DIGITAL AUDIO WORKSTATION IS "NEXT STEP" FOR RAP
PIONEER
Yamaha AW4416-Based Studio Handles Classic Remasters, New
Recordings,
Ground-Breaking CD Technology
 |
|
The
Legendary Cold Crush Brothers
|
BUENA PARK, CA (October 4, 2002)Culture and
technology have always been tightly linked entities, perhaps nowhere
more than in the world of HipHop. Beginning as an underground
genre on the streets of New York City, this billion-dollar industry
has spawned a host of artists, DJs, remixers, producers, performers,
and technologies that continue to change the way music is made.
Kenneth "Kay Gee" Pounder embodies that entrepreneurial
spirit in a career that includes Rap music pioneer, engineer,
producer and technological innovator. Centered around a Yamaha
AW4416
digital audio workstation, Pounder, a founding member of the ground-breaking
rap combo The Legendary Cold Crush Brothers, is currently at work
at his Bronx-based studio, remastering historic rap and HipHop
tracks for a series of compilation albums, recording and mixing
a new project from ex-Fugee Pras, and working with partners on
a new technology called CS2
(Consumer Surround Sound).
"For mixing and making glass masters for replication,
the Yamaha AW4416 is my main console," Pounder explains.
"I like the fact that you can do a project 'in one box.'
The recording quality is superbvery clean."
 |
|
Still
"Crushin": Kenneth "Kay Gee" Pounder
at Work
|
"I've recently installed the Waves Y56K
card, which makes a CD master sound much crisper and that, in
turn, makes it easier for a plant to replicate." The studio
also features a Neumann U87 mic, an Avalon preamp, a vintage Ensoniq
ASRx drum machine and controller keyboard.
Cutting his engineering teeth at D
& D Recording, one of the main HipHop powerhouses in New
York in the 1980s, Pounder made the transition from performer
to studio wizard, developing promos with Funk Master Flex of top
radio outlet Hot 97, finally opening his own facility in 1989.
"In that time, I saw studio become much more user-friendly,
with drum machines, synthesizers and workstations. Today, that
gear, particularly workstations, is at a level that can produce
professional-quality material.
Project studios were a natural progression, not
only for me, but for the entire industry," he adds. "I
got into the studio because, as a performer, I always thought
that it would be a cool thing to put hip-hop on wax, and was always
interested in the development of the sound. And, being actively
involved in a style that has pushed the musical and technological
envelopes, allows me to bring a unique history to my projects.
I've seen music technology evolve to the point where a professional
project can be done by someone with a home-type studio, and digital
audio workstations are a big part of that."
The Yamaha AW4416 contains full 32-bit DSP capabilities
(similar to the Yamaha 02R digital console), 44 fully-automated
audio inputs, 17 motorized faders, four fader and mute groups,
eight bus and eight aux sends plus stereo, stereo cue busses and
a front-mounted CD-RW drive, which enables mastering as well as
loading and/or backing up data.
An integrated 16-track recording systemcomplete
with sampling, editing and mastering capabilitiesretains
true 24-bit, 48 kHz resolution without data compression of any
kind.
Seamlessly integrating with the workstation's
normal operation, the Waves Y56K provides a hardware and software
solution to expand the recording, mixing and mastering capabilities
of the AW4416, and eliminating the need for rackmount or computer-based
processing. The Y56K inserts into either of the two Mini-YGDAI
slots on the rear panel of the AW4416, and utilizes two 120 MIPS
Motorola 56K DSPs. Audio processing is supported with 48-bit internal
precision on a 24-bit I/O.
"The most unique thing about hip-hop,"
he continues, "is that it can be created from any kind of
music. In the early 70s, Kool Herc, a native of Jamaica, brought
what was called Jammin' to New York, and that eventually
became rapping, and what the media re-named 'Hip-Hop.'
The early scene was very 'street,' very word-of-mouth,
and pretty much limited to the Bronx. People didn't say 'I'm
going to a hip-hop party,' they'd say, 'I'm
going to a Jam.' People would block off streets with garbage
cans and hook up their equipment to lamp posts. The police would
shut you down, but you'd move a few blocks and start up again.
"Once we learned that we could get permits,
a jam would turn into a block party and go from noon to nine o'clock.
That's when the music really started to grow and push the
bounds of technology. Early DJs like Grandmaster Flash, Grand
Wizard Theodore and Afrika Bambaataa, DJ Herc were the real innovators.
They came up with the DJ style of scratching, keeping the beat
from two tablesthey were basically human loop machines and
samplers.
"In 1973," he continues, "there were
only three things you could be: a DJ, a break dancer or graffiti
artist. I didn't have the cash to buy DJ equipment, and my
folks would kill me if they knew I was doing graffiti, so I started
out dancing. I got introduced to rap at a DJ Smoky party, and
after seeing Grandmaster Flash and Melle Mel, I got turned on
to emceeing and was in several groups. I hooked up with the Cold
Crush Brothers in 1979. We got so much attention that other crews
stepped up to battle us."
Known for flashy costumes and synchronized routines,
The
Legendary Cold Crush Brothers set the standard for live shows
of the time. Pounder and fellow members DJ Tony Tone (Angelo King),
Easy AD (Adrien Harris), DJ Charlie Chase (Carlos Mandes), Grandmaster
Caz (Curtis Fisher) and JDL (Jerome Wilson) participated in the
Wild Style tour, the first rap foray into Japan in 1982, and were
also the first crew signed to CBS records on the Tuff City label,
releasing the singles "The Weekend," "Punk Rock
Rap," and "Fresh , Wild, Fly, and Bold." The group
is immortalized in the hip-hop exhibits of both the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame and Experience Music Project museums.
One of the most infamous incidents in Hip Hop occurred
involving the group, when the head of Sugar Hill Records heard
a bootleg of a club bouncer named Hank rapping to a performance
by Cold Crush member Caz, and invited him to become the third
member of a group she was forming called the Sugarhill Gang. Hank
requested to use some rhymes from Caz in exchange for future collaborations,
which never materialized. The bootleg became the multiplatinum
crossover hit "Rapper's Delight," with Caz receiving
neither royalties nor credit.
"None of us knew how big this music would be,"
Pounder explains, "or that it would reach such a wide audience.
When you're kids and creating a new sound, it's just
something that you enjoy doing. Radio and the media got onto it
because they saw the money potential and how addictive the music
is. But today, other than the production methods, there really
isn't anything that's taking the music to another level.
It's still a money machine, and the innovations are in the
marketing."
Pounder and partners are tapping into new ways of
marketing that media with Consumer Surround Sound, or CS2, a technology
which allows the replication of DVD-quality video on a standard
CD that plays in both DVD ROM and CD players ("an Enhanced
CD on steroids," as Pounder explains). "We're using
the studio to do all the CS2 mixes for CS2. The CS2 will allow
the CD to play video footage on both DVD and computer. There isn't
anything in the market that can do that. It's another step,
not only in my life, but for the music that I love."
For more information on the AW4416 Digital Audio
Workstation and Waves Y56K Card, write Yamaha Corporation of America,
Pro Audio & Combo Division, 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.