By | Mon, 01 Feb 2010

Yeasayer (left to right)—Chris Keating, Ira Wolf Tuton, and Anand Wilder.
After a season spent playing songs
from their woozy, soaring debut, All
Hours Cymbal, at outdoor festivals,
Brooklyn’s Yeasayer wanted to record
a sophomore album that was bold
enough for the big stage. Odd Blood
[Secretly Canadian], the result of a
stretched-out yet deliberate recording
process, reflects the band’s constant
tinkering and drive to one-up their
electric debut.
“There was so much creativity in
creating new sounds,” engineer Britt
Myers says. “I’ve done sound design
and a lot of music mixing and engineering,
and this was really the first
record that combined both of those
backgrounds.”
Vocalist/guitarist Anand Wilder,
vocalist/keyboardist Chris Keating,
and bassist Ira Wolf Tuton began with
a set of initial demos, some recorded
as early as 2007. They reworked
them in a rented house in
Woodstock, New York, owned by
drummer Jerry Marotta (Peter
Gabriel) before re-recording and mixing
with Myers at Great City Productions
in Manhattan. Marotta’s
relatively remote home studio was
fully wired and boasted a cache of
gear, including Taos drums and vintage
synths, such as the Prophet-5
and Prophet-VS, which augmented
the Clavia Nord Lead, Nord Wave, and
Roland XV-5050 used on the album.
But Yeasayer hunkered down with
Pro Tools and a Digi 002, painstakingly
laying down and tweaking one
track at a time. Notes blur, melt, and
reform, partially due to the band’s
habit of recording to Ableton Live,
then adding glide between notes.
“Rome,” with its jaunty mix of
spastic keyboards, is an example of
the studio mangling that was
involved. The native piano riff was
chopped up, the attack removed, and
then sent through filters before being
played on another keyboard
altogether by Wilder, who also sped it
up. On “Ambling Alp,” a Moog MF-102
Ring Modulator and the SoundToys
Crystallizer plug-in, a pitch-shifted
delay, gave extra dimension to the
viscous yet charging sax-propelled
single. And on “Madder Red”—
inspired by the soundtrack to Lost
Boys and the guitar thrashing of Warren
Ellis, Wilder says—a Gibson ES-335
is threaded through Frostwave’s Sonic
Alienator pedal.
“Our manager was laughing at us,”
Wilder says. “He said, ‘You can’t seriously
consider changing this little love
song.’ But we wanted to do balls-tothe-
wall production. We thought of it
as making a movie: Get as much
footage as possible with the idea that
later on you’d edit the hell out of it.”
To anchor the album’s unique
sounds, Wilder says the band sought
to emulate hip-hop and dancehall
production, especially Timbaland
tracks. “We were trying to get a lot
more bass, aiming for something
more clear and spare,” he says. “But then we always end up adding more
and more shit.”
Low-end theory was consistent on
Odd Blood, even though bass notes
came from both keyboards and Tuton’s
range of bass guitars, including a Fender
Precision and a G&L Semi-Hollow
ASAT. At Woodstock, synths were
sent directly to Pro Tools, but if Tuton
was playing bass, he would send it
though an Ampeg B-15 flip-top, mic it,
and send it though an API 560 EQ.
Wilder says they removed the attack
and plucking but made sure the
processed sounds didn’t get too synthetic.
A Peavey Kosmos brought out
extra sub tones.
When Myers was mixing, he ran
bass tracks through the SSL Duality
48-channel analog board and used the
console’s built-in EQ. He’d then send it
through a Neve 33609, a Urei 1176, and
a Moog MF-101 Low Pass Filter.
“I’d also send it through the Standard
Audio Level-Or for more
crunch—same thing with synthetic
bass, ” he says. “It has this crunchy
compressor that sounds awesome.
Distortion can be a mixed bag. You
can lose control of your mix easily,
and things can sound grainy and
harsh. The Level-Or does a nice job of
keeping things crunchy in a
compressed way.”
Myers also amped up percussion to
provide more power to the tracks, and
he uses lots of parallel compression,
alongside an API 2500, to provide
punch and warmth to rhythm tracks.
According to Wilder, the real drums on
certain songs, including “Madder Red,”
needed the “movement of air that the
synthetic pieces were missing.”
“When you have a band working
with a lot of f**ked-up, lo-fi sounds,
you need to have the power a big kick
or snare brings to the track,” Myers
says. “If you just have the big stuff, it
sounds clean and generic. Like the rest
of the album, here it’s all about the
right combination.”