Post by fenderwim on May 4, 2011 19:21:44 GMT
Many Shadows fans have tried to reproduce the vintage 60’s Shadows studio sound, many failed and only a few came reasonable close. Why is ‘That Sound’ despite extensive efforts by many so difficult to get?
More than a year ago I was fed up that I could not reproduce the sound I was after. So I decided to start an extensive research on this topic, with the goal to find what the missing link or links are to create ‘That Sound’.
As basis for testing I used the famous song Wonderful land which is very typical for the early sound.
To make things more clear I split the problem in three topics:
- The guitar with all its aspects, including Hanks skills.
- The amp and echo unit.
- The recordings at Abbey Road.
Concerning the first topic, the guitar etc. the Shadows forums are full of tips dealing with topics like: tone wood of the guitar body and neck, electronics, tremolo, strings, playing technique, play position, plectrum etc. Those aspects are all important but in my view each adds only a relatively small contribution to the tone. Of course they can have a very bad influence on your tone if selected wrong.
In my case I concluded that I had to upgrade my Japanese Hank Marvin Strat, by replacing the electronics with standard Strat ones, changing the pickups to Kinmans en replacing the tremolo with a Calaham. These improved the tone and sustain a lot, but concerning the typical vintage sound relatively speaking, just a bit. Because this topic has already dealt with to a great extend by others on many forums /sites, I will not further go in to it.
The next topic, the amp and echo, I initial tried to solve with an amp simulator (POD 2.0) in combination with one of the modern echo units (Magic Stomp). With an amp simulator you can make further steps in the right direction, but I finally concluded that buying a Vox amp (Vox AC30C2X) and recording it with a mic (Shure SM57) would bring me further. But as many probably noticed themselves, the sound becomes better again, but still that typical vintage sound is not there yet.
The echo unit is of course one of, or maybe the most important unit to make the tone. Some people are lucky and still have a vintage unit, but unfortunately most don’t. End of the previous century the interest in shadows music strongly revived due to internet and by the beginning of the present century, many internet sites existed where people posted their own Shadows renditions.
Parallel to this development various people like Charlie, Piet and Jacob created echo patches for various modern echo units. These units did and still do an excellent job in reproducing the echoes from various Shadow songs. The drawback of these echoes however was that it where basically standard units, not specially designed to create ‘That Sound’. So although they produced the right echoes, they have all kind of limitations, especially if it comes to filtering. Some sound better than other due to the fact that more modeling is possible. So the echoes coming out of the units are ok, but they could not fully help us to get the right tone.
Various fans tried to solve this and have created additional equipment, such as filters (Cutting Edge filter, Ariab filter etc) with and without preamps, or used standard EQ’s, which gave in certain situations further improvements.
Only two types of echo units where specially designed for ‘That Sound’: The Atlantis and the more recent TVS units . These units are not only echo units but also have build in filters and other effects, attempting to come as close as possible to ‘That Sound’. Unfortunately the first is quite rare now and the second because of the special design and limited sales, quite pricy. So not too many people own these echo units.
I based my testing on the Magic stomp because this unit is considered quite good and just has the basic echoes (EFTP) required, with some filtering and modulation.
Now we come to the third topic, the recordings at Abbey Road. Very limited information is available on recording the Shadows and many people mention, when asked about it, the statement in the booklet from Roberto Pistolesi that: not much extra was done in the studio.
1 Another look at creating ‘That Sound’
I have developed some nice experience in the last years about recording and I never believed that ‘not much extra was done in the studio’ and I think that this whole point has been greatly neglected by most guitarists. This also makes sense because most guitarists, especially some years ago, had very little experience with recording.
In the sixties Abbey Road was already a famous studio and it is hard to believe that they did not use at least a nice portion of the technical possibilities, the effects, they had for recording the Shadows. Luckily recently a standard work came out called ‘Recording the Beatles’. This book describes the equipment and recording technique in the 60’s at Abbey Road in great detail. Although the Beatles started recording a few years later than the Shadows the whole period of the 60’s including equipment is described.
So I studied all recording techniques at Abbey Road and will describe here the main ones, which either have been used for sure or might have been used for recording the Shadows in this period.
2 Abbey Road basic recording equipment
At Abbey Road Studios, many different ways to influence the sound where possible. We will now go through the key elements to see what their impact on the sound is or could have been:
2.1 Microphones
The sound coming from the Vox amps speaker(s) was recorded with a microphone. At Abbey Road Studios, for the Vox amps Neuman U47 and U48 were use and after 1966 the U67. The U47 was switchable from cardioid to omni. The U48 is actually a smaller version of the U47.
Also on the amps sometimes Neuman KM 54 were used, which has a fixed cardioid. In the Echo Chambers Neuman KM 53 was the favorite, because it was a fixed omni. They are all condenser mic's. For the Beatles each Vox amp was often recorded with another mic . If this also has happened for the Shadows is unknown, but you can just try it, if you record all three guitars, or even put two mic’s on front of your Vox AC30.
The above mics currently have an icon status. They are priceless for hobbyist, but there are cheaper mics close to their sound available.
Now the Shure M57, which is a dynamic mic, is popular with Shadows fans. It's a cheap mic with a very neutral character. Condenser mics often have a smoother, silkier sound and it is advisable to experiment with condensers to improve your sound.
The U47 was thus both cardioid and omni with the following frequency responses:
From the frequency responses can be seen that the U47 had above 2 kHz a response up to about max +5 dB.
The KM 54 as you can see below has a very linear response.
2.2 Amps (Mic and Line)
The microphone signals went to tube amps located in the mixer desk, the REDD 37 desk and after 1964 the REDD 51 desk. The REDD 37 desk came out in 1958 and both desks were 4 channel stereo mixers.
Abbey Road Studios had a very un-orthodox standard for impedances. Standard both the incoming and outgoing signal was 200 ohms. The result was that a lot of line amps were needed. For example the REDD mixing desk 37, needed 31 Siemens V72S valve amps.
For the REDD 51 desk, the EMI REDD 47 valve amp was used. The Siemens V72S valve amps sound was described as more smooth and round, while the EMI REDD 47 valve amp sound was more aggressive and punchier. These amps will certainly have influenced the sound considerably. Valve amps/ valve mic preamps as we call them today for mics, all sound different. Recording engineers state sometimes that a mic makes 20% of the sound and the preamp 80%. This depends ofcourse on the quality of the mic and the preamp.
It is definitely worth, instead of going directly with your mic into your audio interface, to try to use a valve preamp before it. The best is a preamp where you can vary the impedance, because you can adjust your sound a lot with it. Also it is possible to buy a DIY board including parts list for an EMI REDD 47.
See here:
www.dripelectronics.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6&Itemid=33
2.3 Mixer REDD Desk
These mixers had four channels and primitive EQ’s. Essentially you could just adjust the low and high frequency side. At the low end, there was a shelving boost or cut of +10 db/ -10dB at 100Hz in steps of 2 dB. On the high side was a shelving EQ, but a very special one. In boosting, the peak was at 5 kHz, but cutting the peak was at 10 kHz, with again the same range of +10dB / -10 dB in 2 dB steps. Also the settings of the low and high side affected each other a lot.
Furthermore there were two types of EQ which could be used in the mixer, the Classic and Pop EQ. They were small hardware plugin devices that could plug into the mixer desk. Through a hole in the mixer you could see what type was inside. The Pop version was obviously used for pop music.
The pictures give an insight into the behavior of the EQ.
i421.photobucket.com/albums/pp293/Fenderwim/REDDEQ00011.jpg [/img]
i421.photobucket.com/albums/pp293/Fenderwim/REDDEQ00022.jpg [/img]
From the graph of the bass EQ you can see that here the possibility exists, in relation for instance to the Inverted Smiley curve and the Cutting Edge filter curve, to remove some extra dB’s. My testing has proven this to be needed to get closer to the vintage tone. Also because of the shapes of the curves, this potentially must have had a big effect on the creation of the vintage sound.
This EQ can be bought as a separate unit including an amp to recover the volume. See here:
phaedrus-audio.com/phab_phame_phi.htm
The EQ matches in all options the famous Pultec EQP-1A equalizer. For this EQ you can also buy a DIY board including a part list:
www.dripelectronics.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=10&Itemid=36
This Pultec EQ has also been modeled in various plugins:
Nomad factory Pulse-Tec
Waves JJP PuigTec EQP-1A
Bomb Factory EQP-1A (mac only)
UAD Pultec EQP-1A
2.4 Echo Chamber/ Plate Reverbs
Hank obviously made use of his tape echo unit, but in order to make the sound fuller/thicker, Echo Chamber 2 and EMT 140 plate reverbs could be used. (The name Echo Chamber is not really correct, because it is essentially a reverb chamber).
The Echo Chamber 2 at Abbey Road is essentially a small room of only 6.4m to 3.7m. The mono signal from the mixer was send to a speaker in the Echo Chamber, where they recorded the sound with one (in mono) or two mic's (in stereo). The returning signal to the mixer was thus mono or stereo.
The reverberations of such a small room are quite small, with a short tail, but with technical tricks, it sounded for the listener as if it was much larger, more like a hall. To create a reverberation time (reverb time) as long as possible, the room was covered with tiles and the concrete was painted. Furthermore, there were sewer pipes upright in order to get maximum reflection and thus further enlarging the reverb time. The resulting reverb-time of Echo Chamber 2 was approximately 2-3 seconds, depending on the climatic conditions.
The plates were mainly used for mastering, but nothing prevents us from trying out plates also.
2.5 Single Tape Echo/ Drum Delay
From the mixer, the recorded sound was passed on to the Echo Chamber 2 as a Send. The sound of the Send was delayed by a tape recorder, the BRT 2, see 2.7. Standard a delay of 120ms was used. A reverb with a Predelay of 120 ms is perceived by our ears as the reverberation of a fairly large hall. After 1965 there was also Feedback possible, see 2.8.
Let me just explain this:
If you're in a room of this size and send a sound wave through a speaker at a short distance from a wall, facing the wall and record the first sound coming back after bouncing of the walls with mic (s) close to the opposite wall, then the sound based on the set up at Abbey Road and taking into account the reflection, has at least traveled about 10m. See picture.
i421.photobucket.com/albums/pp293/Fenderwim/Shortestroute.jpg [/img]
The speed of sound is 0.34m/ms. The sound wave requires thus 10/0.34 = 29.4ms to bridge that distance. This is the minimum Predelay of this room with this speaker / microphone(s) setup.
Add to this as discussed above an additional delay of 120ms and you will have a Predelay of 149.4ms. If you now calculate how big the room appears to the listener, this is (149.4 x 0.34) = 51m, so a large hall.
The reverb is quite different than an actual hall. You hear the fullness created by the Predelay of a hall, but the reverb tail is different and more like a large room. So you have a huge full sound but it is still very clear / transparent and not drowned in the tail, so a very special reverb.
According to the Beatles book at Abbey Road Studios this effect was in the sixties always on. Also the placement of the speaker and mics in the Echo Chamber 2 was optimized and was always kept the same.
Also for the EMT 140 plates, the incoming signal was delayed by 120 ms, but with a specially designed drum delay.
Based on the information above, you can, with a good reverb plugin, simulate the echo room reasonably easy. Eventually you will have to adjust the details, by ear.
2.6 RS 106 Echo Control unit-Band Pass Filter
In order to make a great reverb sound you have to filter the sound beforehand. At Abbey Road as filter the RS 106 Filter was used, which could remove both highs and lows. This was a passive unit with the following settings.
There was also a dial to set reduction, ranging from 0 to -50dB.
The RS 106 Filters were sometimes also used as a replacement for the more limited EQ on the mixer.
The most commonly used frequency setting as Send was Bass Cut 600 Hz and Top Cut 10 kHz, but that does not mean that this was used for Shadows recordings.
With this information you can however try the same frequency steps in your DAW.
2.7 Tape recorders
As tape recorders the BRT 2 were at Abbey Road Studios the most common used units. The first unit was from 1953 and they were used by EMI more than 20 years. They were mono units and at the end of the fifties, Abbey Road Studios had 53 units. In 1959 the BRT 3 was released which was a 4 channel stereo tape recorder. This machine became the standard for Abbey Road Studios for classic and pop music during the whole of the sixties.
The BRT 3 also had an EQ which was standard for tape recorders in these times. There were more standards but the BRT 3 used the CCIR standard with a tape speed of 15 ips (inches per second). This EQ gives by recording a Cut at 4500Hz and by playback a boost at 10 kHz. For the CCIR standard see pictures:
The reason for this EQ was to avoid tape hiss. Naturally this also had an effect on the sound on the high side.
The tape recorders were both used for recording as for echo effects (Single Tape Echo).
2.8 BTR2 S.T.E.E.D Effect
STEED stands for Send Tape Echo/ Echo Delay. This is a further development from 1965 with the BRT tape recorders. This addition creates both the Single Tape Echo, so the 120ms, but also has a feedback, so you got a multiple echo delay and the sound was even fuller/thicker. The feedback loop had also an EQ, where you could set the frequency to remove the lows and highs. As an extra also two EQ, the EQ RS 92 and RS 127 EQ could be put in the loop.
For Beatles recordings after 1965, this effect was always used.
3 Additional equipment
3.1 RS 127 Presence Box/Brilliance Control
As already described the REDD mixers had a very limited EQ. In order to have more EQ possibilities in 1962 the RS Presence Box 127, called originally Brilliance Control was put into use. This was an EQ box with 3 possible frequencies of 2.7, 3.5 and 10 kHz and a range of +10dB / -10 dB in 2 dB steps. There were two versions (Rack and Box) of which one had a handle for ease of pulling it from a rack and the other could just be put on a table.
These EQ’s were widely used for recording of instruments, in the mixer, but also in the Sends to Echo Chamber2 or the Plates. Sometimes even two were put in series. The setting of +10 db at 10 kHz was quite popular to create air.
With the above frequencies and volume steps you can experiment a lot in your DAW. If you want the authentic sound you can use the plugins Abbey Road made for this recently.
3.2 6MB 3.5 Audio filter
This was an additional EQ that could be used in the send to the Echo Chamber 2, but now with a fixed frequency of 5 kHz and 6 dB. Not known is how often it was used and it may well be that it was used often.
So this you can try also in your DAW.
3.3 ADT
ADT stands for Artificial Double Tracking. In Abbey Road it was customary to improve/thicken the sound, by double tracking it and using both tracks in de mix. Also Hank did this often, however in 1966, the ADT effect was created to do this automatically. This was done by a clever use of two existing tape recorders. Originally it was only used for vocals, but very quickly for almost everything. Essentially, it means that starting with a mono track, two tracks were made with about 40ms difference. This created the full sound of doubling a track.
By varying the speed of the tape recorders slightly in time and also because of the fact that they did not quite turn stable anyway, additional small variation in the time between the units were created, which further contributed to the sound.
3.4 RS 92 Neumann Mic Equalizer 3.4 RS 92 Neumann Mic Equalizer
This was actually an equalizer for the U47, but was also used for other purposes.
The EQ had three settings: Steep Bass Cut, Bass Roll-Off and Cut Extreme Bass. There was also a button with Boost and Extreme Flat Top. Boost Extreme Top did basically nothing and resulted in case the EQ was located after the U47, in the natural sound of the mic.
The most common use was on the Return of the Echo Room 2 and the plates. Since in this Return the low-frequencies were already removed, the RS 92 at this location was probably only used in the Flat position.
3.5 RS 124 Altec Compressor
The RS 124 Altec was originally the Altec 436B compressor from 1959, but was not suited to the Abbey Road Studios way of working and was subsequently adapted countless times. The compressor was used on everything, the guitars, in the mixer, as bus compressor and mastering. Rather subtle compression with a threshold of -3dB was often done with it, but sometimes extremes of -20 to -30dB were also common. The compressor gave a very clear coloration of the sound especially when it was used for high compressions. For the sound of the Beatles it was a vital part, so for the Shadows it could have been important too. For this important unit you can also buy a DIY board including parts list.
www.dripelectronics.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3&Itemid=29
If you want the authentic sound you can use the plugins Abbey Road made for this recently. There are three plugin variations of the RS 124.
3.6 RS 114 limiter
The RS 114 limiter from 1956, was at Abbey Road Studios often used as an insert in the 4 channels of the mixer. For all the Beatles recordings in the period 1962-1964 it was used. Then it was replaced for vocals and drums by the Fairchild 660 limiter.
4 Summary
So all above equipment and describe applications can also have been used on Shadows recordings. Unfortunately there are no records of this on the web. But from above info you know what was possible at Abbey Roads and in your DAW many can be easily tried out.
In a next posting I will shows you the results of testing some of the above mentioned effects out on Wonderful land and can you hear the proof (hopefully) of the importance of certain effects to create the vintage sound.
More than a year ago I was fed up that I could not reproduce the sound I was after. So I decided to start an extensive research on this topic, with the goal to find what the missing link or links are to create ‘That Sound’.
As basis for testing I used the famous song Wonderful land which is very typical for the early sound.
To make things more clear I split the problem in three topics:
- The guitar with all its aspects, including Hanks skills.
- The amp and echo unit.
- The recordings at Abbey Road.
Concerning the first topic, the guitar etc. the Shadows forums are full of tips dealing with topics like: tone wood of the guitar body and neck, electronics, tremolo, strings, playing technique, play position, plectrum etc. Those aspects are all important but in my view each adds only a relatively small contribution to the tone. Of course they can have a very bad influence on your tone if selected wrong.
In my case I concluded that I had to upgrade my Japanese Hank Marvin Strat, by replacing the electronics with standard Strat ones, changing the pickups to Kinmans en replacing the tremolo with a Calaham. These improved the tone and sustain a lot, but concerning the typical vintage sound relatively speaking, just a bit. Because this topic has already dealt with to a great extend by others on many forums /sites, I will not further go in to it.
The next topic, the amp and echo, I initial tried to solve with an amp simulator (POD 2.0) in combination with one of the modern echo units (Magic Stomp). With an amp simulator you can make further steps in the right direction, but I finally concluded that buying a Vox amp (Vox AC30C2X) and recording it with a mic (Shure SM57) would bring me further. But as many probably noticed themselves, the sound becomes better again, but still that typical vintage sound is not there yet.
The echo unit is of course one of, or maybe the most important unit to make the tone. Some people are lucky and still have a vintage unit, but unfortunately most don’t. End of the previous century the interest in shadows music strongly revived due to internet and by the beginning of the present century, many internet sites existed where people posted their own Shadows renditions.
Parallel to this development various people like Charlie, Piet and Jacob created echo patches for various modern echo units. These units did and still do an excellent job in reproducing the echoes from various Shadow songs. The drawback of these echoes however was that it where basically standard units, not specially designed to create ‘That Sound’. So although they produced the right echoes, they have all kind of limitations, especially if it comes to filtering. Some sound better than other due to the fact that more modeling is possible. So the echoes coming out of the units are ok, but they could not fully help us to get the right tone.
Various fans tried to solve this and have created additional equipment, such as filters (Cutting Edge filter, Ariab filter etc) with and without preamps, or used standard EQ’s, which gave in certain situations further improvements.
Only two types of echo units where specially designed for ‘That Sound’: The Atlantis and the more recent TVS units . These units are not only echo units but also have build in filters and other effects, attempting to come as close as possible to ‘That Sound’. Unfortunately the first is quite rare now and the second because of the special design and limited sales, quite pricy. So not too many people own these echo units.
I based my testing on the Magic stomp because this unit is considered quite good and just has the basic echoes (EFTP) required, with some filtering and modulation.
Now we come to the third topic, the recordings at Abbey Road. Very limited information is available on recording the Shadows and many people mention, when asked about it, the statement in the booklet from Roberto Pistolesi that: not much extra was done in the studio.
1 Another look at creating ‘That Sound’
I have developed some nice experience in the last years about recording and I never believed that ‘not much extra was done in the studio’ and I think that this whole point has been greatly neglected by most guitarists. This also makes sense because most guitarists, especially some years ago, had very little experience with recording.
In the sixties Abbey Road was already a famous studio and it is hard to believe that they did not use at least a nice portion of the technical possibilities, the effects, they had for recording the Shadows. Luckily recently a standard work came out called ‘Recording the Beatles’. This book describes the equipment and recording technique in the 60’s at Abbey Road in great detail. Although the Beatles started recording a few years later than the Shadows the whole period of the 60’s including equipment is described.
So I studied all recording techniques at Abbey Road and will describe here the main ones, which either have been used for sure or might have been used for recording the Shadows in this period.
2 Abbey Road basic recording equipment
At Abbey Road Studios, many different ways to influence the sound where possible. We will now go through the key elements to see what their impact on the sound is or could have been:
2.1 Microphones
The sound coming from the Vox amps speaker(s) was recorded with a microphone. At Abbey Road Studios, for the Vox amps Neuman U47 and U48 were use and after 1966 the U67. The U47 was switchable from cardioid to omni. The U48 is actually a smaller version of the U47.
Also on the amps sometimes Neuman KM 54 were used, which has a fixed cardioid. In the Echo Chambers Neuman KM 53 was the favorite, because it was a fixed omni. They are all condenser mic's. For the Beatles each Vox amp was often recorded with another mic . If this also has happened for the Shadows is unknown, but you can just try it, if you record all three guitars, or even put two mic’s on front of your Vox AC30.
The above mics currently have an icon status. They are priceless for hobbyist, but there are cheaper mics close to their sound available.
Now the Shure M57, which is a dynamic mic, is popular with Shadows fans. It's a cheap mic with a very neutral character. Condenser mics often have a smoother, silkier sound and it is advisable to experiment with condensers to improve your sound.
The U47 was thus both cardioid and omni with the following frequency responses:
From the frequency responses can be seen that the U47 had above 2 kHz a response up to about max +5 dB.
The KM 54 as you can see below has a very linear response.
2.2 Amps (Mic and Line)
The microphone signals went to tube amps located in the mixer desk, the REDD 37 desk and after 1964 the REDD 51 desk. The REDD 37 desk came out in 1958 and both desks were 4 channel stereo mixers.
Abbey Road Studios had a very un-orthodox standard for impedances. Standard both the incoming and outgoing signal was 200 ohms. The result was that a lot of line amps were needed. For example the REDD mixing desk 37, needed 31 Siemens V72S valve amps.
For the REDD 51 desk, the EMI REDD 47 valve amp was used. The Siemens V72S valve amps sound was described as more smooth and round, while the EMI REDD 47 valve amp sound was more aggressive and punchier. These amps will certainly have influenced the sound considerably. Valve amps/ valve mic preamps as we call them today for mics, all sound different. Recording engineers state sometimes that a mic makes 20% of the sound and the preamp 80%. This depends ofcourse on the quality of the mic and the preamp.
It is definitely worth, instead of going directly with your mic into your audio interface, to try to use a valve preamp before it. The best is a preamp where you can vary the impedance, because you can adjust your sound a lot with it. Also it is possible to buy a DIY board including parts list for an EMI REDD 47.
See here:
www.dripelectronics.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6&Itemid=33
2.3 Mixer REDD Desk
These mixers had four channels and primitive EQ’s. Essentially you could just adjust the low and high frequency side. At the low end, there was a shelving boost or cut of +10 db/ -10dB at 100Hz in steps of 2 dB. On the high side was a shelving EQ, but a very special one. In boosting, the peak was at 5 kHz, but cutting the peak was at 10 kHz, with again the same range of +10dB / -10 dB in 2 dB steps. Also the settings of the low and high side affected each other a lot.
Furthermore there were two types of EQ which could be used in the mixer, the Classic and Pop EQ. They were small hardware plugin devices that could plug into the mixer desk. Through a hole in the mixer you could see what type was inside. The Pop version was obviously used for pop music.
The pictures give an insight into the behavior of the EQ.
i421.photobucket.com/albums/pp293/Fenderwim/REDDEQ00011.jpg [/img]
i421.photobucket.com/albums/pp293/Fenderwim/REDDEQ00022.jpg [/img]
From the graph of the bass EQ you can see that here the possibility exists, in relation for instance to the Inverted Smiley curve and the Cutting Edge filter curve, to remove some extra dB’s. My testing has proven this to be needed to get closer to the vintage tone. Also because of the shapes of the curves, this potentially must have had a big effect on the creation of the vintage sound.
This EQ can be bought as a separate unit including an amp to recover the volume. See here:
phaedrus-audio.com/phab_phame_phi.htm
The EQ matches in all options the famous Pultec EQP-1A equalizer. For this EQ you can also buy a DIY board including a part list:
www.dripelectronics.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=10&Itemid=36
This Pultec EQ has also been modeled in various plugins:
Nomad factory Pulse-Tec
Waves JJP PuigTec EQP-1A
Bomb Factory EQP-1A (mac only)
UAD Pultec EQP-1A
2.4 Echo Chamber/ Plate Reverbs
Hank obviously made use of his tape echo unit, but in order to make the sound fuller/thicker, Echo Chamber 2 and EMT 140 plate reverbs could be used. (The name Echo Chamber is not really correct, because it is essentially a reverb chamber).
The Echo Chamber 2 at Abbey Road is essentially a small room of only 6.4m to 3.7m. The mono signal from the mixer was send to a speaker in the Echo Chamber, where they recorded the sound with one (in mono) or two mic's (in stereo). The returning signal to the mixer was thus mono or stereo.
The reverberations of such a small room are quite small, with a short tail, but with technical tricks, it sounded for the listener as if it was much larger, more like a hall. To create a reverberation time (reverb time) as long as possible, the room was covered with tiles and the concrete was painted. Furthermore, there were sewer pipes upright in order to get maximum reflection and thus further enlarging the reverb time. The resulting reverb-time of Echo Chamber 2 was approximately 2-3 seconds, depending on the climatic conditions.
The plates were mainly used for mastering, but nothing prevents us from trying out plates also.
2.5 Single Tape Echo/ Drum Delay
From the mixer, the recorded sound was passed on to the Echo Chamber 2 as a Send. The sound of the Send was delayed by a tape recorder, the BRT 2, see 2.7. Standard a delay of 120ms was used. A reverb with a Predelay of 120 ms is perceived by our ears as the reverberation of a fairly large hall. After 1965 there was also Feedback possible, see 2.8.
Let me just explain this:
If you're in a room of this size and send a sound wave through a speaker at a short distance from a wall, facing the wall and record the first sound coming back after bouncing of the walls with mic (s) close to the opposite wall, then the sound based on the set up at Abbey Road and taking into account the reflection, has at least traveled about 10m. See picture.
i421.photobucket.com/albums/pp293/Fenderwim/Shortestroute.jpg [/img]
The speed of sound is 0.34m/ms. The sound wave requires thus 10/0.34 = 29.4ms to bridge that distance. This is the minimum Predelay of this room with this speaker / microphone(s) setup.
Add to this as discussed above an additional delay of 120ms and you will have a Predelay of 149.4ms. If you now calculate how big the room appears to the listener, this is (149.4 x 0.34) = 51m, so a large hall.
The reverb is quite different than an actual hall. You hear the fullness created by the Predelay of a hall, but the reverb tail is different and more like a large room. So you have a huge full sound but it is still very clear / transparent and not drowned in the tail, so a very special reverb.
According to the Beatles book at Abbey Road Studios this effect was in the sixties always on. Also the placement of the speaker and mics in the Echo Chamber 2 was optimized and was always kept the same.
Also for the EMT 140 plates, the incoming signal was delayed by 120 ms, but with a specially designed drum delay.
Based on the information above, you can, with a good reverb plugin, simulate the echo room reasonably easy. Eventually you will have to adjust the details, by ear.
2.6 RS 106 Echo Control unit-Band Pass Filter
In order to make a great reverb sound you have to filter the sound beforehand. At Abbey Road as filter the RS 106 Filter was used, which could remove both highs and lows. This was a passive unit with the following settings.
There was also a dial to set reduction, ranging from 0 to -50dB.
The RS 106 Filters were sometimes also used as a replacement for the more limited EQ on the mixer.
The most commonly used frequency setting as Send was Bass Cut 600 Hz and Top Cut 10 kHz, but that does not mean that this was used for Shadows recordings.
With this information you can however try the same frequency steps in your DAW.
2.7 Tape recorders
As tape recorders the BRT 2 were at Abbey Road Studios the most common used units. The first unit was from 1953 and they were used by EMI more than 20 years. They were mono units and at the end of the fifties, Abbey Road Studios had 53 units. In 1959 the BRT 3 was released which was a 4 channel stereo tape recorder. This machine became the standard for Abbey Road Studios for classic and pop music during the whole of the sixties.
The BRT 3 also had an EQ which was standard for tape recorders in these times. There were more standards but the BRT 3 used the CCIR standard with a tape speed of 15 ips (inches per second). This EQ gives by recording a Cut at 4500Hz and by playback a boost at 10 kHz. For the CCIR standard see pictures:
The reason for this EQ was to avoid tape hiss. Naturally this also had an effect on the sound on the high side.
The tape recorders were both used for recording as for echo effects (Single Tape Echo).
2.8 BTR2 S.T.E.E.D Effect
STEED stands for Send Tape Echo/ Echo Delay. This is a further development from 1965 with the BRT tape recorders. This addition creates both the Single Tape Echo, so the 120ms, but also has a feedback, so you got a multiple echo delay and the sound was even fuller/thicker. The feedback loop had also an EQ, where you could set the frequency to remove the lows and highs. As an extra also two EQ, the EQ RS 92 and RS 127 EQ could be put in the loop.
For Beatles recordings after 1965, this effect was always used.
3 Additional equipment
3.1 RS 127 Presence Box/Brilliance Control
As already described the REDD mixers had a very limited EQ. In order to have more EQ possibilities in 1962 the RS Presence Box 127, called originally Brilliance Control was put into use. This was an EQ box with 3 possible frequencies of 2.7, 3.5 and 10 kHz and a range of +10dB / -10 dB in 2 dB steps. There were two versions (Rack and Box) of which one had a handle for ease of pulling it from a rack and the other could just be put on a table.
These EQ’s were widely used for recording of instruments, in the mixer, but also in the Sends to Echo Chamber2 or the Plates. Sometimes even two were put in series. The setting of +10 db at 10 kHz was quite popular to create air.
With the above frequencies and volume steps you can experiment a lot in your DAW. If you want the authentic sound you can use the plugins Abbey Road made for this recently.
3.2 6MB 3.5 Audio filter
This was an additional EQ that could be used in the send to the Echo Chamber 2, but now with a fixed frequency of 5 kHz and 6 dB. Not known is how often it was used and it may well be that it was used often.
So this you can try also in your DAW.
3.3 ADT
ADT stands for Artificial Double Tracking. In Abbey Road it was customary to improve/thicken the sound, by double tracking it and using both tracks in de mix. Also Hank did this often, however in 1966, the ADT effect was created to do this automatically. This was done by a clever use of two existing tape recorders. Originally it was only used for vocals, but very quickly for almost everything. Essentially, it means that starting with a mono track, two tracks were made with about 40ms difference. This created the full sound of doubling a track.
By varying the speed of the tape recorders slightly in time and also because of the fact that they did not quite turn stable anyway, additional small variation in the time between the units were created, which further contributed to the sound.
3.4 RS 92 Neumann Mic Equalizer 3.4 RS 92 Neumann Mic Equalizer
This was actually an equalizer for the U47, but was also used for other purposes.
The EQ had three settings: Steep Bass Cut, Bass Roll-Off and Cut Extreme Bass. There was also a button with Boost and Extreme Flat Top. Boost Extreme Top did basically nothing and resulted in case the EQ was located after the U47, in the natural sound of the mic.
The most common use was on the Return of the Echo Room 2 and the plates. Since in this Return the low-frequencies were already removed, the RS 92 at this location was probably only used in the Flat position.
3.5 RS 124 Altec Compressor
The RS 124 Altec was originally the Altec 436B compressor from 1959, but was not suited to the Abbey Road Studios way of working and was subsequently adapted countless times. The compressor was used on everything, the guitars, in the mixer, as bus compressor and mastering. Rather subtle compression with a threshold of -3dB was often done with it, but sometimes extremes of -20 to -30dB were also common. The compressor gave a very clear coloration of the sound especially when it was used for high compressions. For the sound of the Beatles it was a vital part, so for the Shadows it could have been important too. For this important unit you can also buy a DIY board including parts list.
www.dripelectronics.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3&Itemid=29
If you want the authentic sound you can use the plugins Abbey Road made for this recently. There are three plugin variations of the RS 124.
3.6 RS 114 limiter
The RS 114 limiter from 1956, was at Abbey Road Studios often used as an insert in the 4 channels of the mixer. For all the Beatles recordings in the period 1962-1964 it was used. Then it was replaced for vocals and drums by the Fairchild 660 limiter.
4 Summary
So all above equipment and describe applications can also have been used on Shadows recordings. Unfortunately there are no records of this on the web. But from above info you know what was possible at Abbey Roads and in your DAW many can be easily tried out.
In a next posting I will shows you the results of testing some of the above mentioned effects out on Wonderful land and can you hear the proof (hopefully) of the importance of certain effects to create the vintage sound.