|
|
Our SSL 4000B console
has previously been installed in London's Townhouse Studio
2, the famous 'Stone Room'.
It has serial #2 out of a total of six B-series consoles.
1984 it was purchased
by Matrix Studios, Soho.
After about 10 years it got replaced by an E-series.
Years
of Rock 'n' Roll left deep marks.
The idea was to take it apart and sell the modules.
Luckily, this didn't happen and we could buy it off Matrix
in 1999.
The Refurbishment took almost 2 years.
|
 |
|
Read a great article in
MIX on how the drumsound of Phil Collins - 'In The Air Tonight'
has been created on this desk here
|
|
In 1981 Producer Nick
Launey, who witnessed the events above, got what
he describes as his lucky break. Another great Townhouse story
...
The PIL sessions With
John (AKA Rotten Sex Pistols) Lydon, Mr. Lydon had a reputation
for pissing all over the console, throwing chairs, instruments,
tapes, and indulging in extreme verbal abuse. Being a Pistols/PIL
fan Nick jumped at the chance. The first session went very
slowly due to the engineer/co-producers inability to work
the then new experimental "B" series SSL console.
This resulted in Nick constant to-ing and frow-ing from His
tape operator position at the back of the mix room, to actually
getting the sounds at the console. This eventually got John
so pissed off he said: "Nick! For f**k sake stop acting
like a fu**ing yo-yo, you're making me dizzy. Move your chair
to the console and show this pathetic wanker which knob to
turn". Later that day the engineer left to go and have
a pee. Lydon promptly got up and locked the door. The engineer
thumped on the door then called on the intercom. John told
him: "Your position has been taken.. Kindly fuck off"
The recording was successfully finished at 7am the next morning.
Nick's relationship with PIL blossomed to the point where
he was asked to Co-produce their next Record : "The Flowers
Of Romance".
Thanks
for permission to use this, Nick www.launey.com |
|
Chris Jenkins
was the technical manager at the Townhouse when the B-series
was installed in the newly constructed Studio 2 (1979)
I spent more than two
years implementing design revisions and modifications in conjunction
with SSL to get the console as good as we could make it. It
should have the original Listen Mic compressor mod that I
added plus another mod to allow routing to the multitrack
buses in Mix Mode.
A little known fact is that the channel compressor is based
on the same circuit as the master compressor plus has the
very usable deesser option.
Records recorded and/or
mixed on it during my time at the Townhouse include Peter
Gabriel 2, The first Phil Collins album, XTC, The Skids, Yes
(with the Buggles), the Members, Simple Minds, Public Image,
Jane Eyre and many others. The console was a favorite of Producers
such as Steve Lillywhite, John Leckie, Mick Glossop, Hugh
Padgham, Tony Platt and many more.
Glad to hear that it has
found a good home where it will be looked after and appreciated.
thank
you, Chris |
|
Thus was born the drum
sound of the 80s
Defining exactly what
Gabriel's skills are can be difficult, but when he gets into
a studio, things happen. Take that day in 1979 when Hugh Padgham
and Gabriel were sitting in the control room of Genesis' Townhouse
studio listening to Phil Collins play his kit to a drum machine
pattern in his headphones. As Padgham tells the tale, the
drum sounds reaching the control room were only coming in
through the talkback mike, which had a crude noise gate and
limiter on it. Padgham was twisting the knobs on this setup
when suddenly Gabriel cried, "Wait! What's that?"
The simple compression and the rapidly closing gate had given
Collins' kit a whole other sound. Gabriel had Collins record
about five minutes of the same pattern, then went back and
turned it into "Intruder." Thus was born the drum
sound of the '80s, with Gabriel as midwife.
_________[Musician
Magazine June 1989]
|
|
|