Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Countdown to the Degree Program - A Pictorial


We're very excited for January 9, 2012, when we will welcome 9 students to The Recording Arts Center for a 10-month Associate Degree Program in Recording Arts! We'll be posting 1 photo per day to show you all what we're doing to get ready...follow us on Twitter at @TRACSanDiego to see the pics!

Monday, December 5, 2011

Pro Tools 10 classes start on January 7, 2012!


We're excited about all the new features included in PTX! Here are just a few of them...

• The option to use 32-bit floating point processing
• Multi-format audio and multi bit-rate audio in the same session
• Significantly improved audio cacheing via RAM - allows for record and playback from network drives, raids, and previously unsupported USB drives
• Realtime fades and the integration of stereo interleaved files
• Regions are now referred to as "clips" throughout the program
• Avid Channel Strip plug-in included on all Pro Tools X systems
• Dynamics and EQ processors from the renowned Euphonix System-5 Console
• Clip-based gain, up to 36db change per clip in the edit window
• Improvements in Audio Suite functionality (handles now included when processing and multiple Audio Suite plug-in windows open at a time)
• Built-in iTunes and Sound Cloud support

We've scheduled an accelerated session of Pro Tools training for the first of the year, starting with Pro Tools 101 on January 7 - 9. Click here to see the full schedule or here to register!

Thursday, October 27, 2011

4 Basic Tips For A Better Recording

Have the entire band tune with the same tuner
Tuners can vary in their accuracy, so having the entire band tune with one tuner is a great way to ensure A = A for everyone. A hand-held tuner is about $30 bucks, but in a pinch Pro Tools comes with “TL InTune”, a plug-in tuner that can suffice. Have your musicians tune every 30 minutes to be sure tracks stay consistent.

Tune the drums before recording
Drums can – and should – be tuned. It isn’t difficult to Google your drum kit model and find out the “default” note to tune each drum. Drum Tuners can cost as little as $60 bucks and can stop a $700 kit from sounding like a $200 one. Without a tuner, drums can be hand-tuned by ear and feeling the amount of tension around the circumference of the drumhead.

Record to a click track
A performance that’s very close to perfect can easily be edited to perfection with built-in Pro Tools editing power to snap the performance together. Beat Detective and/or Elastic Time can help maintain the groove of drums and align the beats with the click and tempo meter. Then Elastic Time can be used to warp the bass performance to the drums. Basic editing – simple copy and pasting or nudging – can always be used to ensure the entire band hits on a downbeat or finale of a track.

Use a DI with your guitar and bass
Some amps don’t translate well through any microphone. Recording through a DI allows you to mix amp modelers like Eleven or Chrome Tone with your amp signal to beef it up. This helps to minimize the bleed from other instruments or the buzz from a noisy amp.

Brandon Papsidero
Engineer, Studio West of San Diego
Instructor, "Signal Processing with Waves"

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Congratulations to Our First Avid Media Composer Certified User!

Michael Gervais, a TRAC student from Los Angeles, recently attended our Avid Media Composer Certification course. At the end of 5 intensive days he took the Certification Exam and passed it with flying colors! Congrats, Michael!

Monday, October 17, 2011

How to Clean Up Drum Recordings

This article outlines a few ways drum tracks can be cleaned up and better prepared for a mix.

Kick
Placing a gate on your “kick in” microphone (the mic inside the kick drum) is useful, but many times the snare still bleeds into the track. Gating the kick in track to open and close off a side chain input can fix this problem easily.



If you have a subkick track (using the Yamaha Subkick microphone), make a mono aux send from that track into in internal bus. If you don’t have a subkick track, duplicate your kick in track and create an aux send from that. Be sure that this track doesn’t contain any snare bleed using an EQ if needed.

On the original kick in track, use a C1 Gate plug-in, or another gate that has a sidechain option. Select the internal bus that correlates to the aux send previously made.


Now the kick in track will only open when the gate is triggered by the alternate track, and since that track has less snare bleed than the kick in track, the snare bleed no longer comes through the gate.

Toms
The toms are notoriously problematic when it comes to bleed from cymbals and snares. Using a gate with a sidechain can be helpful, but sometimes manually editing the track is the best option. Solo each track and gently create fade ins and fade outs around tom hits, making sure the transition between hits is natural. Any unnatural side effect from the editing should be avoided.


Cleaning up tom tracks will help give the cymbals (from the overhead and rooms) much better dimension and clarity. It will also allow for significant compression on the toms without changing the overall snare and cymbal levels in the mix.

Time-aligning tracks
When a drum is hit, the direct microphone picks up the signal first, and the overheads pick up the signal just 3 to 4 milliseconds afterward, since the sound takes longer to arrive.


For a mix with significant overhead level, nudging your snare and tom tracks just enough to align with the overhead signal might improve the sound of the mix, just by correcting small phase correlations. Zooming into the tracks can confirm the measurement in milliseconds.

You may want to try another stylistic technique, adjusting the timing of the room microphones for effect. How do they sound aligned directly with the overheads, versus 20 milliseconds later? Or 40?

Brandon Papsidero
Engineer, Studio West of San Diego
Instructor, "Signal Processing with Waves"

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

VENUE D-Show is in the house!


VENUE D-Show has arrived at TRAC!

VENUE 110V and 210V classes start on November 1st, 2011.

Mark and Gary are at Avid HQ in the Bay Area this week to pick up another console, the VENUE Profile, so we'll soon have two full VENUE systems here in San Diego for your hands-on instruction. Find out more about Venue classes at TRAC here.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Avid Media Composer and Pro Tools for Game Audio


Avid Media Composer - TRAC is now an official testing location

Jesse just finished up another session of Avid Media Composer, leading his students through exercises on capturing media, enhancing audio, creating motion effects and more. He was also able to administer the certification exam at the end of the course, since TRAC is now an authorized testing location (and, for a limited time, we can offer the exam at no extra charge!)

Pro Tools 130 - not just for Gamers anymore!

Anyone interested in improving their editing techniques in Pro Tools will benefit from this class. If you've taken Pro Tools classes with us in the past, you know that we run at a pretty fast pace to get through all the material covered in each book. While Pro Tools 130 does expose you to the workflows involved in producing audio elements for the video game environment, much of the class focuses on editing techniques. This makes it a perfect way to reinforce the Pro Tools editing skills you learned in 101, 110, and even 201.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

TRAC Alumni Do Full Live Record for Johannes Linstead

On June 22, TRAC alumni (and current Studio West interns) Hunter Levy, Henrique Landim, Joel De Witt and Alfonso Wong set up and ran a live sound session for spanish guitar virtuoso Johannes Linstead. The guys ran the FOH (front of house sound) and did a full live record of Johannes' show with Pro Tools HD. They took one Digi 192 that had 16 inputs and 16 outputs, 2 Digi pres (for a total of 16 pre amps), a 4-channel headphone amp (for monitoring), a few select mics from Studio West's mic locker, four DI (direct input) boxes for the guitars and bass and a Mac Pro Computer.

Here's what they had to say about the gig:

Recording live shows has an added edge to it because you can't afford to have anything go wrong during the record. There are no re-takes or punch-ins. You are also in an environment that can lend itself to surprises! For example, feeback in the house sound would mean you have feedback in your recording as well. In this case, we were recording a full band all standing within a few feet of each other, so mic placement was very important to reduce bleed from other instruments as much as possible. This record went very smoothly, and I think everyone had a lot of fun and worked really well together. -- Hunter Levy, TRAC alum and Studio West Intern Program Manager

For this live record we utilized a nice selection of mics from Studio West, including SM81s for cymbals, SM57s for snare and congas, a spaced pair of AKG 414s as drums/percussion overheads, a couple of KMS 105s as audience mics, a Sennheiser 421 for the bass and a SM58 for the vocals. We also utilized a couple of JDIs for the acoustic guitars and a Countryman DI to get a clean signal from the bass. All the microphones were plugged into a splitter, which sent the mic signal both to the live mixer and to Pro Tools. The live performance was recorded through a couple of Digi pres into a Pro Tools HD9 system. The Pro Tools HD rig (Digi pres, 192, Mac Pro, Headphone amp, etc.) was set up at one of the corners of the stage, behind black curtains that separated it from the backstage area, and was only illuminated by the computer screen and one blue lamp, so we dubbed this area "The Blue Room". After setting everything up and doing the mic and sound check we were able to press "record" and enjoy Johannes' amazing show. I was really impressed with the group's ability to tell the stories of the places they'd traveled through their music, making us feel like we were actually in those places as they were playing. All the band members were very nice to us and seemed pretty happy with the gig, not only because of the enthusiastic audience response but because of the sound quality, which made us proud of a job well done. It was a really enjoyable experience for me as a live music enthusiast and as an aspiring Recording Engineer! -- Henrique Landim, TRAC alum and current Studio West intern

I really enjoy live sound so it was a great experience to set up for the show as well as record it. The musicians were all very easy going and extremely talented so it was great working with them. Johannes was also kind enough to give each of us a signed copy of his CD. -- Joel De Witt, TRAC alum and current Studio West intern

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Congratulations to Our Newest Pro Tools 9 Post Production Experts!


Congratulations are in order for Martin Fitrzyk and Sal Agostino, our two most recent Pro Tools Expert Certification graduates. Both Sal and Martin completed the 310-level Post Certification in Pro Tools version 9.

(Pictured at right, L-R: Sal Agostino, TRAC Instructor Mark Kirchner, Martin Fitrzyk)

Sal is a long-time TRAC alum who started his classes with us back in August of 2007. He is the Media Studios Supervisor for audio and video at Sea World here in San Diego and he has been putting his Pro Tools chops to good use on new summer shows such as One Ocean, Believe, and Blue Horizon.

Martin is an independent sound designer, post production editor and production sound recordist based in Los Angels. Having composed music for years, Martin is no newbie to audio production. Recently, however, he's been using the skills acquired in his post certification training to land jobs in film and television commercial work.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

TRAC Goes Video

Mark, Gary and Jesse retuned from Avid HQ recently...a little tired, a little battle-worn, but all proudly waving their Media Composer Instructor certificates! Which means...TRAC will begin offering video editing classes in April 2011!


Avid Media Composer is the industry standard video editing application used in making Hollywood film and television shows..and now you can use it t home. If you've wanted to learn the art of video editing, this comprehensive 5 day class covers all the fundamentals. And as a registered TRAC student you can purchase a full-featured copy Avid Media Composer software for $295!

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Pics and Tunes from Audio Recording Techniques



For the last round of Audio Recording Techniques we recruited the talent of TRAC Alum Sarah Dorrian, who sang and played guitar as students and interns from Studio West learned about micing, routing, patching and more. Listen to her track here. Next, they were joined by our "house band" (Peter Dyson on drums, Henrique Landim on bass, Hunter Levy on guitar and vox) who covered The Undertones' "Teenage Kicks". Listen.

Monday, January 17, 2011

News from NAMM


Peter and Mark visited NAMM yesterday expecting smaller crowds...only to find the place was still packed! Mark took a beta version of Avid's new User Certification Exam and got through the 100 questions in 30 minutes (the bar has been set!). Avid's plan is to redesign the certification process so both the video and audio sides of the house follow the same rules...we'll be posting news here and on the site about the new criteria and new levels of certification, so stay tuned!