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Craig
Leon
Fresh off Blondie's
comeback album, Craig Leon explains how he uses the similar approaches
for recording New York punk and modern classical music.
By Howard Massey
One of the maxims of the music business is that
it can make for strange bedfellows. Who would have thought that a classically
trained musician with finely honed composition, harmony, and arranging
skills would be the primary architect of the second-wave New York punk
movement of the mid-1970s?
The man we're talking about is Craig Leon. Not only did he discover
the original thrash-rock band - the Ramones - and go on to produce their
groundbreaking first album, but he proceeded to bring many other denizens
of CBGBs and Max's Kansas City to the listening public - bands such
as Blondie, Richard Hell and the Voidoids, and Suicide. Eventually abandoning
the Big Apple for the lure of L.A., Leon's eclectic career took a decidedly
country twist - working with singers Rodney Crowell and Dwight Tilley
- before he relocated to London, his present base of operations. In
1999, Leon reunited with Blondie for their critically acclaimed comeback
album No Exit, and today he finds himself returning to his classical
roots as he explores new ways of assimilating modern recording technology
with conventional orchestra performance. To say that he has a singular
perspective on the past, present, and future of record production would
be an understatement.
EQ: How do you feel your classical background has enhanced your ability
to make pop records?
Craig Leon: I taught myself how to engineer
in the '70s because I was flying by the seat of my pants and nobody
would engineer the way I wanted to. I originally came from an arranging
background - orchestration, composition, and piano - and a lot of that
ended up in my method of production. I would actually attack each recording
as you would a composition - lay it out in blocks, like you would with
normal orchestration. So I would do a lot of things in the arrangement
that ultimately affected how the record sounded. Not on something like
the Ramones, where everything was just a big wall of sound, but that
approach is more evident on something like Blondie - music that has
a lot of countermelodies in it. Even something which sounds radical,
like the Suicide records, were really thought out in terms of sonics
- which frequencies people were going to be playing - rather than trying
to EQ it. It's about, "Let's change the register where that bass is,"
going through that type of preproduction to create a hole for the vocal.
So, consequently, on a lot of those old punk records - and even up to
the new Blondie record - I don't use a lot of EQ and I don't use a lot
of effects; the arrangement is what shapes the sound of the record.
Which is not a million miles away from what we were doing with classical
records. Doing things with harmonies and different chord changes and
not necessarily playing the root all the time in the bass changes the
way a record sounds more radically than anything you can do electronically.
The sound of a record has much more to do with what the musicians are
playing and singing than it does mic placement.
Conversely, how has your experience as a pop record producer influenced
the work you're doing now in the classical genre?
Actually, what I'm trying to do is to not do core classical recording.
I'm doing more modern things - something that's very early music, but
modernized. I'm trying to incorporate some of the techniques of pop
in classical recording, like using multi-track - even though they are
live orchestral performances - and doing things with sequences. Sometimes,
there are live instruments sequenced [through digital editing] and then
overdubbed with more live instruments. So it's actually making very
radical recordings in the classical world - I guess I can't ever quit
making radical recordings of one kind or another! [Laughs] There's not
a lot radical you can do in pop right now; it's pretty much established.
In 1900, they said that everything that was ever going to be invented
had already been invented, so that's a dangerous point of view.
Well, I'm not quite saying that. Someone could come out in the next
year and make the killer record of all time that nobody's ever heard
before - please, somebody do it! But I'd like to do a straight core
classical record in a modern way, where you do something multitracked
and use different EQ's and different echoes to change the shape of the
music a little bit. That's one thing I'm really interested in right
now.
You said earlier that you learned engineering because nobody was
around who could engineer the way you wanted.
Well, you've got to realize that it wasn't
that far away from the '60s when we were starting to do Blondie and
the Ramones. When you'd go [into the studio], you'd have people that
were still unaccustomed to live, loud music. They were still trying
to dampen things down, even in 1973 and 1974, when I started doing some
of the preliminary work on the things that came out in '75, '76, and
'77. So you'd get very conventional engineering, very flat-sounding
compared to what I wanted to hear. I wanted to hear the impact of a
Ronettes record without having 300 things playing. [Laughs] That was
the goal; I wanted to hear the band sound like that. But wanting to
get that larger than life sound involved a lot of things that were different
in those days.
The way we did the new Blondie album is pretty much the same way we
did the old Blondie stuff, which for then was really radical but now
is the standard way to make a record. It was using a lot of room mics
with leakage. On the early Ramones and Blondie stuff, there's hardly
any processing, and there's very little reverb. Even though it sounds
really roomy, that's actually the sound of a huge studio. Then, that
was really radical - you didn't do that. Instead, you put an amplifier
in a little cage and you put the drums in a little booth with foam all
around it. So I'd have a lot of trouble with engineers wanting to do
that.
A couple of guys really got it. I worked with Shelly Yakus on a couple
of things back then and he really had it down, but because of the low
budget nature of a lot of the records I was making, I couldn't get him
all the time. So I'd have to go and do it with whoever was in the studio.
I'd just put the mic wherever my ear was, and hopefully it would sound
right. Nobody taught me that - it was just a matter of moving things
around until they sounded right. You know, "What's this? A limiter?
Well, let's put it across everything and see what happens." In those
days, nobody was limiting the mix before it would go to mastering, or
putting the whole drum kit through a stereo limiter. Everybody was saying,
"This is technically incorrect," especially when it's a pair of API
limiters that crunch the hell out of it! [Laughs] So we were trying
a lot of things like that, and I had to do it myself because there was
no method for doing it. We were still having people that were very used
to recording close-miked jazz sessions and stuff, which was really cool
also, but it just wasn't what I was after, not with those bands. Later
on, when I did Rodney Crowell and people like that, we did a mixture
of both - very conventional close miking combined with a bunch of room
sounds and having the drummer play in the bathroom and things like that.
So you are definitely from the "leakage is good" school of thought.
Oh, yeah. That, and getting as much of the live performance as you can
possible get on the record. Even today, when you're hearing things sequenced,
get as much live as you can get. I never really separated things a lot,
not even to this day.
But, with the exception of the Ramones recordings, there is good
separation. You clearly carved out spaces for the individual instruments
within this broader brush of the big sound.
That's because there are a lot of overdubs , but the basic core of it
is one big sound. We did a lot of the new Blondie record in the basement
of Chris Stein's house, in his rehearsal room - a home environment,
albeit with a lot of the equipment from my sophisticated studio. But
still, the basic feel of the album was the bass, drums, two guitars,
and keyboards recorded live at Electric Lady for a couple of days. We
then took that away and stripped things down and built on top of that,
so you still have the live core of what the band was sounding like,
even though there later is a bunch of separation from the overdubs.
Generally, you can get a very good picture of things - even within the
mass - by panning instruments hard left and right. That comes from me
listening to old Beatles records, where, by necessity, the whole band's
on one side and then a guitar solo and a tambourine is coming out of
the other side. [Laughs] I thought that was really the way they were
supposed to be! Because I grew up in America, I didn't know that the
band and George Martin disowned all of that stuff.
Do you tend to use fairly standard drum miking in addition to the
extensive room miking?
It's pretty much a close-miked kit plus a stereo overhead of one kind
or another. Sometimes there's added emphasis on a cymbal or two if it's
not being picked up, but it depends on the drummer. How you mic something
and how you EQ it - in fact, everything that you do - is actually driven
by the way the instrument is being played. If it's a guy that has a
really heavy foot, you would use a different mic on the bass drum than
the guy who has a very light foot. You would judge where the room mics
and where your overheads are placed more by that than anything else.
How the drummer's playing determines your mic setup, so there isn't
a standard setup that works; no one thing works all the time. I'll even
change mics within a session. [Blondie drummer] Clem [Burke] is pretty
consistent in the style that he plays, but within different styles of
music, we use different setups; sometimes the room mics and the overheads
will be way overhead and sometimes they will be really close, depending
on how hard he's playing the cymbals.
Do you experiment with placing the drums in different areas of the
room?
Yes, or even in different rooms. If you're going to throw a whole bunch
of digital reverb on it later, it wouldn't really matter, but if you're
trying to get an organic sound, the room means so much more than which
specific mic you're using.
For example, we did some overdubs on that first Ramones album in a huge
room - again, there's that connection between punk and classical music,
because it was Arturo Toscanini's old rehearsal hall with the NBC symphony
above Radio City Music Hall. So we were in this room that was about
65 by 100 and 30 feet tall, and we had room mics all over the place.
We wanted the sound of an explosion on one song so I ran around and
had people climbing up ladders and putting room mics all over the place
while Tommy [Ramone] hit a tom-tom. For all that, it just didn't sound
roomy enough. No matter what we did, it sounded like someone hitting
a piece of paper - even if it was 50 feet away and cranked up and run
through API limiters. So we just took a pair of grand pianos and put
them around Tommy's kit and put bricks on their sustain pedals. Then
we put up a pair of [Neumann U] 87's in a normal pattern over the drums,
cranked them up, limited them to death, had him do one hit, and it sounds
like cannons exploding.
That's not just an isolated incident, either; something like that seems
to happen on almost every session. For example, on the latest Blondie
album, Debbie [Harry] didn't want to have as resonant a sound as she
usually did, so we got different pieces of foam to put up above her
head and we'd lower them or raise them to get more or less resonance
on her voice. There were even a couple of songs where she wanted to
do something really deadpan, so she'd actually put the foam on top of
her head and wear it like a little hat! [Laughs] Maybe that sounds like
1920's recording techniques - you know, move farther away from the horn
- but it works. We'd have people, within the course of a track, moving
on and off mic on things. We'd move mics - do half of a guitar solo
with close mics and then do another take with different miking, maybe
putting the two mics out of phase - and then combine the two in the
middle of the solo. As much as I want a live base, I do stuff like that
a lot.
Every incident that I'm describing is not an over-the-top trick; it's
something that worked because the guy really thought about the way the
piece of music was meant to sound, about what the composer intended
or what the artist wanted out of his guitar solo. You want to do what
emphasizes that and not just do it for the hell of it. And when it's
done right, you really get that bit of magic that makes the record something
special. You want to use whatever devices you have at your disposal
to any extreme in order to make the record sound right.
How will you decide to record a particular instrument on analog versus
digital?
I'll use analog if I want to hear tape saturation, and that wouldn't
necessarily be on the instruments you would think you'd want saturation
on. I've done acoustic cello on a classical recording with tape saturation
and heavy, heavy compression. Why not? It's almost like a little homage
to George Martin.
So the only reason you'd go to analog would be for tape saturation?
Well, there's a theoretical "warmth" factor, which really isn't the
right word. It's just that, because we grew up listening to analog,
it sounds right to us. And the more I've been working in digital, the
more analog's sounding older and older to me. That's more in my past
than my present, but when the transition to digital was happening in
the '80s, I'd always have in the back of my mind that it doesn't sound
right until it's analog. Now, because we're ending up in a different
medium - because we're not going to vinyl anymore - I don't know how
valid that is. But there are certain things where I'll go for analog,
maybe more from worshipping some sound that I heard in my youth than
any other reason. Maybe I'm wrong, but I have a feeling that, as the
years go by, I'm going to be less dependent on hearing that old "warm"
sound.
That's kind of the tube versus solid state argument, also.
It's the same thing. When I started doing some
of these classical things, I had access to the mic cabinet of both Decca
records - which is unbelievable - and the mic cabinet of Abbey Road,
which has everything, you name it. I would be able to set up fifty [Neumann]
M49's if I wanted to, but what ended up sounding right to me was a modified
transformerless M50. On the other hand, I'll use valve [tube] mics on
certain instruments, because they sound a bit more mid-rangy and brighter
to me in an odd kind of way. You'd think the opposite - that they'd
sound round and warm and velvety, but they don't. Nowadays, especially
when you're recording to digital, the criteria for not using a valve
mic is generally noise. When you're doing very, very low-level recording
of something, they just won't work. But I tend to use valve mics more
in pop stuff than in classical, because it's masked and it gives you
a different kind of a punch - kind of a mid-range, lower octave punch.
I also like to use valve mics as overheads on drums - a [AKG] C24 instead
of a pair of 414's or something like that.
The flavor of tube equipment on tape is also different than tube
to digital.
Which is why I'll do things simultaneously. On the Blondie album, there
are a lot of things that I ran to analog and to digital simultaneously
- bounce some bits over from the analog, edit some bits on the digital.
There are times when I've actually used the analog drum take for the
verses and the digital drum take for the choruses. It's all subtle stuff,
but it builds up over the course of many instruments on a record. I
wouldn't say that that's going to miraculously change anything, except
in your own mind when you're doing it. But if you apply that philosophy
to many different elements of a recording, then it can all of a sudden
open up in the choruses as opposed to being really intimate in the verses.
Do you generally mix to both domains as well?
Not anymore, because we're in the CD medium and you might as well get
it sounding good in that medium as soon as possible. I'll use outboard
analog, but I usually mix to digital.
As an American producer living and working in England, do you think
there's an "English sound" versus an "American sound"? If so, what accounts
for it?
I do. There's a different approach and a different mentality. I think
it's because the control rooms in England are drawn up more by the seat
of their pants. You're working on speakers that are extraordinary, but
they're not positioned using any kind of scientific method; they're
placed according to what sounds good to the people that are working
in the room, so it's done by ear. Whereas in America, I think it's done
a little bit more technically by the book, and that creates a different
sound.
I find that I actually push myself a little more in English studios,
because the environments are a bit unnatural. One of my favorite rooms
to work in here was the old AIR studios. The control room had big floor-to-ceiling
windows overlooking Oxford Street. That was how the room was designed,
yet George Martin would sit there and get the most incredible sounding
things out of there, and I got really good results as well.
All of which proves that the sound doesn't come from the equipment,
but from the way you hear things in the room. The most important criteria,
more than anything outboard, desk [mixer] choice or anything, is how
you hear something coming through the speakers.
But will a number one British pop record and a number one American
pop record have qualitatively different sounds?
These days, it's really odd because chances are both of them were recorded
all over the place, the vocals were done on an ISDN line and they were
mixed by some guy in Sweden. That's another thing that's becoming great:
the ability to work on things in many places. As a result, the sound
of records has become more universal now.
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