haha. Sean: They sounded great on guitar. I ended up pushin gain pretty hard to give a little extra dirt. Ended up tweaking the EQ depending on the sound of that particular section. Mike: Nice. Sean: For heavy fuzz and distortion I cut the brilliance all the way down and tamed the highs. That combined with the extra dirt was awesome. Mike: Did you use the Thunder feature for that application? Sean: No I didn't. I just needed a little extra push. The Thunder was a bit too much. Mike: How's the record coming? Sean: Good! I think I finally have all the ridiculous layers of guitars done. I reamped bass yesterday and it's sounding awesome. Reamped Trinity strip bass DI into an old Ampeg V4. Miced with a Warm Audio 87 clone into the Trinity strip with the Thunder function. Beef city! Mike: Excellent. Sean: So Trinity squared for bass haha. Mike: I'm eagerly awaiting this new record. Have a date yet? Sean: Hopefully wrapping up everything within the next 10 days. Finally started vocals yesterday. Did the Thunder function trick... sounded so sick... worked perfectly for what I was looking for. Super present and dry, but full of "vibe". Comments are closed.
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About the AuthorMike Congilosi II, Owner/Designer/Electronics Engineer at Lightning Boy Audio and Owner/Audio Engineer/Music Producer at LBA Studios. Archives
November 2024
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