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It's a measure of just how far Aerosmith has left behind its image as
’70s bad boys that they were asked to be part of this year's Super
Bowl half-time festivities, and that they staged an abbreviated Battle
of the Bands there with none other than squeaky clean teen icons ’N
Sync, and romped around with the likes of Britney Spears, Mary J. Blige
and Nelly. There was Steven Tyler, still the energetic, rubber- lipped
dynamo, dragging his trusty microphone stand around the stage with the
same enthusiasm he had 25 years ago, shadowed step for step by the ever-dependable,
guitar-slinger Joe Perry, who tossed off crunching power chords with effortless
grace. Wait a second - what year is this? At this point, Aerosmith is
more than just a band- they're an American institution. It is, as Jerry
Garcia once said of the Grateful Dead, “like the town whore that's
finally become respectable.”
This is a group that understands its fans and its legacy, that never strays
too far from what's expected of them, yet has managed to update its sound
in subtle ways so they always seem current. All the critics' “dinosaur”
jokes bounce off of them like bullets fired at Godzilla, because, year
after year, Aerosmith delivers- on the road and in the studio. They love
being Aerosmith - they wave that freak flag high - and they're seriously
dedicated to keeping the experience fresh for themselves and their legions
of fans. And part of doing that is taking the time to make albums they're
proud of. Their latest is called Just Push Play, and like most of the
Aerosmith records that preceded it, it offers up a blend of testosterone-fueled
hard rock songs, gripping power ballads and grandiose productions that
straddle several different moods at once. There are a couple of tunes
with sweeping strings, but there are also ones with loops and other modern
touches. Say what you will about them; they are not complacently standing
still.
Just Push Play is the first Aerosmith album to be recorded almost entirely
in home studios - Joe Perry's fabulously well-equipped basement, known
as The Boneyard, and Steven Tyler's nearby barn studio, The Bryer Patch.
It is also the first Aerosmith CD to use Pro Tools as the sole multitrack
recording medium. The band didn't set out to work this way when they began
pre-production in the fall of 1999 - they had always worked well in conventional
top-level studios. But as the project evolved over time, Perry, Tyler
and their outside producer cohorts, Marti Frederiksen and long-time ally
Mark Hudson, came to love the comfort and convenience of working at home,
and the flexibility and dependability of hard disk recording. That more
and more top-level bands are working this way is sobering news for professional
recording studios, but equipment manufacturers and dealers should be doing
cartwheels - these “home studios” are stacked floor to ceiling
with the latest gear, as well as fine vintage pieces.
“I've had a studio since I moved into this house 11 years ago,”
says Perry, who, like the others bandmembers, lives in the Boston area.
“As with most project studios, it started off as a hobby years ago,
with a cassette. In the ’70s, I was the only one in the band that
had a studio. Then I got an AudioTronics board and a Scully 1-inch machine
and an 8-track. Later, I made the jump to an Allen & Heath 24-bus
and an Otari 24-track. My main motivation through the years, aside from
having a place where we could do demos, was to have a place where I could
fly guitar solos over from. I always wanted to make sure that it would
sound as good as it could sound, and it would be technically strong enough
to use - whether it was guitar or Steven's vocal. So I worked really closely
with Perry Margouleff to build the studio here. It's been in three different
parts of my basement. I got rid of the Allen & Heath, and I found
this old Neve 8068 board at WGBH [in Boston] and Perry [Margouleff] reworked
it from the ground up and made this 8-bus board into a 32. George Augspurger
came down and tuned the room. It got to where the demos we were working
on here started sounding so good that finally we just said, ‘Let's
do it here.’”
The band's previous CD, Nine Lives (released in 1997) was essentially
cut twice — once at Criteria in Miami using ADATs and then re-recorded
at Avatar in New York on conventional multitrack. The band had no interest
in repeating that experience, though when writing sessions for the new
record began, there was no real plan in place.
“We didn't really have any regular demos for this record,”
Perry says. “We were writing as we went along; the four of us -
me and Steven and Marti Frederiksen and Mark Hudson. We might start with
a drum loop or a rhythm track in Pro Tools, or on other songs we'd start
with acoustic guitars. Probably half the songs were written on acoustic
guitars, and we'd track with a loop or whatever. Then we'd put a rough
drum track on here at my studio, just to get a vibe. And then from there
we'd start layering. So the songs had a cohesiveness and a vibe to them
at the end of the day.”
“What we really did was take our demos and turn them into the record,”
adds Frederiksen, who had songwriting but no production credit on Nine
Lives. “When we approached each song, it was like it was going to
be on the finished record. With that in mind, we had the attitude that
we were actually doing the record while we were writing, and we weren't
going to redo everything later.” Frederiksen says that when they
were writing songs, “we were making sure that we were covering all
the bases - some rock songs, some pop songs. I think we really nailed
it this time.” Perry says that one of the things he likes about
Frederiksen is that the drummer/guitarist/vocalist brings a younger and
hipper attitude to his writing - “He's from the Pro Tools generation,”
Perry jokes - but Frederiksen is quick to point out, “I didn't want
to make them something they're not. I wanted to incorporate a fresh vibe
for them, not change what they are.”
Once the decision was made to keep building from the demos, recording
everything in Pro Tools and working primarily at The Boneyard and The
Bryer Patch, a Pro Tools engineer named Richard Chycki, who had worked
with Frederiksen on a Jeff Healey album project in Canada, was brought
onto the recording team, which included Perry's in-house engineer Paul
Caruso, who has been with him for two-and-a-half years, and Paul Santo,
who runs Tyler's studio.
“I think there's always been a little stigma about doing a home
studio record,” Chycki says. “I think it brings to mind an
image of some guy in a dank, dark basement huddled over a 4-track with
some ‘mudtone’ speakers, and all that. This is not like that.
This place is obscene. There's just tons and tons of equipment at our
disposal. Our slogan was ‘more!’” he laughs. “We
had five or six Pro Tools systems, 160 gigs of hard drive space. Both
Joe's and Steven's studios are amazing.”
Though he is an engineer and mixer who has unabashedly embraced Pro Tools,
Chycki is well aware that until recently there has been resistance to
the technology in some engineering circles. That attitude, he says, seems
to be changing. “I think there were a lot of people who didn't like
Pro Tools just because it's computer-based and was therefore intangible
in some way to people used to working with recorders, where you'd see
reels spinning and you'd have actual tape. But when they see how it actually
is to work with and they heard the end result, particularly with the best
systems now…well, it's different than it was just a couple of years
ago. Pro Tools has really come into its own.”
“The danger in Pro Tools,” Perry adds, “is things not
being wide enough and getting enough air. So you need to get someone in
there who knows how to work against those things. Richard's using some
of the plug-ins, and he's using old LA-2As on other things. I think everything
sounds really, really good.”
“At The Boneyard, we've got a desk full of Neve 1073s [preamps],
and we also have some Focusrite ISA 110s and a great microphone collection,”
Paul Caruso notes, “so when you combine those with the Pro Tools,
it's going to sound good. The pressure is always on to have a good chain
to whatever recorder you're using, and when it comes down to it, that's
really what Pro Tools is, a recorder that also happens to have a lot of
other features. The editing, DSP, recalling of mixes and all the plug-ins
made it an easy choice for us.”
“I have a beautiful, totally reworked Studer 800 Mark 3 that's just
sitting over here in the corner,” Perry says. “We never used
it. We didn't need to.”
Unlike many other Aerosmith albums where the band attempted to lay down
live rhythm tracks as a group and then added vocals and solos later, on
this project the drums and bass were the last things recorded and nearly
every part was added separately, with each player reacting individually
to what had already been put down in Pro Tools by the others. So, in effect,
they built the master take of each song part by part in Pro Tools, and
there is no band performance of any song.
“On the one-hand, some people might be disappointed to hear that
the whole band didn't sit in a room and play it all together like a live
track,” Perry comments. “But that's such an impractical way
to do things, because, in my experience, 90 percent of the time you go
in and you do that and then you end up replacing the bass, replacing the
rhythm guitars, and you're just trying to get a good drum track. When
you think about it, what better way for the drummer to play to a song
than to hear a song that's got guitars that are keepers and vocals that
are keepers? It's like playing along with the band live, for real.”
Drummer Joey Kramer and bassist Tom Hamilton had a wait of several months
before their contributions were added to the songs; first, Perry, rhythm
guitarist Brad Whitford and Tyler methodically laid in their parts. Perry
prides himself on coming up with different guitar textures from song to
song, and this album was no exception. “It might have even more
[different guitars] on it than usual, because we did them at The Boneyard,”
he notes. “There are acoustic guitars on a lot of songs. For electric,
I might go for a clean Tele into a Twin kind of sound or a highly overdriven
rock thing. Since we record here, I don't have to cart my entire collection
around, which I never do anyway. You usually just pick a few you know
you're going to use. But here I have every guitar that I would ever want,
and some that I don't, down here at our disposal. There are probably about
50 guitars out of the cases at any given time, and a lot of other things
that have strings on 'em. I've got a Vox mandoguitar and a pedal steel
and all sorts of amps. I'm a big Combo fan — I rarely use a 4*12.
Maybe if we need something big and crunchy, but generally I find the smaller
the amp, the easier it is to control and the sound is sometimes denser.
A Royer [mic] can really handle high SPL, too.”
“We'll switch around a lot between guitars and amps,” adds
Caruso. “He'll get out the Les Paul and put that through one amp,
grab the Rick and the AC-30 and put that part on over here.” Caruso
says he and Perry also experiment with different mics on the amps, but
on this project, “what I used a lot was a Royer R-121 ribbon mic,
which was a microphone that Fletcher [of Mercenary Audio] suggested. Joe
and I both really, really liked it a lot; it became my favorite guitar
mic. When we track guitars here, it's high SPL,” he says with a
chuckle. “The Royer can really handle high SPL; it gave it a wonderful
quality.”
Adds Richard Chycki, “Being a guitar player myself, I love to record
guitar and lots of it! Guitar setups varied from an organic single SM57
or Royer dead center cone on a combo, to an intricate array of amps, cabinets
and mics with a matrix of Neumann KM86s, 87s, Royer R-121s, Shure SM57s,
Sennheiser 421s and AKG D112s. I favor Neve mic preamps, or Focusrite
ISAs occasionally, fed through a Pultec EQP-1AS - ‘hi end shelf’
mode on the 1AS model is awesome - with a bit of LA-2A or [Empirical Labs]
Distressor, application dependent. I also used various combinations of
Neumann KM84s and AKG 414 TLIIs or C-12s for acoustic guitars, often recording
the acoustics in true stereo rather than double-tracking for a huge, but
realistic, sonic image from the instrument.”
And though Perry mostly used amps from his extensive collection, Chycki
also employed an Amp Farm plug-in here and there. “I'd say that's
my current favorite plug-in,” he notes, “though I'm really
looking forward to hearing the Fairchild Bomb Factory and the Pultec Bomb
Factory. But the Amp Farm sounds really good - it's got an AC-30 in there,
Twins…”
Tyler tracked many of his vocal parts at The Bryer Patch, which is equipped
with Focusrite and Neve mic pre's interfaced to his Pro Tools system.
“Some of Steven's earliest vocals were done with various Audio-Technica
mics,” Caruso says. “We tried a Shure SM7 for a little while
[as well as a Neumann M149], but we ended up doing a lot of work with
a C-12; that was probably used more than any other mic for vocals.”
“The C-12 is one of my all-time favorite vocal mics, as it is for
Marti,” notes Chycki. “It complemented Steven's vocal texture
perfectly. I also had both Joe and Steven's studios outfitted with identical
equipment chains for vocals, so the recording remained consistent no matter
where the recording was done.
When it finally came time to record the drums, they went out to Longview
Farm, a highly regarded studio in rural Brookfield, Mass., where the band
had worked before. “It's a really cool vibe and a big room and a
Neve to track to,” Caruso says. “We wanted to get a drum sound
that had a lot of ambience.” The team bypassed the studio's tape
multitrack tape recorders in favor of Pro Tools. Then Tom Hamilton's bass
part was interwoven with what was in essence a finished track.
After a couple of large string sessions at Ocean Way and the Village Recorder
in Los Angeles with noted arranger David Campbell, a small-group string
session at Sound Techniques in Boston, Just Push Play was ready to be
mixed. Again, Perry and Tyler decided to stick close to home: “What
happened was I bought my neighbor's house,” Perry says with a laugh.
“It's one of those great old New England clapboard houses; parts
of it date back to the 1680s. Around the same time that happened, we were
talking to Mike Shipley about mixing the record, and he said, ‘You
know, a couple of times what I've done with Mutt Lange is I've set up
an SSL in a house, and we've had great success.’ So that's what
we did. We did some work in the house, shoring up the floors and doing
some acoustical work and then bringing in an SSL 9000.” [See sidebar
for more on this process.
At the Mix House, as it was dubbed, Shipley mixed the CD from the Pro
Tools tracks - which, in the case of a couple of songs that featured strings,
numbered over a hundred. “The most we had was 102, with an orchestra,
a full band and eight vocal tracks, all of which are used at different
points in the song,” Perry says. “But really, a lot of the
decisions were made as we recorded, as opposed to recording everything
and then trying to sort it out at the other end. We're big believers in
walking out of the room with a rough mix that sounds as close to being
done as you can get. If there's anything you can call a demo, it's those
early, rough mixes.”
“The good thing about Pro Tools,” Chycki comments, “is
you're always in a mix of some sort. We would sit down and premix the
material to some degree, because we were deciding if we wanted something
to be EQ'd drastically -like if we wanted a harsh radio tone on the vocal
or something, we would use a plug-in for that and then Shipley would listen
to that and decide if it would fit into the mix as is, or if not, he'd
create something to his own taste.” Shipley monitored the mixes
on KRK E8s and Yamaha NS-10s. Peppered among the nine racks of outboard
equipment were such pieces as a Fairchild limiter, UREI 1176, LA-3As,
LA-2As, Roland's Dimension D, SPX 90 and EMT plate reverbs, and many Distressors.
Little mix tweaks were still being made by Shipley back at the Mix House
when the band went down to Tampa for their Super Bowl appearance the last
weekend in January, but for all intents and purposes, the record was finished,
and all that remained was returning the rented equipment and restoring
the building to (most of) its former glory. The first single, “Jaded,”
was already in radio programmers' hands and shooting up the airplay charts.
“I don't think the record company thought we were going to give
them a record for two years,” Perry says. “When we first went
to them and said we wanted to produce it ourselves and we wanted to record
it in our own studios, they probably thought, ‘Let them have their
fun. They'll get tired of doing this, and then we'll bring in the big
gun.’ I think we shocked them last summer when we played the first
eight tracks. Then it became, ‘Let's talk about album art.’
With another solid CD under their belts - Perry says the song he's proudest
of is “Avant Garden,” one of the tunes with strings on it
- the band was starting to think about hitting the road once again. That
will involve a little more work than usual: “We have to go in and
learn the songs in a way,” Perry says, “since we've never
really played them in their finished form as a group. Frankly, I'm dreading
having to go back and learn some of the solos. Some of these solos were
done at two in the morning! I always have this attitude [when I'm recording]
that ‘I'm just filling the space. I'll redo it when I'm more together,
or tomorrow or whatever.’ And then, inevitably, that turns out to
be the best solo. I never went back and redid them. It was that way on
the whole record. The performances were really strong; we didn't redo
much at all. A lot of it, I think, is because we had so much freedom in
the way we worked; there wasn't that feeling of pressure every second
that you've gotta nail it right away.”
And though working at home allowed them to be more leisurely in certain
ways, they rarely slacked off. This is a band famous for its work ethic,
at least in recent years. Indeed, Caruso notes, “They love being
in the studio; particularly Joe. It's part of what they do, and they take
it seriously and they're really great at it.”
Adds Richard Chycki, “I didn't know them before this project, but
I can say they are, without a doubt, the hardest working band that I've
worked with to date. They really want to do what they do. They really
like to record. We'll be in the studio for 14 hours, and we'll all have
a pale skin tone and everything, and Joe will come in at the end of the
night and want to record some more stuff -some ideas that he has - and
he'll keep going. He just loves what he does; they all do.”
Blair Jackson is Mix's executive editor.© 2002, PRIMEDIA Business
Magazines & Media Inc. All rights reserved. This article is protected
by United States copyright and other intellectual property laws and may
not be reproduced, rewritten, distributed, redisseminated, transmitted,
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without the prior written permission of PRIMEDIA Business Magazines &
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