NEW FORMAT TRACKS CLASSIC SOUND
Yamaha 02R96 Captures Jazz Vocalist Kevin Mahogany
BUENA PARK, CA (March 28, 2003)Vocalist Kevin
Mahogany combines the best of traditional jazz and modern
R&B styles. With successful albums on the Enja and Warner
Brothers labels, the singer maintains a busy schedule of recording
and touring while teaching at Boston's Berklee
College of Music. Mahogany honed his craft on the Kansas City
scene, and stays true to those roots with frequent appearances
at local venues.
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The
"jewel" of Kansas City's 18th & Vine historic
district.
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Recently, Mahogany appeared in "Jammin'
at the Gem," part of the regular season at Kansas City's
historic Gem Theater Cultural & Performing Arts Center, with
a backing combo that included Phil Upchurch on guitar, Red Holloway
on sax, Grady Tate on drums and Norman Simmons on piano. To capture
the event for a possible live album project, Mahogany enlisted
the help of longtime friend and engineer Doug Walker, vice president
of dBVisionWorks
of Overland Park, KS, a company which has a division specializing
in custom recording and postproduction.
"Kevin called and asked me to record the show,
since he had some pretty strong players with him," explains
Walker. "Since this was to be an intimate setting, we agreed
that we should really capture that atmosphere, so I chose a new
Yamaha 02R96
for the job. I've been an 02R user for a number of years, and
always had consistent, clean recordings. That's particularly important
when recording jazzthat is, no coloration, and allowing
the performances to really speak for themselves. Sonically, the
Gem is pretty live, but not overbearing."
Originally called the Star, the Gem
Theater opened in 1912 and closed in the 1960's. Its 18th
and Vine street address had been the center for the city's African-American
business community and the spot where blacks and whites gathered
to hear jazzone of KC's best known contributions to America's
heritage (second perhaps only to big steaks). In 1995, a massive
renovation project saw the theater reopen as The Gem Theater Cultural
& Performing Arts Center. The 20,000 square-foot, 500-seat
venue now shares the famous intersection with the Kansas City
Jazz Museum, Visitors' Center and Negro Leagues Baseball Museum.
"There's a lot of detail in the room,
so I could get the mix right fairly up front," Walker notes.
"We didn't have time to do a big sound check, but I
had been able to set up things prior to the gig, particularly
the input and output patching, which was a plus. I didn't
have a manual, but I was an expert in a few days. The assignable
function buttons, the ability to quickly get to areas are real
innovations."
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Engineer
Doug Walker tracks Kevin Mahogany and band at the Yamaha
02R96
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"Another good thing was that I got to record
in what resembled an iso booth," he continues, "almost
like having my own control room. The room had been the original
house mix position, but since it was all behind glass, that board
had been moved out into the house. I dropped my own snake and
plugged into a 24-channel splitter which came from the house,
and listened through a pair of KRK V6 reference monitors."
Walker's gear for the tracking included an Apple
MAC G4 laptop running LOGIC Audio Platinum, a pair of MOTU 896
Interfaces and FireWire drive, several hard disk recorders, CD
Burner and DAT.
"Having read the reviews on the 02R96, I knew
it was possible to run several redundant recordings," he
says. "Since the console allowed me to assign outputs and
each one of the slots to the direct outs, buss outs and the aux
outs, each machine could receive independent sends. If one went
down, we weren't dependent on signal running through it to another
machine. I was also able to set up different levels, and since
each input and output patch has a library of its own, I could
visualize being able to recall any of those patches and assign
them to any of the scene memories without having to reset.
"I've always liked the absence of floor noise
in the 02R products," he adds, "but the 96k version
has things I never thought oflike being able to patch in
the insert, being able to utilize the insert to patch in a preamp
or an outboard effect, and not only have that apply to that specific
channel, but be able to use that input and output patching to
route it to another channel or directly to an output. The mic
pres are top quality; we had a $4,000 outboard 2-channel preamp
for comparison, and found that the 02R96 had as much transparency
and less coloration.
"We decided to record in 24-48, since this
concert may be part of a live CD, and we weren't sure what
facility would receive it after the recording. I also did a 2-track
mix off of the board so it could be previewed, and used the onboard
effects of the 02R96. Having an analog feel to the EQ section
made things much faster, plus having potentiometers for the gate
and compressor, and being able to run them simultaneously on the
same channel is great. Having 24-bit depth has really increased
the dynamic range, and that's valuable in a jazz setting
where the music goes from pianissimo to double forte.
"Our mics included Sennheiser KM84s, Audio
Technica 4040s and 4050s EV RE20s and Crowns for a total of around
16 channels. The musicians sat close to each other, even though
the stage is huge. They didn't spread out because they're
accustomed to a semi-circle eye contact-type setting. However,
there was very little bleed. Everything had a lot of clarity."
Walker took the rough tracks and the 02R96 back
to his facility, where he is currently doing mixes. "I'm
getting a feel for the automation," he notes, "and the
dithering on the digital I/O side. My Fostex is a 16-bit machine,
and the other pieces are 24-bit, but I was able to use a single
slot and assign it to a 16-bit dithering, leaving everything else
at 24, so there were no word clock problems. I'm working
from the LOGIC audio files (which are 24-bit/48K) using the Sound
Designer II format, and those files are easily exported to Pro
Tools. So far, the result is a lot of good tracks. Kevin and I
are pleased."
For more information on the 02R96, write Yamaha
Corporation of America, Professional Audio, P.O. Box 6600, Buena
Park, CA 90622; telephone (714) 522-9011; e-mail infostation@yamaha.com;
or visit www.yamaha.com/proaudio.