By | Wed, 01 Sep 2010
By Patrick Sisson
L.A. trio Autolux strikes a rich vein of guitar and bass
tones, recalls the dark, prickly melodies of Blonde
Redhead and Sonic Youth, and roughs everything
up with drummer Carla Azar’s heavyweight hammering.
It’s a balance of high and low fidelity, according
to guitarist Greg Edwards, which he constantly
tweaks while playing and recording.
“It’s easy to get texture and emotion from a lo-fi
approach, and it’s easy to get dynamic, sterile
sound with good technique that has no lasting
impact,” he says. “We’re always trying to combine
emotion and impact that’s not a mess, and fidelity
that’s not just soulless and academic.”
Transit Transit incorporated lessons learned
during previous sessions with producer T-Bone
Burnett that comprised 2004’s Future Perfect.
Burnett’s engineer labored over mic placement,
and when Edwards set out to record the new
album himself, he followed suit. Recording in a
practice space with below-average acoustics,
something that precluded using a room mic,
forced the matter.
While recording himself, Edwards avoided
excess compression and extraneous pedals. He
alternated fluidly between Gibson ES-345 Hollow
Body, Gibson SG, and Jazzmaster guitars, playing
through a VHT cabinet with a Pitbull head into a
pair of positioned mics. A Neumann U57 provided
punch and articulation while a Royer R-121, a
“very EQable, pleasant sounding mic,” brought out
the mid-range and high frequencies, important on
songs like “Supertoys,” where the bass and guitar
constantly shared frequencies.
“The midrange is a mysterious area for me psychologically,”
says Edwards. “I want to hear more
than I should, so I undershoot with midrange. I
follow the old wisdom about taking away frequencies
to reveal what you want to hear and turning
down the high and low ends.”
Tracking to an Alesis ADAT HD24 hard drive
captured multiple versions of the same line, and
provided more options for mixing. Many of the
bent, distorted tones come from running two
amps simultaneously to create tension. The fundamental
sound from the amp, layered or not, is
always the starting point.
“With guitar mics you can get a wide range of
differences in tone just by changing the angle,
pointing into the cone, or changing the mics’ positions
in regards to one another,” he says. “I get the
amp sounding exactly like I want, and then it’s up
to me to put the mics into the right position, do
some subtle EQing with the pres, and really capture
what’s coming out.”