By John Payne | Thu, 01 Apr 2010
The Dillinger Escape Plan Employs Atypical Digital Studio Methods for Mathcore Madness
Dillinger Escape Plan in Omen Room Studios during
the recording of Option Paralysis.
Looking for some mellow, smooth
sounds to kick back to on a Friday
night, with soft lights and a glass of
wine? Well, you’d best leave the new
Dillinger Escape Plan album outta
your plans. Dillinger’s purposefully
agitating punk-metal typhoons are
custom-crafted to hurl you off of that
couch and make you punch holes in
the walls.
Recorded and engineered by the
band’s longtime producer Steve
Evetts at his Omen Room Studios in
Garden Grove, California, Dillinger’s
new album Option Paralysis [Season
of Mist] is another trademarked
Dillinger blitzkrieg of blamblamblam.
What has become increasingly
provocative about the band’s sound,
however, is the ingenious ways
Dillinger manages to blend the harsh
with the harmonious.
“Our music definitely presents a
challenge in that way,” says guitarist/chief
theoretician Ben Weinman, “because in
one sense it’s supposed to be aggressive
and it’s supposed to be obnoxious.
It’s written that way—we use a lot of
dissonant chords, a lot of high frequencies,
and we’re also tuning to normal
standard E, which is not as low as many
heavy bands. But it’s important to balance
the annoyance with things that
are the antithesis of that. It’s the
dynamics that are important to us at
the end of the day.”
SOUNDS OF THRASHING
Ben Weinman at Omen Room.
A veteran soundman who’s produced
and engineered albums by Hatebreed,
Saves the Day, Sepultura, Glassjaw,
and Every Time I Die, Evetts has been
with Dillinger since the beginning of
the band’s career. The current lineup—
which includes Weinman, singer Greg
Puciato, guitarist Jeff Tuttle, drummer
Billy Rymer, and bassist Liam Wilson—
convened at Evetts’ studio after Weinman
had worked out pre-production
demos in Steinberg Cubase.
The Omen studio includes two
rooms, and when Evetts tracks drums,
he leases the A room from the building’s
other occupant; the rooms are
connected, so he uses his gear in the
live room and in the hallway, which he
exploits as a recording area as well.
“The hallway is a tiled room that’s
wired up and meant to use as a
chamber,” he says, “so we keep the
door to the A room cracked open and
have a stereo pair of mics at the end
of the hallway. We get the best of
both worlds.”
For miking drums, Evetts used
Shure SM57s, as well as Sennheiser
MD 421s on the toms and AKG C 414s
or Violet Design The Amethyst on the
overheads. Room miking is mostly
done with 414s, and in the drum hallway,
Evetts depends on the Royer R-121s,
plus a couple of inexpensive Langevin
CR-2001 mics. Then there’s the kick
drum: “I love the Electro-Voice RE20
on the kick,” he says. “A lot of people
use the AKG D 112, but I usually use
the D 112 on the outside to give a
great low-end bump.”
For Puciato’s vocals, Evetts
keeps going back to the AKG C 414
“because it always just works with
him,” he says. “Greg feels more
comfortable with the way it sounds
in his headphones, and if he feels
more comfortable, I don’t care what
we use.”
Recorded, mixed, and edited in Pro
Tools|HD, Option Paralysis was essentially
a digital project, though the
process involved a blend of analog
and digital methodologies. “I used
some analog processing in the mix,”
Evetts says. “I’m mixing in the box but
in a hybrid system, with some outside
summing and then a lot of analog outboard
gear in the mix. [And during
tracking,] we used a Roland Space
Echo, running through tape just to get
that analog sound.”
DILLINGER GUITAR PLAN
While Evetts and Weinman did utilize
direct-inject recording of the guitars
from time to time, they did so in a
sparing way; their tidal waves of
chopping-knife guitars derive primarily
from rudimentary means: using the
right pick on the right guitar through
the right amplifier. jagged little accents on guitar, so I’ll run
a line from an amp,” Evetts says. “I’m
running a cleanish sound, low-wattage
at 5 or 10 watts, to get that small-amp
kind of thing, and then on the other
side I’ll record with a direct box and
really jack the high end up super-high
and compress it hard. It gives a very
metallic kind of tiny sound.”
In the studio, Weinman uses a wide
array of guitars old and new, pricey
and not so, depending on the desired
effect. “I’m using a couple of cheaper
ESP guitars, and then I also threw on a
Les Paul in a few spots for more
body,” he says.
Because of the density and speed
of the Dillinger attack, Weinman feels
that he needs as much control over
the sound as possible. “There’s so
much going on so quickly,” he says,
“so a lot of what’s important for us is
things like deadening the strings in
spots where they’re making noises,
stuffing body cavities with tissue and
cotton, etc.”
Weinman and second guitarist Jeff
Tuttle employ a zillion different analog
pedals in the studio and onstage, but
Weinman insists that for his main
tones he relies mostly on his guitars,
his amps, and his fingers, though he’s
developed a fondness for the Japanese
Guyatone pedals.
“They’re really little, for one—you can
put about 40 of them on a pedalboard,
but they’re really huge-sounding. And
I also use their reverb pedals, a Guyatone
that has a tube in it, a tremelo
pedal, and the digital delay. There’s a
shaper pedal, which you can carve out
a lot of different frequencies and
tones with, and then there’s a booster
pedal that’s similar to a [BBE] Maximizer.
Sounds really good.”
The band’s selection of amplifiers is
crucial as well. “In the past I’d throw in a
[Peavey] 5150 for certain things that
were really bright and aggressive, and
then for clean things I’d change amps,”
Weinman says. “But on this record probably 80 percent was the Mark V,
definitely the best amp Mesa/Boogie has
ever made. It’s diverse; the distortion is
extremely tight. The pedalboard that
comes with it has some interesting features,
too, like looping and a great
reverb; the clean sounds great, but then
the variations in distortion rival any
$4,000 amp.”
PLUG-IN LOVE
While this very electronicized band’s
sonic attack can give the impression of
being heavily effected, the real meat of
the music is reliant on just a handful of
plug-ins and hardware effects. Evett’s
two main tools for EQ are the URS
plug-ins made for the Neve, along with
the Massenburg DesignWorks
Parametric EQ for more “carving out”
of the sound. “The Massenburg EQ,” he
says, “is less obtrusive than the other
Pro Tools EQs; the URS EQ has more of
a color of a sound, but it’s very pleasing
to the ear.”
For reverb and delay effects, it’s
back to basics for Evetts. “The funny
thing is, for the main snare reverb I
just use a Yamaha SPX90. I have
other plug-ins, like the [Peavey]
UltraVerb, but the DX just sounds
great—it does one thing pretty much,
but it does it well.”
Evetts is not a big fan of plug-in
compressors, but he’s found a few that
do the job well. “For some reason, a lot
of software compressors flatten out
the sound, and not in a pleasing way—
it kills the bottom end,” he says. “But
the three main compressors I use are
software, and they all seem to not do
that—the URS doesn’t do it, the Massey
and the Chandler EMI don’t either.”
Evetts is referring to the Chandler
EMI TG12413 Limiter plug-in, which he
uses for drum compression, the URS
Neve plug-in for bass, and the Massey
CT4, which he hits up when the mood
strikes. For the main vocals, he turns to
hardware, such as the Universal
Audio 1176.
DILLINGENTLY DRAINED
Blurring lines between metal and hard
rock, the members of Dillinger Escape
Plan push a distinctly aggressive
agenda with their sound—they just do
it their own way.
“We usually don’t try to have a
metal-sounding record, even though a
lot of stuff we’re playing is really fast
and heavy and distorted,” Weinman
says. “Typically metal bands use a lot
of frequencies that wouldn’t necessarily
work with a rock album, and viceversa.
We’re trying to make a record
that’s blast-you-in-the-face, but we’re
not using a lot of the tricks that a lot of
other bands are doing, so we do incorporate
a lot of electronics.”
The question is, with all the ferocious
speed and complexity built into
a typical Dillinger Escape Plan song,
how in the hell do these guys process
it all without losing their heads?
“Dillinger records usually take a lot
more effort than most,” Evetts says.
“It’s a lot to take in, and it’s an
intense listen. When you’re hearing
all this stuff going on at a million
miles an hour, and sometimes in
multiple time signatures, all that is
mentally exhausting. Dillinger’s the
toughest job I ever loved. It takes so
much out of you, but I always love
the end result, and it’s very satisfying
as a creative entity.”