Dave is quite right in post #68 – reputable recording studios would never compromise an artistes’ reputation by using ‘coloured’ recording techniques which would alter an artistes’ own sound in any way. Control rooms are set up to be very neutral sound wise these days – they offer as accurate a rendition of the artistes’ musical creation as the artistes’ themselves envisaged.
However, that is what happens today – fifty years ago this wasn’t the case. As I said in an earlier post – they even used domestic Leak TL12’s to drive the cutter head when making the lacquer for the subsequent stamper. Things just weren’t so carefully done back in the early sixties.
I mentioned the possibility of the monitor speaker being a possible variable – well, after trawling through a tea chest full of ancient copies of “Studio Sound†(the in house mag for recording studios a few decades ago) – it seems that these built in and calibrated monitor systems we use now only really came in, in the later seventies and the eighties. Before then it seems to have been somewhat hit and miss with monitoring.
In ‘59/60, the monitoring was actually done via the amplifier built into the main tape recorder! It’s true, just read this extract from an interview Malcolm Addey did on the subject, I quote : “
The monitor speaker, positioned to the left of the console, was a Tannoy 15-inch dual-concentric mounted inside a large bass reflex enclosure and driven by the power amp built into an EMI BTR2 mono tape machine.â€
Now, I know what these 15†Tannoy’s sound like, I had a pair in the ‘70’s – they are good, but they are coloured – I changed them up in the ‘80’s for a pair of B & W 801’s (which I still use – and haven’t found nothing yet to beat them, except of course for those B & W big ‘uns EMI use these days!)
Malcolm’s interview was about the recording of Cliff and the Shad’s “Move it†and the equipment used at the time; it is still available on line – do please read it and see what you think. Here is a link to the interview, I hope you find it interesting :
http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/nov03/articles/classictracks.htm(By the way, it’s also got some interesting photos in there as well.)
Cheers,
Alan.