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The Hit Factory Recording Studio Reborn! — Part 3

A close-up view of a typical drum setup in Studio 1. PHOTO: Troy Germano
A detailed-up view of a typical drum setup in Studio 1. PHOTO: Troy Germano

Continuing our protection of The Hit Factory‘s monumental return, we choose up from Parts 1 and 2, and conclude immediately with how proprietor Troy Germano constructed his personal legendary studio—after which seized the chance to deliver the Hit Factory legacy again residence.

GERMANO STUDIOS

On the Cover: In January 2023, after 20 years, Troy Germano reacquired rights to The Hit Factory name, bringing back one of the world’s iconic studio brands and renaming his worldclass Germano Studios in NoHo, New York City. Pictured in Studio 2, from left: Slick Rick, engineer Kenta Yonesaka, Troy Germano, Mark Ronson and Steve Jordan. Photo: Bob Gruen.
On the Cover: In January 2023, after 20 years, Troy Germano reacquired rights to The Hit Factory identify, bringing again one of many world’s iconic studio manufacturers and renaming his world-class Germano Studios in NoHo, New York City. Pictured in Studio 2, from left: Slick Rick, engineer Kenta Yonesaka, Troy Germano, Mark Ronson and Steve Jordan. Photo: Bob Gruen.

“There was a variety of press that was not correct when the studio on 54th Street closed down,” Germano says, with emphasis. “It had nothing to do with the state of the music business or folks working at residence or folks having manufacturing rooms, or with the studios not being busy. It was merely a real-estate concern between my mom and myself. After my father handed away, she wished to promote the studio and promote the actual property, and I used to be adamantly towards that.

“The studio was an energetic studio, the busiest studio in New York for a 20-year time period,” he continues. “It had nothing to do with the use or the change in know-how. Absolutely zero. It was strictly a dispute over an actual piece of actual property that I didn’t suppose must be offered. It’s actually a couple of household factor that simply type of went haywire—however it was at all times a aim at the back of my thoughts to get the identify again.”

Germano makes no bones about his anger and disappointment on the time, however after settling into his new actuality, he channeled that power into creating Germano Studios at a time when most individuals would have suggested towards it. He wasn’t going into it blindly, and he was assured in his method to working a hybrid analog-digital studio facility in a much-changed studio market. He had discovered from his father that it was vital to embrace change, whereas retaining the basics like vibe, service and relationships.

“I nonetheless suppose the analog console that may interface to Pro Tools in a digital area is the best way to go,” he says, “however to achieve success within the studio enterprise, it’s concerning the alternative of displays, the arsenal of analog and digital outboard gear, the microphone assortment, the sound of the reside room, the devices. It’s not only one or two or three issues; it’s seven, eight, 9, ten issues that really make folks need to be within the studio. And it’s not at all times simple. It’s an enormous funding, with fixed capital enhancements.” Recent updates embrace the addition of Dolby ATMOS and Sony 360 Reality Audio immersive mixing, and Germano at all times has his eye on the horizon for the subsequent change that can preserve the ability’s aggressive edge.

“I wasn’t strolling in right here with the clout of getting the Hit Factory model behind me,” he says. “It was a totally completely different factor; it was me, re-creating and reinventing what I do. The proven fact that it’s come full circle and the identify has come again to me simply proves to me that I made the appropriate resolution 15 years in the past after I opened this place.”

Still, he’s totally conscious that it’s principally concerning the expertise—the engineers within the room—that make a studio profitable; it’s one thing he discovered from his father. “Eddie was all concerning the man within the chair, and so is Troy,” Panunzio says. “I don’t suppose Eddie knew concerning the tools the best way Troy does, however he knew that what drew folks in had been the folks within the constructing. Whenever I am going to New York, Kenta [Yonesaka] is my engineer. He’s incredible.”

“I believe we’ve an important steady of younger engineers,” Germano provides, “and my chief engineer, Kenta, is somebody I’m very happy with. He’s now the longest-running workers engineer within the historical past of all of the Hit Factories. I actually pleasure myself on making an attempt to assist gifted younger engineers begin their careers, on educating them or their assistants easy methods to maintain onto purchasers—after which domesticate relationships and true friendships which are going to be lasting their entire profession, their entire lives. I’m going to place them in the appropriate conditions with the appropriate shopper, after which they’ve to know easy methods to develop that relationship and easy methods to be sure that these purchasers at all times need to be right here.”

A Gobo acoustic panel setup at Hit Factory.
A Gobo acoustic panel setup at The Hit Factory. PHOTO: Troy Germano.

COMING FULL CIRCLE

“Here” is now as soon as once more The Hit Factory, although to regulars, the Germanos and The Hit Factory are all however one and the identical.

“It labored out, however it was a pursuit, there’s no query about it, and it wasn’t a straightforward job,” Germano says. “It took a very long time to get the trademark and brand and the IP and every thing else after my mom handed. There had been legal professionals and conferences and it value some huge cash, however there was by no means a query about doing it. Even although I like the best way we’ve constructed Germano Studios, and I’m very happy with the goodwill that me and my workers have created over the past 15 years, switching the identify actually did make excellent sense.

“It’s one thing I’m captivated with,” he provides, “and I believe you may be seeing extra Hit Factory studios popping up in just a few attention-grabbing locations over the subsequent variety of years. There are licensing alternatives with the identify. I have already got Germano Acoustics and the audio system, we’ve the Waves plug-in that I’m very happy with, and there’ll be new merchandise based mostly round just a few issues I’ve been engaged on.

“One of the explanations I named it Germano Studios in 2008 wasn’t from an ego perspective. It was actually to let folks know that The Hit Factory was nonetheless right here. It took a very long time, however I’m joyful it’s labored out so properly.”

“He’s acquired loyal purchasers,” Panunzio concludes. “He’s a hustler, which he discovered from his father—no person may hustle higher than Eddie—and he’ll preserve that place working perpetually. He creates an important vibe, he’s acquired nice expertise working with him and he runs an important studio. People love being with him, and that’s finally what it’s all about.”

The Hit Factory Recording Studio Reborn! — Part 2

Engineer Thom Panunzio mixing at The Hit Factory in the mid-1970s. PHOTO: Courtesy of Thom Panunzio
Engineer Thom Panunzio mixing at The Hit Factory within the mid-Seventies. PHOTO: Courtesy of Thom Panunzio.

Continuing our protection of The Hit Factory‘s monumental return below second-generation studio legend Troy Germano, we choose up from Part 1 and dive into the unique facility’s peak years below Troy’s father, Eddie Germano.

FATHER AND SON

The cover of Mix's March 2023 issue.
The cowl of Mix’s March 2023 concern.

“Eddie Germano was the supervisor of the Record Plant in 1974, and he gave me my first job,” Thom Panunzio recollects. “I used to be a employees engineer at that time, and they’d assign artists to Jay Messina or Jack Douglas or me or Jimmy Iovine. All these nice producers, like Eddie Kramer and Bob Ezrin, after which Bowie, John Lennon, the Rolling Stones, KISS—each room had some celebrity. My goodness, it was a lot enjoyable. It was a good time to be in New York City.

“I used to be truly solely at Record Plant for a really brief time,” he continues. “I keep in mind Eddie known as me into his workplace on a Friday, and he stated, ‘It’s killing me to do that as a result of I believe you’re incredible. I actually such as you, however I’ve obtained to allow you to go. We’re reducing again, and I’ve guys who’ve been right here three years. You’ve been right here for, like, three months.’ And then Monday he known as me again and stated, ‘You know, I’ve been fascinated by you all weekend. I don’t need to lose you. How about you go to work on the distant truck for some time till I can get you again into the studios?’ That was the good factor on this planet. This was working with David Hewitt, and also you go to all the nice concert events and also you’re onstage with these big artists. And it’s dwell, so that you study fairly shortly the right way to make a combination work.”

Eddie Germano would later provide Panunzio a job as chief engineer at The Hit Factory, although he says that he declined out of loyalty to Roy Cicala at Record Plant. Still, he introduced work to The Hit Factory and he has ever since, at each location, together with 9 out of the final 10 Joan Jett album tasks.

A bit of history: the back wall of Studio 1 at the previous incarnation of The Hit Factory, West 54th Street, circa 2002. Photo: Dave King.
A little bit of historical past: the again wall of Studio 1 on the earlier incarnation of The Hit Factory, West 54th Street, circa 2002. Photo: Dave King.

“Nobody who ever owned a studio was like Eddie Germano. Nobody,” Panunzio states. “He was like the top of Columbia Records, or head of Universal Records. He was like a file firm govt, a mogul, an entrepreneur, no matter. He was an enormous presence and an enormous shot. And you knew when he was there. Troy was the identical. I’ve identified Troy since he was a boy. From the time I first met him, he was enjoying hockey and he had this big hockey bag that he used to tug into the studio, both coming from college or going to follow. This bag was greater than him! He would stroll into the room and didn’t care who you have been with. You might be in there with John Lennon, and it could be like all people stopped what they have been doing to say good day to Troy. He demanded that spotlight simply by being within the room. He was very very like his father.”

Over the following years, Troy Germano’s position within the enterprise would develop to the purpose the place he was thought of one thing of an equal accomplice, groomed to in the future take over the household enterprise. Despite the fast developments in digital know-how and rising competitors from each cell manufacturing and rising, lower-priced studios, enterprise was nonetheless buzzing on W. 54th Street. Life was good.

Then, in 2003, Eddie Germano died unexpectedly following a scheduled surgical procedure. Four months later, Troy walked away from the corporate. In 2005, the constructing was bought, the gear auctioned off, and The Hit Factory studios have been shuttered. Though he remained energetic in consulting roles—from studio design to product manufacturing to record-label enterprise growth, it could be 5 extra years earlier than Troy was again within the studio.

 

COME BACK TOMORROW FOR THE CONCLUSION, EXPLORING THE 2023 RETURN OF THE HIT FACTORY, TWENTY YEARS IN THE MAKING.

Mix Cover Story: The Hit Factory Reborn! — Part 1

On the Cover: In January 2023, after 20 years, Troy Germano reacquired rights to The Hit Factory name, bringing back one of the world’s iconic studio brands and renaming his world-class Germano Studios in NoHo, New York City. Pictured in Studio 2, from left: Slick Rick, engineer Kenta Yonesaka, Troy Germano, Mark Ronson and Steve Jordan. Photo: Bob Gruen.
On the Cover: In January 2023, after 20 years, Troy Germano reacquired rights to The Hit Factory title, bringing again one of many world’s iconic studio manufacturers and renaming his world-class Germano Studios in NoHo, New York City. Pictured in Studio 2, from left: Slick Rick, engineer Kenta Yonesaka, Troy Germano, Mark Ronson and Steve Jordan. PHOTO: Bob Gruen.

Soon after you learn this, a brand new web site for the Hit Factory will go dwell, changing germanostudios.com. Emails to [email protected] will start being forwarded to [email protected]. And all the brand new signage, reviving a well-recognized, decades-old emblem, could have been hung, saying that Germano Studios, situated at 676 Broadway in Manhattan’s NoHo District, is now The Hit Factory.

Why change the title? A superb query. From the surface—say, to a enterprise college professor, administration guide or client items government—it will appear to make no sense. Going towards the industrial and technological developments of the business in 2008, when the price of entry had lowered tenfold and nearly all of top-flight studios popping up have been for private use, Troy Germano designed and constructed—not purchased—a brand-new, two-room industrial facility, outfitted it with large-format SSL consoles, an in depth outboard rack and enormous audio system, mixed that with the most recent model of Pro Tools and plug-ins, after which crammed up the acoustically true monitoring areas with a variety of devices, amps, cables, microphones, cue stations and every little thing a high artist may want—most of it new and state-of-the-art. And he has made it work, for 15 years in the identical location!

The spacious Studio 1 control room, featuring an SSL Duality console and loads of outboard gear, at the recently renamed The Hit Factory studios in NoHo. PHOTO: Troy Germano
The spacious Studio 1 management room, that includes an SSL Duality console and a great deal of outboard gear, on the just lately renamed The Hit Factory studios in NoHo. PHOTO: Troy Germano

It hasn’t at all times been straightforward, as he can be the primary to inform you, however over time, Germano Studios developed a shopper listing that features artists like Joan Jett, Kendrick Lamar, The Rolling Stones, J Balvin, Post Malone, Lady Gaga, Mark Ronson, Joe Bonamassa, A$AP Ferg, Slick Rick, Dove Cameron and so many others throughout a number of music genres. Many, if not most of them, are repeat guests. It’s stated to be the one place the place Keith Richards will file when within the States. Same for Joan Jett. So, once more, why change the title?

Mix Blog: Go Inside the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio

To anybody working within the skilled recording business, it makes excellent sense. Recording studios aren’t like different areas or different manufacturers. Why one is profitable and one other one down the road isn’t, with all issues being equal, comes right down to phrases like vibe, consolation, service, confidence, belief, care and, maybe most significantly, relationships. That’s why studios corresponding to Motown, Abbey Road, Capitol, Record Plant, and in the present day locations like Blackbird in Nashville, carry that mystique.

From the late-Seventies by the early 2000s, few, if any, studios on this planet might match the artistic and industrial success popping out of The Hit Factory, and Troy Germano was there each step of the best way. From his perspective, hanging the indicators final month saying the rebirth of The Hit Factory was the equal of bringing again the household title—one that ought to by no means have been misplaced within the first place.

A BIT OF HISTORY

By all accounts, Eddie Germano, a producer, singer, entrepreneur and Troy’s father, was a charismatic, welcoming, only-in-New-York, larger-than-life particular person. In 1975, whereas a component proprietor and day-to-day supervisor of the most popular studio on the town, Record Plant, he determined to go solo and bought the two-room Hit Factory studios on 353 W. forty eighth Street from Jerry Ragavoy. He redesigned the areas, added a 3rd room, and hosted historic periods from the likes of Stevie Wonder (Songs within the Key of Life), Paul Simon (One Trick Pony), Talking Heads (Fear of Music) and David Bowie (Station to Station), and lots of others.

In 1981, The Hit Factory relocated to 237 West 54th Street, throughout the road from Studio 54, and the expertise adopted: Graceland by Paul Simon, Born in the usA. by Bruce Springsteen, Under a Blood Red Sky (U2), Steel Wheels (Rolling Stones), Up Your Alley (Joan Jett and the Blackhearts)—the listing fills pages. Though Troy Germano had been in and across the studios since age 10, it was at the moment that he turned concerned on the enterprise facet.

The Studio 1 live room at The Hit Factory, in the NoHo area of Manhattan. PHOTO: Robert Wright
The Studio 1 dwell room at The Hit Factory, within the NoHo space of Manhattan. PHOTO: Robert Wright.

“He was at all times sort of extra my older brother than he was my dad, and in that regard, there was a real bond,” Germano says. “He actually went out of his solution to educate me and present me what the music business was about. I used to be 12 years previous when he purchased The Hit Factory, so from continually being round varied musicians and producers, and well-known artists and bands, I understood the worth of relationships at an early age.

“And that’s the elemental ingredient that makes studios work,” he continues. “It’s the connection with not simply the engineer or the producer or the songwriter. It’s a relationship with the precise artists within the band, in addition to the file labels and the attorneys and the A&R individuals. It’s a group, it’s a whole ecosystem, and it must be maintained continually. My dad taught me that.”

Eddie and Troy would go on to open a Hit Factory Times Square location, transfer the principle operations to a seven-studio (plus 5 mastering rooms) complicated at 421 W. 54th Street, open Hit Factory London and buy Criteria Studios in Miami on the daybreak of the South Florida increase in hip-hop manufacturing. Engineer/producer/file exec Thom Panunzio has labored in all of them.

 

COME BACK TOMORROW FOR PART 2!

Racket NYC Club Takes Different Approach to Live Sound

L-Acoustics monitor wedges line the new venue’s stage, while a smaller coaxial enclosure is seen here covering the audience area house-left of the stage. Photo: Ryan Muir, The Bowery Presents.
L-Acoustics monitor wedges line the brand new venue’s stage, whereas a smaller coaxial enclosure is seen right here protecting the viewers space house-left of the stage. Photo: Ryan Muir, The Bowery Presents.

New York, NY (March 15, 2023)—This Racket membership isn’t about tennis. Racket NYC, which opened in early January is the most recent addition to the The Bowery Presents’ string of venues round New York City. The 650-capacity venue is housed within the Chelsea house as soon as occupied by Highline Ballroom, with an audio system comprised of latest and repurposed L-Acoustics gear nabbed from different Bowery Presents venues—New York’s Webster Hall, Brooklyn Steel and Terminal 5, and Boston’s Roadrunner.

“The economics of small golf equipment could be fairly unsure,” says Scott Raved, Director of Operations at The Bowery Presents. “It’s vital for us to develop bands, and we worth the smaller venues and their pure intimacy as essential to perform that. We need to give each artist and each venue one of the best sound doable, so we’ve chosen L-Acoustics for our golf equipment. Pulling some L-Acoustics parts from varied venues allowed us to create an economical sound system for Racket NYC that very a lot continues The Bowery Presents’ custom of presenting nice sound in each house.”

The Bowery Presents Assistant Sound Designer Alex Kehr labored with the corporate’s Head Sound Engineer, Lorne Grabe, L-Acoustics’ East Coast Application Engineer, Chris “Sully” Sullivan, and Mark Friedman, Managing Partner of See Factor, The Bowery Presents’ longtime integration associate.

Teragram Ballroom: Built From Experience

Installed in December, Racket’s principal PA includes 4 A15i flown per aspect, complemented by 4 legacy 12XT, two 8XT, and two ARCS WiFo hung as varied fills and balcony delays, plus three compact 5XT offering fill at house-right. Four SB28 floor subs are unfold out beneath the lip of the stage, whereas eight 115XT HiQ wedges on the deck, pushed by 5 LA4X amplified controllers, present monitoring. A mixture of 1 LA12X, one LA2Xi, and 4 LA4X drive the home system, which is processed by way of a P1 Milan AVB audio processor sourced by means of See Factor.

Having quite a lot of gear at their disposal made discovering options on the fly doable throughout the set up. “For occasion, I particularly love the three five-inch [5XT] bins we put in to cowl a blind spot we found on the house-right platform,” Raved says.

Outfitting Racket NYC’s sound was removed from typical, nevertheless it was indicative of the resourceful firm’s ethos. “As ordinary, we did it our approach,” Raved laughs. “It’s troublesome to finances for rooms this small on this setting and on this metropolis, however we weren’t going to compromise on sound high quality in any of our venues, together with Racket, which sounds each bit pretty much as good as any of them.”

MIX SIDEBAR: Take Me to the Rink—Mixing Talking Heads Live

Photo credit: Lindsay Gauthier
FOH pro and ‘Soundman Confidential‘ podcast host Frank Gallagher. Photo credit: Lindsay Gauthier.

The key to interviewing legendary FOH engineer Frank Gallagher, host of Soundman Confidential, is to not interrupt, because much like an extended guitar solo, every story is headed somewhere unexpected—like this one, which starts off in late-1970s New York City.

“Manhattan—this was my old hood here. The B-52s, Talking Heads and The Ramones had the same manager; Broadway and 57th was the office. I lived on 85th and Columbus; the Bs used to be sent out as our opening act and we did shows in Central Park at Wollman Rink. I used to skate there every day in the winter—walk to Wollman Rink and then go to the office if I needed to. We played the Wollman Rink with the B’s and the next day, the New York Times had a glowing review of Talking Heads and how it sounded.

[John Rockwell wrote in the August 18, 1979 edition, “The same sound system that had exposed the B-52’s served the Heads superbly, revealing new subtleties in their textural ideas, and providing new confirmation of their success in evolving gripping, interesting live versions of songs….”]

“Talking Heads also played there in 1980, and I will tell you as a soundman—whoa! Talking Heads were very secretive and back then, there’s no cell phones, no faxes; the word would come from the office. I got a call: ‘10 o’clock tomorrow morning, Brit Row rehearsal.’ Britannia Row, Pink Floyd’s sound company, had a warehouse out in Long Island City. I get to Brit Row and there’s Bernie Worrell from Funkadelic. There’s Busta Jones, another bass player. There’s Adrian Belew. There’s Nona Hendryx. There’s Steve Scales, the percussionist. And I walk in on that! That’s how I found out about ‘the big band!’ As artists, Talking Heads were very protective of what they were doing and their thinking was, ‘If it don’t work, we don’t want anybody knowing it didn’t work.’ But I had no idea it was coming. I thought, ‘Get on with it. I’ve got a mixer, a box of mics, we just go at it.’ The whole sound for that nine-piece band was sculpted in one day.

Frank Gallagher: ‘Soundman Confidential’ Talks Talking Heads, B-52’s

“The first show we played with the big band was Heatwave Festival—60,000 people in a field in Canada—and the second show was Central Park. I’m thinking to myself, ‘Oh my God, what are we gonna do with this,’ but you just do it. The only thing I remember was Adrian Belew saying to me—and I usually hated notes from artists—Adrian said to me, ‘Frank, just make sure that everything I play sails over Central Park,’ and that was how I mixed that show—made it sail.’ Some of it’s on the live album, The Name of This Band is Talking Heads.

“Later that year, we were in Paris, set up at the Baltard Pavilion. U2 were the support, but their van broke down in Calais. Again, no cell phones in those days; they showed up with just guitars and drumsticks, and said, ‘Where can we get gear?’ I pointed at the stage and said, ‘Right there.’ They used Talking Heads’ gear as it was and played the show. And they’ve never forgotten.

“Years later, I was in Dublin with Buddy Guy—I toured with Buddy for years—so I called up Paul McGuinness, their manager. I said, ‘Is the Edge in town?’He said, ‘He is.’I said, ‘He should come down and see Buddy.’ And McGuinness said, ‘Well, why would he do that?’ I said, ‘He’ll get a free guitar lesson!’”

Frank Gallagher: ‘Soundman Confidential’ Talks Talking Heads, B-52’s and the Evolution of Touring Sound

Frank Gallagher, seen here line-checking the B-52’s at New York City’s Beacon Theatre, has started his own podcast, Soundman Confidential, to explore the artist/engineer relationship.
Frank Gallagher, seen here line-checking the B-52’s at New York City’s Beacon Theatre, has started his own podcast, Soundman Confidential, to explore the artist/engineer relationship.

New York, NY (February 9, 2023)—Frank Gallagher has a keen ear for two things—mixing a band and telling a story—and with a resume that includes engineering Talking Heads, Simple Minds, The Go-Go’s, The Bangles, Gang of Four, Buddy Guy, Suzi Quatro, Marshall Crenshaw, Skunk Baxter and dozens more on the road, he’s done a lot of one, which has led to a lot of the other. Blessed with a wry sense of humor and a Scots accent that sounds like a sly grin, there are few things he can’t get away with saying—which may explain his longevity in the field.

“I tell bands, if you’re not giving me what I need, there’s no point in me being here— you may want to find somebody else, because I’m not going to sit here and suffer and do damage control,” said the veteran FOH engineer, speaking backstage at New York City’s Beacon Theatre during a recent stop on the B-52’s farewell tour. “This band here, I’m going to give them notes tonight on the show last night. I’m a socialist when it comes to a show—we’re all equal, we’re all in this together!”

Gallagher’s Live Sound CV is epic—there’s also stints running a hip London eatery in the Seventies, helping open and book New York’s legendary Irving Plaza in the Eighties, production managing San Francisco’s annual OysterFest for 16 years, doing corporate audio to this day and more—but in recent times, he’s added another occupation to the list: Podcast host. An offshoot of an autobiography in the works, Soundman Confidential finds him talking to old pals and acquaintances, from rockers (Vernon Reid, Davey Johnstone and virtually all the aforementioned artists) to fellow audio pros (Ed Stasium, Steve Lillywhite).

“Originally, the premise was to explore the relationship between the soundman and the band,” he said. “How does what we do get in us— because sound is in us. I remember this vividly: I was three years old, living in a little Scottish mining village. Every year, the traveling fair would come by, and that was the first loud music I heard; it had to be loud to get over the hum of the generators. The speakers were big [Altec Lansing] Voice of the Theater models and they had these Vortexion amplifiers—metal, military-grade P.A. amplifiers that looked like an ammo case and were indestructible.”

The lure of loud sounds eventually snared Gallagher for good (“I got in a van in 1966 and never got out”) and by the early 1970s, he was mixing Suzi Quatro around the world on three prototype WEM six-channel mixers daisy-chained together and WEM Festival Stacks: “Incredibly clean, and you could do 4,000 people with a couple of bins; they’d blow the ice cream outta your cone.”

MIX SIDEBAR: Take Me to the Rink—Mixing Talking Heads Live

Moving on to work at UK audio provider Concert Sound, Gallagher was immediately sent to start a tour in Switzerland: “They couldn’t get anyone to do it; they said, ‘Pick up these two American bands in Zurich’—and it was Ramones and Talking Heads. Ramones had a full crew; Talking Heads had no roadies, no music out in Europe, nothing. The second man on the P.A. got to mix the opener, so I set them up at the Volkshaus in Zurich, and barely got a line check. They opened the doors, the place was sold out. Talking Heads came on stage, and first song, I was busy getting a mix. Second song, I began to pay attention. Third song, the hairs on the back of my neck stood up—‘Psycho Killer? What is this?!’

“True story: I went back to the hotel after the show, barely knew them, had a wee production meeting with them. I had a cup of tea and I said to Chris and Tina and David, ‘I have no idea what’s going on here— but I want in.’ Instant decision. I don’t believe in coincidences. Fate takes a hand, but you’ve got to be smart enough to take advantage of it; I’ve never been shy about letting people know. Talking Heads brought me to New York for a couple of shows at the Entermedia Theater in New York’s East Village; by that time, they had graduated from CBGBs. We started playing up and down the Eastern seaboard, and in America, I got used to using house systems, which I did not have the luxury of in England; I was so happy!”

The decades that followed found Gallagher moving to the U.S. permanently and honing mixing philosophies that he follows to this day:

  • “I believe in keeping it simple. I tell people it’s because I’m lazy, but that’s not the truth. I’m keeping it simple because I’ve learned the less there is, the less that can go wrong.”
  • “I never listen to the record. If I’ve got preconceived ideas about what’s going to come off the stage and it doesn’t meet expectations set by the record, that’s not really a good place to start. Also, I’m a realist: I have to deal with what’s coming off the stage because that’s all I have.”
  • “When I go into a house these days, I don’t touch the house settings because the guy’s usually got it dialed and why would I want to reinvent the wheel? Also, I want an easy day.”
  • “I don’t go over the top with effects. I’ve got one little reverb on drums and one on vocal—and if you can hear them, you’re lucky. I want it to be there without anybody knowing it’s that there, but when you take it away, you can tell.”
  • “Rock and roll bands are like buses: There’ll be another one along in a minute. Once you get a couple of names on your resume, people think it means something; it doesn’t. You’re only as good as your last show.”

For the B-52’s tour, he adhered to all of those rules and more (“I don’t work for anybody with more than a two-truck tour anymore; the personalities, I don’t want to be dealing with all of that”). For the journey, he opted to mix on a Yamaha CL5 console using only onboard effects (“Never owned a Waves license”), capturing vocals on Shure wireless mics outfitted with Heil PR 30 capsules (“They give me another 10 dB before feedback over anything I’ve heard”).

The jaunt capped off a busy 2022 that saw Gallagher also mix runs with Gang of Four and Skunk Baxter, as well as tech at multiple corporate events. “Post-Covid, people are working again,” he said. “Hugo [Burnham], the drummer from Gang of Four, called and said, ‘Do you want to come out?’ I was quite enjoying being at home—Flagstaff is beautiful—and my wife said, ‘Get out of the house; go do this tour.’ And I’m not gonna say ‘my mojo,’ but my mix is back with a vengeance.”

The B-52’s tour may be over, but Gallagher will see them soon enough, helming the desk for their upcoming Vegas residencies in May and August; more runs with Baxter and Gang of Four, as well as Indian artist L. Shankar, are also in the offing. It’ll be a hectic year ahead, which suits him just fine. “I’ve lived a charmed life,” he admitted. “I’m from a little coal mining village in Scotland, got pulled in by the fairground, and had a restaurant in the middle and a dance hall in Manhattan, so I’m not afraid of anything really. Except my wife. Sometimes.”

Mix’s Top 20 Articles of 2022, Part 3

Mix’s Top 20 of 2022, Part 3

New York, NY (December 21, 2022)—Join us as we look back at our most popular articles of 2022, according to Google Analytics. The Mix Top 20 of 2022 lists our most-read news stories, reviews, blog posts, profiles and interviews of the year, so this Top 20 was chosen by YOU, our readers (Don’t miss Part 1 and Part 2)! We’ll see you tomorrow with Mix’s Top 20 Articles of 2022, Part 4!

12. VIDEO: Counterfeit L-Acoustics Loudspeakers Destroyed by Authorities (2/8/2022)

By Clive Young. Chinese customs officials recently seized and destroyed fake L-Acoustics loudspeakers, then prosecuted the counterfeiters.

 

11. Steven Wilson Knows Surround (1/20/2022)

By Steve Harvey. Artist/engineer Steven Wilson has become the go-to pro for remixing classic rock in Dolby Atmos and Spatial Audio.

 

10. Restoring the Audio of The Beatles: Get Back (1/27/2022)

By Clive Young. Director Peter Jackson explains how modern AI technology was used to restore 53-year-old mono recordings, creating the audio of his documentary series, The Beatles: Get Back.

 

9. MSG Sphere’s Immersive Sound Technology to Debut in New York (7/26/2022)

By Clive Young. The immersive audio tech slated for the $1.8B MSG Sphere in Las Vegas has been installed in New York City’s Beacon Theatre and debuted in August with two Trey Anastasio concerts.

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