“I record in Logic mainly. Sometimes you want to do a demo first and you record it in MIDI and my workflow is quicker in Logic, but we mix in Pro Tools. I stem it and bounce it out at the end because I find that in Pro Tools the panning is a lot wider and it’s naturally warm and sounds better. There’s a few DAW now out there - PreSonus, sounds good, and it’s the middle ground, because you still got the benefits of Logic but it’s got some of the tricks and the sounds of Pro Tools, I just can’t be bothered to learn another DAW, I just think sometimes you could use that headspace to be creative rather than reading manuals.
I’ve got a 737 Avalon that I used to use a lot, but now I mainly use my analogue TL Audio M32 mixing desk which I’ve had since 2007. Over the years I’ve got into recording desks and understanding the power of track laying through a desk. At first I use to drive the audio signal on my desk too much, and because it’s got valves on every channel, the sound was slightly distorted . I was getting that crunchy sound, but when I realised and understood how the desk worked, and also got into EQing, I began to record everything through my desk.
Before I had the desk, I was trying to build a digital studio using just software with a few MIDI controllers, so I bought Roland TD 20 drums, also BFD drum software, as well as many other plugins and software synths. I didn’t have a second room and my space was limited so I thought maybe by getting software and controllers I could make the studio work.
I was cutting a record in Germany with an artiste called Patrice and he had the complete opposite in his studio, he had a Neve desk, a 2 inch tape machine, an old vintage Gretsch kit, old Fender basses, a Hammond organ and a Bosendorfer piano, an old one. After we had recorded and gone back into the control room the engineer pushed all the faders up to unity and pressed play and as I heard it back, I just thought, you can’t recreate that in a digital studio. So I came home and I changed my whole approach. I moved studios where I now have two rooms, in Tooting, South London, I can record drums or different instruments, I’ve recorded horns, upright bass, percussion as well as vocals. The studio is a lot better and I’m very happy with the recording results.”