kap'n krunch
2K Club - QQ Super Nova
so, what is the hidden track after the last one(Brand New Day)????
I just voted 10 as I own the DVD-A, love it. A Brand New Day, the song is fantastic, rest of disc is quite good and surround is great throughout.
It's discrete, the fidelity is fantastic. It's everything that you expect from an Elliot Scheiner mix. The man is the king. (Come out of retirement Mr. Scheiner, we miss you!) It just sounds glorious. There's lots of layers to this music and Elliot takes full advantage. It's very full and dynamic.
ES: On the Sting project, you were starting from Simon Osborne’s stereo mixes. He came to Connecticut. I like using this room because it’s perfectly aligned for 5.1 for me. I do all my 5.1 there if I can. I have a Panasonic DA7, and I use that in conjunction with the VR. They had done an 80-channel mix. There was a lot of programming on it. There’s a lot of orchestra. A lot of effects. A lot of vocals. And it’s absolutely astounding in 5.1.
Q: What sort of decisions did you have to make particular to this record?
ES: It was a perfect record to do in 5.1 because it had so much to draw from. I had the option to do pretty much whatever I wanted. I called [Sting’s manager] Miles Copeland before I started and said, “Look, I really like to experiment. I put a lot of music in the surrounds,” and he was fine with that. He said, “Go for it. Sting is very experimental himself.”
Q: When you sit down in a 5.1 room, you’re right in the middle of this whole band. What did you do with the orchestra?
ES: Eighty percent of the time I put it in the rear.
Q: When you’re sitting there in the midst of this, are you trying to establish a visual picture of where the instruments are sitting, so you might have the band in front of the orchestra, literally?
ES: Not really. It’s more like the band is in front of me and the orchestra is behind me, like I’m sitting in between them. On another track you might want it to feel as though everyone is in a circle around you and you’re facing the main band. With all the previous live projects I’ve done with Fogerty and The Eagles and Fleetwood, I wanted to just put the listener onstage. I always made the focus point the band. But anyone who wasn’t one of the five or six guys in the band I’d put in the surround-maybe the extra keyboard player or the extra guitar players or the orchestra or any soloists. When you’re sitting there and you hear the audience behind you and to the side of you, you expect everything to come from the front, and then all of a sudden you realize you’re onstage. It really doesn’t matter what sort of visual picture anyone gets from it; I just want them to be engrossed by the entire experience.
Q: What did you tend to do with Sting’s vocal?
ES: It’s always up front, left-right with just a touch of it in the center. Primarily what I use the center for now is I put a little bit of lead vocal in there, a little bit of the bass, a little bit of the snare, a little bit of bass drum and that’s pretty much it.
Q: So did you essentially have to mix from scratch using the 80 tracks?
ES: Close to it. Basically what would happen is Simon would come in, we’d pull up the multitrack, and he would pretty much get the EQ that existed on the stereo [mix]. You know, if someone went out and bought the stereo and then bought the 5.1, I wouldn’t want it to be jarring for them by emphasizing a lot of different things. So I try and maintain the sound that Simon had, though I punched up a few things differently, like the kick and the snare; those are a little different than the original stereo mix, but having the subwoofer [in a 5.1 mix] it’s never going to sound exactly the same as the stereo.