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Surrounded
By Drums
Order number 2162
Price/Order
Summary
Not only for fans of the world-class drummers Simon Phillips, Kenny Aronoff,
Dennis Chambers, and Mel Gaynor, but for everybody who is interested in
5.1 surround recording and mixing, SPLs surrounded by drums"
DVD is a special delicacy.
The DVD offers the unique hearing experience to listen to the drum legends
from their perspective. At the same time the DVD gives an insight into
the production of the first 5.1 drum sample library which has been recorded
using SPLs surround recording system Atmos
5.1.
The DVD-Video
is ideally suited to get an impression of the latest technologies and
implementations of up-to-date multi channel productions. SPL deliberately
had chosen to record drums, because the belong to the most difficult recordings
in modern music while at the time offering one of the most spectacular
hearing sensation in surround.
The DVD-Video
offers both Dolby Digital and DTS audio formats as well as stereo downmixes.

Price/Order
The retail price of "surrounded by drums" is USD 30.- (plus
shipping). The DVD can be ordered directly from SPL USA. Please
click here to order via E-Mail.
Content
of "surrounded by drums"
1. SOLOS
Each drummer performs two solos. The surround mix is recorded from the
drummers position sitting behind the drum kit whereas the stereo
downmix gives the traditional hearing position standing in front of the
drum kit.
2. INTERVIEWS
Each drummer talks about his expectations, experiences and cognitions
about surround sound.
3. MAKING
OF
The Making Of is a 15 minute video presenting the studio, the people involved
in the project, the recording environment and the realisation of the first
5.1 sample session for drums.
4. AUDIO
SETUP
Selection between DTS and Dolby Digital playback formats.
5. MIKING
SETUP
Description of the drum kits and the microphone set-up.
6. CREDITS

Fade
In
Surround-Sound will be tomorrows dominant playback format not only
for movies, but also for music. It will soon be irrelevant which audio
compression (AC3 or DTS) or which data format (DSD = SACD or PCM = DVD
Video/Audio) will be the flavour of the month, because the
capacity of a standard CD/DVD size disks will soon be high enough to carry
uncompressed multi channel audio and video. The only relevant questions
are: How do I record instruments and vocals in surround to make good musical
sense? How dramatic and musically relevant is the difference between recording
surround and mixing surround?
Our experiences
in surround recording with the Atmos 5.1 system are, that the results
of a true surround recording are much more pleasant and sensible than
a surround mix that deals with mono and stereo recordings/samples panned
on a surround matrix. All comparisons have shown that the true room/surround
impression can not be produced artificially. The sound sticks
in the speakers and the speakers can be localised. Both are pretty negative
characteristics for a surround mix. A further reason is that that in an
artificial surround mix the engineer has to position every instrument
in the surround listening field. That is difficult. The only means is
the joystick. But you only control levels and that is insufficient to
create the phase in relation to the other instruments. Also it is impossible
to record differences in height artificially. Both aspects are picked
up by the Atmos 5.1 system.
When recording surround with Atmos 5.1, you instantly get the audio content
for each speaker with the correct phase relation creating the sound atmosphere
of being there.
The
idea for surrounded by drums
Chris Pfannschmidt, enjoying a very good reputation as producer of various
CD-ROM titles such as Real Mega Drums and Real Mega
Rhythm and programmer for Clavias DDrum 4 & 5, Steinbergs LM
4 and bands like Simple Minds had a clear vision of tomorrows recording
technique for drums. It is obvious to him that a drum kit needs to be
recorded in 5.1 whereas e-drum kits should deliver 5.1 samples.
The producer has the option between two perspectives of the drums in the
mix. The more traditional view of a listener standing in front of the
kit (with the hi-hat coming from the right) is perspective number one
whereas the more spectacular position would be the drummers seat
with the drum kit folding around the listener (the hi-hat will than appear
on the left).
Old habits die hard, they say. Thus it might take a while
until we hear productions with the drums wrapping around.
We have been
excited to go that route with Chris. Recording drums surely is one of
the most difficult tasks of sound recording. But we knew that there is
a team behind Chris that has enough knowledge to succeed and to show the
potential of surround sound for music. For the Atmos 5.1 system this was
a perfect opportunity to produce spectacular and all new hearing impressions.

The
hearing perspective
We decided to opt for the drummers perspective for the solos on
the DVD and for surround-drum-loops & grooves ROM production for two
reasons. First, it is possible to create the traditional in-front-of-the-kit
perspective by panning the rear speakers to the front and flipping the
L/R channels to R/L. The other way around is not possible. You cannot
create a wrapping surround sound when the drum kit is recorded in the
in-front-of-the-kit perspective. Second, the drummers havent
heard themselves from their own perspective in the studio yet. We were
very anxious about hearing their comments, because they are the only ones
to tell whether we truely catched the surrounding sound of the drum kit
or not.

The
role of video
The production and release of a DVD for demonstration purposes and as
a teaser for the upcoming sample ROMs was not decided upon right from
the start. While recording we just walked around and filmed with the DV
camcorder. Then we thought that we are making a little piece of history,
because it was the first time ever that such brilliant drummers are recording
a surround sample session. We thought we just document it with the means
at hand. So we put the camera on a stand, pressed Rec and
left the hall, so that Simon, Mel, Kenny and Dennis could fully concentrate
on their solos. Walking cameramen would have been too disturbing.
The full focus for everyone in this project was the audio part.
So, if you are looking for a DVD with drum worshops and clinics you should
not buy this DVD. If you are seriously interested in the capabilities
of surround sound and you are looking for a reference in 5.1 drum recordings,
surrounded by drums is the must have DVD.
The
musicians
With Simon Phillips, Kenny Aronoff, Dennis Chambers and Mel Gaynor, Chris
Pfannschmidt managed to engage four world-class drummers. After month
of endless email traffic and telephone conversations a slot for the sessions
between November 2000 and February 2001 was found.

Simon
Phillips
Simon Phillips has not yet played on any sampling project. The mentioning
of 5.1 triggered his interest, as he his familar with the technical aspects
through his work as engineer and producer.
Simon's drum tech Iain Robbo Robertsen brought the kit from
England in the truck. We I met him at the studio on the day of the built-up
we started to talk about the upcoming days and speculated what the session
may bring. Iain said: If Simon positively comments his sound, it
would be the first time years. I had to swallow hard. What Simon
said after the session can be heard on the DVD.
Click here for all about Simon Phillips: www.simon-phillips.com
Kenny
Aronoff
Kenny Aronoff is certainly one of the most recorded drummers of the past
decade. His straight style is ideal for sampling. Probably his sounds
will be the mostly used samples because they are applicable for such a
wide range of music.
The session was him was minted stiffness from laughter. He is such a funny
character and a precision instrument with groove. Maybe quite normal for
somebody who claims to be from Mars.
Kennys experiences can be found on the DVD. Visit Kennys website
at: www.kennyaronoff.com
Dennis Chambers
Dennis was the opening act of the recording sessions and according
to Murphys law we had a bad start. The guy from the limo service
couldnt spot him on the airport for hours. The driver didnt
know anything about a drum kit and luggage and so forth. Not really in
the best temper, Dennis finally arrived at the studio.
But all anger was forgotten after we heard the first test recordings.
Dennis was a newcomer to sampling as well. He didnt know how hard
sampling sessions actually are and that you have to concentrate for hours
and hours. After the session he said: I have a whole new respect
for the guys doing sampling.
To me Dennis is one of the most talented drummers. He is extremely fast,
but everything looks so easy. Who if not Simon could judge upon Dennis.
When I met Simon 9 month later at Galaxy, I presented the master copy
DVD to him. He immediately wanted to see Dennis play his solos. His comment:
Bastard.
Dennis website: www.dennischambers.com

Mel Gaynor
Mel and Chris are friends for many years. Being famous as the drummer
of Simple Minds, he had a major influence on the rock/pop drum sound of
the 80ies and 90ies. Mel Gaynor is also a fantastic studio drummer, producer
and a talented vocalist.
The
Studio
Doing a session with four elite musicians we had to find a studio that
matches their standard. Pretty soon we decided to record and mix at Galaxy
Studios, Mol, Belgium. The phenomenal acoustics in the studio, especially
in the great Galaxy Hall, represented the best possible conditions. The
Galaxy Hall is 330 qm with a height of 8m offering a flutter-free reverberation
between 1,6 and 2,6 seconds.
Everything about the incredible Galaxy studio complex including virtual
tours can be found under www.galaxy.be

The
Recording Equipment
All sessions were recorded with AMS Neve Capricorn console with CXS Surround
Panel on ProTools 24 and Akai DR 16 Pro. Monitors were Genelec 1035B for
the front and Genelec 1038A for the surround speakers.
Pre Amps
and Channel Strips:
2x SPL GoldMike
5x SPL Channel One
1x Focusrite Red
Processing:
1x Tube Tech compressor
1x Summit Audio compressor
1x Empirical Labs Disstresser
1x SPL Kultube compressor
3x TC electronic M6000
1x SPL Tube Vitalizer
2x SPL Stereo Vitalizer
MK2-T
3x SPL Qure Parametric
Equalizer
3x SPL Transient
Designer
Did we already mention that we used the SPL
Atmos 5.1 for the surround mikings?

The
Recording Crew
Chris,
Iain, Simon and Uli; in front Bram
Produced by Chris Pfannschmidt
Recorded and mixed by Uli Baronowski
Assitant: Bram Poelmans
The
Microphone Set-Ups
Simon
Phillips
Bassdrums (24"):
Shure Beta 52 (innen)
Neumann U87 (außen)
Bassdrum (18"):
Shure Beta 52 (innen)
Neumann TLM 170 (außen)
Snaredrum 1 (Gladiator):
Shure SM57 (top)
AKG C414 (bottom)
Snaredrum 2 (Pageant):Shure SM 98
Piccolo-Snaredrum:Shure SM 98
Toms:6x Shure SM98
Gong-Tom:Neumann U87
Octabans:4x Shure SM57
Hi-Hats:Shure SM81,B&K 4011
Overheads:2x Neumann U 67
Room:SPL Atmos 5.1/Brauner ASM-5

Kenny
Aronoff
Bassdrum:
Sennheiser MD 421
Shure 91A PZM
Neumann TLM 170
Snaredrums:
Shure SM 57 (Top)
AKG 414 (Bottom)
Tom 1:Neumann KM84
Tom 2:Neumann KM84
Tom 3:Neumann KM84
Tom 4:Neumann KM84
Hi-Hat 1:B&K 4011
Hi-Hat 2:B&K 4011
Ride-Cymbal:Neumann KM 184
Overheads:2x Neumann U 67
Room:
Front:2x Neumann U87
Back:2x Neumann U87
SPL Atmos 5.1/Brauner ASM-5
Mel Gaynor
Bassdrum:
AKG D 12
Shure 91A PZM
Neumann TLM 170
Snaredrum 1:
Shure SM 57 (Top)
AKG 414 (Bottom)
Snaredrum 2:Shure SM 57 (Top)
Tom 1:Neumann KM 84
Tom 2:Neumann KM 84
Tom 3:Neumann U 87
Floor-Tom 1:Neumann U 87
Floor-Tom 2:Neumann U 87
Hi-Hat:B&K 4011
Ride Cymbal:B&K 4011
Overheads:2 x Neumann U 67
Room:
Front:2x AKG 414
Back:2 x Neumann U 87
SPL Atmos 5.1/Brauner ASM-5

Dennis
Chambers
Bassdrum:
Sennheiser MD 421
Neumann TLM 170
Shure PZM 91A
Snaredrum:
AKG 414 (top)
AKG 414 (bottom)
Toms:3x Neumann KM 84
Floor-Tom 1:Neumann KM 84
Floor-Tom 2 und 3:2x Neumann U 87
Hi-Hat:B&K 4011
Ride-Cymbal:Neumann KM 184
Overheads:2x Neumann U 67
Room:
Front:2x AKG 414
Back:2x Neumann U 87
SPL Atmos 5.1/Brauner ASM-5
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