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Earthworks Audio |
| A
Pro's Point of View |
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Jim Merod |
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23 August
2002 |
I
gained my introduction
to the extraordinary
audio universe of David
Blackmer in the late
'80s. I was searching
among several high-end
audio stores for my
first CD player. One-box
units were standard then
and I had no
understanding of the
complexities and
complications that would
soon emerge in the world
of digital sound
reproduction. Perfect
sound was here forever
and all of us could junk
our vinyl albums and
prepare ourselves to
repurchase them in the
much more convenient,
terrifically 'better
sounding' 16-bit digital
disc format.
Ah, yes … the world was
generous with heady new
audio horizons. My job,
at that moment, was
merely to locate the
best sounding CD player
from among a small
gaggle of boxes arriving
on the market.
I held off buying a unit
until I was convinced
that I had found
something worth
listening to for a
sustained while. After
several visits to audio
outlets within easy
reach, I came across a
seemingly knowledgeable
salmon who wanted me to
put a grand down on the
soon-to-be-in-production
laser vinyl player. I,
too, could be the first
on my block to have a
digital-based analog
machine -- a device so
space-age intense with
gaudy innovation that
only a select few
hipsters were chosen to
put upfront bucks on the
new device.
Because I loved my vinyl
albums dearly, as I
still do, and because
this bloke worked his
rear off to convince me
that I was the perfect
candidate to help him
usher in the
mind-boggling new world
of vinyl playback via
laser tracking, my gaze
was temporarily diverted
from the real source of
audio joy resting within
reach.
There were two of them,
in fact. The first was a
pair of Dahlquist DQ-10
speakers that were being
blown out at a genuine
bargain price. When I
heard them at length (in
the process of scoping
out CD players) I
realized they were a
tremendous upgrade from
my Klipsch speakers.
They became part of the
sound chain I relied on
for several years. The
second jewel momentarily
obscured by the sales
hustle was a dbx DX-5 CD
player, a mighty sound
reproduction engine in a
modest box sporting four
somewhat understated,
wholly innocent knobs on
the face panel.
Little did I realize at
the time that I was face
to face with one of
David Blackmer's benign,
yet truly evil little
creations. The DX-5 blew
away higher-priced
Nakamichi and other
one-box units . . . and
gave the willing audio
enthusiast a handsome
set of controls to
tailor sound: a
remarkably effective
"ambience" control; a
variable attenuation
"soft" compression
control; and a "digital
impact audio recovery" [DAIR]
control, a two band
signal processor that
added sonic wallop to
musical transients. The
fourth knob sets the
volume for its headphone
jack (a very useful
feature, indeed).
Other useful functions
made the DX-5 a
marvelous one-box
companion: time display;
a sub-index repeat
control so that any
place on and any portion
of a disc can be
auditioned repeatedly;
and more . . . but the
finest aspect of
Blackmer's devilish
little gizmo was its
extraordinary
musicality. The unit
just flat out made great
sound, music that did
not fatigue the ears or
destroy attention.
I'll put that virtue in
the present tense, as
well, since I still use
the DX-5 as an armchair
auditioning tool for any
number of audio-related
tasks. David Blackmer's
splendid musical
craftsmanship has stood
up for more than fifteen
years of weekly use. The
unit still gives me
pleasure with a nearly
unrivalled ease of use
and breadth of
functional flexibility.
All this is by way of
introduction to
EARTHWORKS, perhaps
David Blackmer's finest
legacy. He has many
achievements worth
celebrating.
Alas, we lost David on
March 21st of this year
. . . a loss that may
not have been recognized
as widely, for example,
as the loss of a pop
cult vocal star or
sports hero. But, for
me, the work that David
Blackmer accomplished in
his lifetime continues
to have an impact on the
world of music.
Of all the ways
Blackmer's legacy
influences our audio
present and future, the
EARTHWORKS line of
microphones and
recording instruments is
the most significant.
The company is in the
excellent hands of
David's son, Eric, a man
who fully understands
the value of the work he
carries on - a man who
respects the delicate
nature of well-recorded
music and who knows how
to push the sonic
envelope toward greater
degrees of musical
enchantment.
I feel fortunate to call
upon two sets of
Earthworks microphones
in my recording efforts:
a near-matched pair of
TC30K omnidirectional
microphones and a pair
of
SR-series condenser
mics. One of them, the
SR-71, has been
superceded by the SR-77,
but both of these
microphones have
wonderful tonal
neutrality with gobs of
sonic "reach" (a term I
use to designate the
ability of a mic
instrument to command a
large and
appropriately-scoped
musical field). All four
of these microphones are
glorious. They are each
characterized by the
Earthwork trademark:
signal flatness with
huge sonic impact,
delicacy and detail.
I've read reviews that
suggest that Earthworks
microphones are somewhat
"dry," a term that may
not be intended as
derogatory but a term
that, nonetheless, does
not do justice to the
exquisite capacity of
these microphones to
capture sonic nuances
and musical magic.
Let me give you an
example of what I mean.
Awhile back I had the
opportunity to record a
small group of superior
musicians with minimal
miking … an occasion
that I enjoy a great
deal since it places a
premium upon immediate
musical intimacy. Too
often the aim of a
recording session is to
cram as much sonic
information as possible
(or so it seems) into
the available sonic
(instrumental) envelope.
One's entire set of
gear, in such
circumstances, governs
the extent of one's
creativity. In contrast,
it is a joy to have the
chance to focus
essentially or solely on
microphone choice and
microphone placement as
the central
sonic-shaping logic.
For this occasion, I
chose three microphones:
the Earthworks omni pair
(TC30k) in a wide-angle
Ortophon spread for the
fundamental sonic
capture, with a single
Earthworks condenser,
the SR-77, as a spot mic
on the guitar. There is
much to be gained from
such a simple array and
a great deal to give one
pause, too. The crucial
choice, after
microphones are
selected, is placement
of mic-instruments. I
think of microphones as
organic extensions of
human ears: quite
literally, ears we can
put more or less where
we'd like them to be -
with all that entails in
emotional, physical, and
psycho-acoustic
sensitivity.
I set the omni pair
where I felt the total
body of ambient
information would not
overwhelm or blur the
immediacy of first order
transient impact. I
placed the single SR-77
where it had the
greatest chance to
"hear" the innate bloom
of the acoustic guitar.
The merging of such
sonic streams with a
minimalist mic-preamp
was, at that point,
straightforward and
without complexity.
This arrangement allowed
the greatest possible
"coloring" or
"filtering" or "shaping"
or sound and music by
the microphones
themselves … each of
these terms in some way
a derogation of the
results that I expected
- and achieved.
First, Earthworks
microphones have a
remarkable way of
getting out of the way
of anything they record.
Their sonic flatness and
neutrality are forms of
transparency. I expected
to hear, on monitoring,
a "large as life" sound.
That was precisely what
I received back. I was
never doubtful that the
Earthworks would somehow
intrude upon the "big
sound with an immediate
dynamic kick" that I
wanted to achieve. A
good part of success
here, of course, had to
do with the signal
purity of the three-mic
mixing preamp. It did
its job perfectly and,
thus, allowed the TC30Ks
and the SR77 to do their
work with ease and
impressive clarity.
Anytime, each time, that
I've called on any of my
four Earthworks
microphones, they have
met or exceeded my needs
and expectations. In
many years of carrying
these mics with me
across country and using
them under all sorts of
difficult sonic
conditions. I have never
had a single fluff or
failure of any sort from
them. They are, as I
frequently tell
colleagues, "work
horses." They do their
jobs perfectly every
time. They capture music
with every loud THWACK
and each subtle SWOOSH
held lovingly within an
ambient whole that
always seems much
greater than the sum of
its many (sometimes
conflicting) parts.
When and if I have the
opportunity to audition
the new Earthworks Sigma
6.2 monitors and/or the
critically acclaimed LAB
series of mic-preamps
(as well as their SR69
vocal mic), I will
report here what I've
found. I expect to
discover there what I've
lived with all these
years from the four
Earthworks instruments
that have made my work
easier: sonic clarity at
an advanced degree of
musicality and ease of
use as well as
durability... precisely
that combination of
attributes that David
Blackmer built into the
handy, bulletproof DX-5
disc player that has
kept me happily engaged
for fifteen years of
use.

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