By | Thu, 01 Apr 2010
The music of Denton, Texas, band
Midlake sounds labored over in the
best possible way, an artful, sepiatoned
style of folk rock exuding the
craftsmanship of a handwritten manuscript.
But the band’s airy, languid
delivery masks the precise arrangements
and extensive effort expended
during composition and recording.
Making The Courage of Others [Bella
Union], the follow-up to the band’s
2006 breakthrough The Trials of Van
Occupanther, took more than a year
and a half, including a side trip to the
Sand Hill Farm in Buffalo, Texas, to
shake up recording sessions after frustration
had metastasized.
“The studio was getting quite dark,
and there were bad vibes in there from
so many failures every day,” admits
frontman Tim Smith. “It felt like we
needed to get away.”
The work done on that farm set the
stage for final recording at the group’s
small hometown studio in Denton.
British folk music like Pentangle and
Fairport Convention and the guitar
tones on American singer-songwriter
Jimmie Spheeris’ debut album Isle of
View, seeped into the new songs,
according to Smith. The bulk of the
album was tracked as the band played
together—as opposed to overdubheavy
Van Occupanther—with the
drummer in the main room and other
members performing in the control
and storage rooms. On “Rulers, Ruling
All Things,” a subtle bass thump, winsome
drums, and guitar and flute
melodies are as intertwined as a Celtic
knot. But it wasn’t recorded with the
kind of acoustic and vintage equipment
one might expect.
“You probably would think we use
a lot of analog gear, but we
don’t,” Smith says. “We used a
RADAR V [digital recording system]
and an old Soundcraft board from the
’90s.” RADAR’s simple interface and
distraction-free technology impressed
Smith, who went so far as to tape the
cover of a Peter and the Wolf record
over the monitor screen when they
were tracking Van Occupanther. “I really
hate looking at a screen of colored
waves of sound,” he says. “You’re
expecting to hear something because
you see the wave coming up and it’s
very distracting.”
The band’s digital gear (they use
Logic and Cubase for mixing) and the
slightly gothic tinge on many of the
album’s tracks doesn’t mean the music
sounds cold. Midlake utilizes an
Empirical Labs EL7 Fatso, a compressor
that adds high-end harmonics to
recreate tape-like warmth. They’d
often run the overhead drum mics
and Smith’s vocals through the
Fatso to slightly amp up the bass
during mixing.
The band normally used a Martin
D-16 GT acoustic guitar and found the
Neumann U 87 sounded better for
recording picking instead of strumming,
so they pinned the mic to the
12th fret. “We didn’t really use a lot of
compression,” Smith says. “With the
acoustic guitars, we just went direct
to the board, and those preamps
sounded fine.”
Meanwhile, the Fender Jazz bass
was altered with a little foam or
denim placed by the back bridge to
muffle the sound (as heard in the rich
thump of “Acts of Man”). “It gets
more of a plucky sound,” Smith says.
“We were really inspired by that early
’70s bass sound. I always like that
Höfner hollow bass sound, really
woody-sounding bass.”
Smith also fretted a lot over his
vocals, settling on an AKG C 414 and
usually standing back about seven inches
while singing. Smith feels the 414 flattens
out his voice and accentuates the
mid-range. He swapped in a U 87 occasionally
to get a more canny sound.
“I’ve never been a big fan of my
voice,” he says. “It always takes me a
long time. I always record alone and
there are punch-ins all over the place. It
may take me a day for a song. Finding
the right mic is tough. People blame it
on the mic, but man, it’s my voice.”
The band was its own harshest critic,
constantly re-recording and evaluating
because they believed they needed to
get the right sound during tracking.
And their recording techniques
evolved as they went. They only used
three mics for the drums on “Acts of
Man,” the first song recorded on
Courage of Others, but by the end of
the sessions, they were using up to
seven, including an AKG for the snare,
a Beyerdynamic Opus for the bass, and
a Soundelux U99 room mic.
“If it’s lacking energy, you can’t wait
for mixing,” Smith says. “It’s going to
sound stale. In the future, I want to do
more of the live type of recording with
less overdubs, more like the old-school
bands. Go back and listen to records
like Grateful Dead’s Anthem of the Sun.
Music like that sounds so good, so different
from today.”