The Sunday Guardian

Pink Floyd’s analogue mixing desk sold for $1.8m and it was worth every dime

- ROB TOULSON

The mixing desk that Pink Floyd used to record The Dark Side Of The Moon recently sold for $1.8m (£1.4m). The EMI TG12345 MK IV desk is one of only two ever made and it was used extensivel­y between 1971 and 1983 in Abbey Road’s Studio Two by artists including The Cure, Paul McCartney, Kate Bush and George Harrison.

But apart from being a grand piece of memorabili­a of a bygone era of classic pop and rock, is this very expensive bit of kit of any use to the modern sound engineer? Indeed, today’s music producer can quite easily access profession­al-grade microphone­s, software and all of the essential studio equipment to create a hit song or album.

If it’s possible to make profession­al records on a laptop computer, then the perceived sound quality of the analogue desk cannot alone justify its continued use. So what is the draw — why would a studio owner or music producer invest so much in such a big recording desk? The answer for most console owners is simple — workflow.

The methods by which we approach any creative project have a significan­t influence on the direction and form of the resulting (L-R) Richard Wright, Roger Waters, Nick Mason and David Gilmour: members of Pink Floyd. product — not least in music technical aspects during peproducti­on, which requires riods of creative intensity, a substantia­l blend of artistic which is often necessary craft and technical ingenuity. when using compact and The large-scale mixing desk software-only systems. allows flexible working and The analogue console rapid movement between makes connectivi­ty with creative phases, without the other audio devices very need for regularly reconfigst­raightforw­ard. So the prouring the technical set-up. ducer can quickly and eas

To put it simply — a musiily route audio signals, for cian or producer can preexample, to add reverb to a pare, for example, inputs vocalist’s headphone feed. from a vocal microphone, It’s also possible to link one keyboards, bass and electric audio signal to another (this guitar to individual chanis called “sidechaini­ng”). nels of the desk. They can The timing of a kick drum then move swiftly between recording, for example, can the instrument­s, recording be routed to automatica­lly and producing as inspiratio­n control the parameters of an emerges. The artist is able to effect applied to a bass guitar remain firmly in a creative recording. headspace at all times with It has therefore emerged no need to stop and consider that the technical aspects of They can then move swiftly between the instrument­s, recording and producing as inspiratio­n emerges. The artist is able to remain firmly in a creative headspace at all times with no need to stop and consider technical aspects during periods of creative intensity, which is often necessary when using compact and software-only systems. analogue mixing are fundamenta­lly creative themselves and have led to many new innovative sounds, such as “gated reverb” (a large stadium echo sound that suddenly cuts to silence soon after it is heard), which is synonymous with the drum sounds and classic rock recordings The EMI TG12345 MK IV mixing desk, used by the band. breed creativity and artistry in the production studio — which is potentiall­y lost when working with the endless possibilit­ies provided by digital production tools. When using analogue tape and mixing desks in the past, every recording was important — not least because it took time to rewind the tape to the beginning and try again.

Equally, track limitation­s meant that it wasn’t possible to record extra sounds or instrument­s and decide which to keep or discard later on — artists needed to make critical decisions based on intuition at the time. Musicians had to be firmly in the zone — every take mattered because recording another of the 1980s, such as “In the Air Tonight” by Phil Collins. Creative genius Working with analogue mixing desks and recording systems does bring many limitation­s that are overcome with digital and software systems. But these “limitation­s” have been known to take would sometimes mean deleting the previous one. Musicians and singers would therefore feel performanc­e pressure in the studio, heightenin­g their delivery and bringing often tense human elements to the performanc­e that cannot be choreograp­hed or pre-planned.

Modern digital systems allow infinite track counts, infinite implementa­tions of effects plug-ins, unlimited undo and redo operations, cut, paste and loop facilities that all take away from the importance of the artist performing and connecting through real emotion captured directly on tape.

Nowadays, with digital tools, we can automate many mixdown parameters (such as volume, panning and effects levels) to boost some instrument­s or to add certain effects at key moments in the song. This is not possible with analogue mixing consoles, so mixing needs to be a live and dynamic performanc­e too. You quite often see footage of the mixing process with a number of engineers and musicians in the control room, each taking responsibi­lity for adjusting one or two settings as the song plays back. When the perfect mix was achieved, the song was finished and it would be impossible to ever set the desk and the equipment up in exactly the same way again.

By contrast, digital systems have full recall capabiliti­es, meaning that a song can be tweaked and manipulate­d to perfection over weeks and months, even years. The modern recording artist sometimes just doesn’t know how to stop, sign off and move on to the next song.

Of course, digital technologi­es have brought huge advancemen­ts to music production, themselves enabling and defining new genres and approaches. The opportunit­ies brought through digital sound libraries, mobile recording and collaborat­ion over the internet are profound. But analogue is physical — you can feel the warmth of the valves glowing in an old levelling amplifier, you can see the resonance of a reverb plate with electric current flowing through it, you can hold a vinyl record in your hands.

The future approach is clearly a hybrid one, bringing the best of both worlds of analogue and digital music production, and therefore a place still for the large format mixing console. With innovation­s in new analogue and digital production tools happening in tandem, there are still endless creative opportunit­ies that have yet to be unearthed for the music producers of 2017 and beyond. THE INDEPENDEN­T

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