MrSmithers
1K Club - QQ Shooting Star
This is great info!
Interesting sidenote- I took a quick look at the four Doobies quads and interestingly a lot of them feature the drums shoved into one of the FRONT speakers only. Maybe that's a new category.
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Interesting sidenote- I took a quick look at the four Doobies quads and interestingly a lot of them feature the drums shoved into one of the FRONT speakers only. Maybe that's a new category.
Maybe their thinking (the quad mixer) was like the listener is on the stage, looking out into the crowd. The drums are generally in the back of the stage.
Who knows?
Actually, I hate any reference to a "stage" when talking quad/surround, mostly because there will always be some stereo-head saying "I can't listen to quad/5.1, because at a concert, all of the music is in front of you like it's supposed to be". UGH. Who made that rule?
Me? I want that French Horn solo in my back seat!
I'm loving this thread. And I hope you won't take offense, @sjcorne, if I say that we need more of the sort of careful, analytical listening that's behind this sort of geekiness. (If I had more time and ambition, I would be one of those geeks!)
In fact, somebody, not necessarily you, should build a searchable, sortable online database that tracks this kind of thing for all of the instruments (and vocals) in a given surround mix. And then some clever programmer could write a bit of software that takes the data from a given album and, at the press of a button, generates a 2-D visual surround map of that album. (Maybe even track by track!) Anybody here have the chops for this?
That Super Sessions album...
It sounds like Al was going for simply every instrument in its own speaker. Which led to the drums getting crammed into a single channel. I think this was a misguided inexperience thing. I've read interviews with him where he says he had almost no idea what he was doing in the studio at that time.
The drums in the rear bit almost has to come from thinking about the drums being in back on stage, right?
For instance, because of the size of BS&T, the engineer [Fred Catero] put the guitar and the bass on the same track. When they did the quad mixes, there was no way around that. Today, you can separate them by subtracting frequencies that are comparatively foreign to each instrument. I’m not saying you just push a button and it’s done, but we separated the two instruments and put each in its own location. So we used technology in a useful way. Matt Boynton went through the mono drum track and extracted the various drums — i.e., kick drum, snare, hi-hat, etc. — to new locations. I still kept the drums in mono, but I had control over the mix of the interior kit as a result. So, again, technology was used in a helpful way.
I remember [quad] very well, because I was there. I was working at Sony when they were doing that, and I stayed away from it. Of course, quad didn’t make it. I have a theory why quad didn’t make it. (chuckles) The audiophiles were definitely very excited about it, but then they hit the wall of having the women say, “You want to put how many speakers in my living room?” I think that’s what killed quad.
I think that blows my theory then.All good points, but I don’t think Al was even involved with the quad mix of Super Session. I think at the time Columbia would just mix everything in quad without the artists’ consent and without the original engineers. For quad they used these lesser known in-house guys (Larry Keyes, Don Young, etc), who were probably working under tight deadlines and likely didn’t even reference the stereo mix.
Jim Reeves did the Super Session quad and some other ones I’ve mentioned on this thread (BS&T, Sly’s hits). He is actually a member on the forum- he commented on the BS&T poll thread.
Though for what it’s worth the original stereo mix of Super Session also has the instruments in mono hard panned into all 3 stereo positions (left-center-right). So the quad is actually sort of true to that feel...
Some more RE: Super Session
I remembered Al Kooper did this interview when the Super Session and Child Is Father To The Man 5.1 SACDs came out and he does actually mention quad:
Seems that the drums were actually all recorded to one mono track, which definitely puts the mixing choice on the quad into context.
There's also this little bit:
All humor aside, this pretty much confirms that he wasn't involved with the making of the Super Session quad mix.
Interesting stuff! I wish Al would do more 5.1 work...
have you ever got to the bottom of what Fred Catero did to the Quads of Herbie Hancock's "Secrets" and Santana's "Amigos" & "Festival"?
love the albums but the mixes are just f-in' weird, man..!!
It's funny actually, I found this big lot of later-era Columbia SQ discs in a record store back in July that included Secrets. Of course I've heard the incredible quad mixes of Head Hunters, Sextant, and Thrust so I had pretty high expectations. I ran the LP through the surround master and while it was sort of atmospheric-sounding, I couldn't detect any real front-to-back separation.
So I came here to read up on it and sure enough people are saying even the Q8 sounds sort of like double stereo! I'd still like to get that tape and judge for myself (it is not an easy one to find), but seems to me it's similar to the Pretzel Logic situation where we have multiple quads by the same engineer, first couple are super active/discrete and the last one is about as conservative as it gets!
...I know for a fact that one of the CBS SQ mixing rules was that reverbs had to emanate from the same place as the thing causing them, ie if your guitar was in front, reverbs also had to be in front. But I also know that SQ encoding/decoding basically 'eats' reverb, even when it's done to spec (I think Adam can also verify this, comparing Surround Master decodes with Q8 equivalents) and those studios had a built-in 'discrete bypass' where they could flip a switch and hear what their mix would sound like SQ encoded and then SQ decoded, and I think they made adjustments to get the most out of SQ.
I thought that Machine Head mix had the drum spot mics and kick in fronts and the overheads in the rears.
I think that blows my theory then.
The drums are probably recorded mixed to a single channel of tape as many albums around the time did. Probably as simple as that right?
I've also got a theory for some of these instances in a Columbia quad where only one or several tracks have the drums in a different place, while the rest of the album doesn't:
Perhaps in the case of say, Labelle's Nightbirds, they originally mixed "Lady Marmalade" with the drums in the front (like the rest of the album), then ran it through this "discrete bypass" switch and found it didn't decode so well. So they moved the drums to a diagonal placement, flipped the switch again, and found it decoded better.
Same with Ten Years After's A Space In Time- maybe the original test mix of "I'd Love to Change The World" had the drums in the front, but it didn't decode well so they moved them to the rear, because the decoder could better reproduce that effect.
I'm imagining a sort of "trial and error" scenario where they would do a mix, then keep adjusting it based on how the SQ decode sounded.
I think Dave is absolutely right that the quality of the SQ decode took precedent over everything, even the overall logic or consistency of the mix itself. Fascinating!
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