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by cenafria_Archive
AudioLovah wrote:cenafria wrote:I like to use our live room as an echo chamber (when mixing). It's aproximately 55m2 and 6m high. The top half of the room has quite a reverb tail. It sounds nice (very live, not too bright). Ideally, I set up two speakers and two spaced omnis about four or five meters from the speakers. I like to swap the LR on the returns from the sends. With a little predelay from a copicat or echoplex I preffer it to the emt 140 or bx20.Uhm... Here's a picture of the room:I concur! That is a pretty spectacular photograph. Very nice for a living room in my personal opinion; my home is itty-bitty. Yes, I know that I'm posting in an older thread, but I was looking up info on echo chambers, soundproof rooms, etc. -- and this is what I just so happened to stumble upon. . . and I thought I'd comment. =P Besides, I'm wanting to do some construction on my home to create a small recording studio -- something that could accommodate sound curtains, among miscellaneous audio equipment. Thought the people on this forum could provide some good advice. =)The atmosphere kind of reminds me of a small gymnasium. As a kid, I remember the sound in those school gyms having a particularly great echo. Obviously, certain room obstructions would alter the sound, but you get the idea. Was that room custom built or altered to have a particular "sound?" I'm pretty intrigued. Peace, everyone! Hi!I'm glad you like the room. It's very comfortable to record in. Bands feel at ease from the first hour. My idea when building the studio was to have a medium/large recording room with good acoustics and natural reverberation that would compliment drums, horn sections, strings, vocals... (Well, everything, I guess!). My experience recording in Spanish indie/budget studios had been very frustrating (specially with drums). Welsh recording engineer Huw Price exposed me to the importance of great rooms (and a lot more!) . His explanations really hit home when I heard a vintage gretsch drum kit being played in a recording studio called Kirios outside Madrid (Kirios had an orchestral sized room with another adjoining live room and a control room built by Eastlake in the late seventies, early eighties. The main live room was built in the sixties. The control room had a lovely vintage Neve. Couldn't find any pictures that did justice to that beautiful recording room...). Brazil was built entirely from scartch inside an industrial unit/ warehouse type space by Stephen Pickford aka Fritz from eHz. I had a basic layout idea (big live room downstairs, control room upstairs) and knew that I wanted the recording room to sound live but still be able to record an entire band by putting down rugs and placing panels in strategic places. Fritz built a beautiful sounding studio. Years later I brought him back to install the Westlake speakers in the control room and turn a booth into a dead room, a way of working (live room and dead room combination) that I was first made aware of through this wonderful web page. I have found that this set up is ideal for many recording situations. It has changed my life really. We also have a kitchen/stairwell that we use as a second chamber when mixing (or third recording room). It has even longer decay than the live room and can sound darker when mic'd with m130s. A lot of the time it's a self powered floor monitor at the bottom with the beyers in Blumlein configuration at the top of the stairs. I always use tape predelay when I can. A Memory Man pedal can sound great as well!