Audix microphones are a crucial part of the historic rock band’s sonic formula. Tappero and front-of-house engineer Colin Loynachan explain why … and how.
Great songs and chops are crucial to any band’s musical success, but they don’t mean much if the band doesn’t sound equally great live and on album. Part of that is gear—guitars, amps, stompboxes, and everything else in your signal chain—of course. But audiences and fans don’t really hear gear. They hear the sound captured on recordings and in the front of house at shows by microphones—an absolutely critical but sometimes overlooked component of making a great band sound as great as they truly are.
Soul Asylum’s bassist Jeremy Tappero knows this, as both a stellar player and an experienced engineer. He shares the stage with the Minneapolis-based band’s founder Dave Pirner, guitarist Ryan Smith, and drummer Michael Bland, of Prince fame. And they—along with Soul Asylum’s front-of-house engineer Colin Loynachan—share an enthusiasm for Audix microphones. Especially for vocals and drums, which are the two main focuses that mixes are typically built around.
Tappero and Loynachan took a deep dive into how they use Audix mics in the studio and onstage, but not until Tappero—Soul Asylum’s newest member—shared some deep background on his musical journey.
Jeremy, how did you join Soul Asylum?
Jeremy Tappero: I did the indie rock touring van thing for a long time. I was in a band called Gratitude that got signed with Atlantic Records. After a few years, that band got let go, and I found myself back home but itchy to get back on the road. Soul Asylum is obviously a staple here in Minneapolis.
I grew up in Madison, Wisconsin, and one of the big reasons I ended up in Minneapolis was the larger music scene there. As Soul Asylum were going back on the road, they were looking for a guitar tech. I jumped into that role. Later, they found themselves on the hunt for a bass player and I watched them audition a lot of people who would go on short runs or not really cut it.
I started thinking, “I can do better.” It was a hurdle because when you come into a group as a crew member, that’s how you’re perceived. Long story short, after they went through several bassists, I insisted on auditioning and wound up with the gig! I’m almost five years with the band now. Not only are they one of the better bands out of Minneapolis, but I think [lead singer] Dave Pirner is one of the better songwriters of his generation.
Would you describe your early musical background?
Jeremy Tappero: I started playing as soon as I was old enough to hold a guitar, I’d say as early as 5 years old. I remember my dad putting one in my hands and trying to get my fingers to stick in an E major chord. When I finally got it, I probably strummed E major for three hours.
My dad is also a bass player and played in bands as I was growing up. They rehearsed in our basement and when they were gone, I would go downstairs and play all their instruments. I really wanted to be a drummer, so I’d play their drums as much as possible.
It just so happened that the drummer for the band my dad played in was Butch Vig. I idolized him growing up, and used to tell people I wanted to be Butch Vig long before he was, you know, Butch Vig.
What was your point of entry into the music business as a professional?
Jeremy Tappero: I’m not sure that’s even happened yet! [laughs] My first paying job was in high school. There was a teen center in Madison, Wisconsin, called the New Loft. They’d have after-school activities during the week, and then bands playing on the weekends. At some point, they got a real booking agent and national touring bands would come through as well as local high school bands. I started being the sound guy there, I think in 10th or 11th grade. I got to meet a lot of the bands. I met Josh Freese when he was with the Vandals. I got to see a lot of punk, ska, young acts. You learn a lot when you get three or four bands up and down in a night.
You said you moved to Minneapolis for the music scene. How would you describe it?
Jeremy Tappero: There’s a ton of bands. There are giant rehearsal spaces with long waiting lists to get a spot. Rock bands, pop, funk—everybody is playing. The hip-hop community is going great. I don’t know if it’s our long winters, but maybe the idea of being indoors and making a record is part of it. Obviously, people think of the big three of R&B in Minneapolis: Prince, Morris Day, and Jam & Lewis. For rock, it’s the Replacements, Soul Asylum, Hüsker Dü, and so on. Everything cross-pollinates here. No matter their style, everyone was aware of what Prince was up to, and Prince was surprisingly aware of the local scene. There are all kinds of places to play, from fancy venues to kids doing $5 basement shows.
So, you’ve mentioned you’re an Audix devotee. Which Audix mics are you using and on what applications?
Jeremy Tappero: The D6 has been part of our package for quite a while now. We’ve been through a few vocal mics, but a few months ago, Colin, our sound guy, said, “I’m really fighting bleed when it comes to background vocals.” He was the one who drove us trying OM7s onstage. Colin had used them in various applications over the years, and Chris DeNogean [Audix artist relations manager] was nice enough to send us some. Colin was happy in the front-of-house, and our instruments had never been clearer in our in-ear monitor mix. The OM7s really rejected background sound well, and cymbals, guitars, and vocals were all very individuated and clear.
Colin Loynachan: As Jeremy said, the thing I love about the OM7 on vocals is its lack of bleed. Out of all the different mics I’ve used and different acts I’ve worked with, the OM7 is unparalleled in that regard. I can just leave them hot all the time. There’s also no mistaking the D6 on kick drum. We use it outside the drumhead, and it has such a clean attack on transients.
Jeremy Tappero: Everyone in the band except Dave is on in-ear monitors. Changing to the OM7 was a night-and-day difference in terms of the clarity of vocals in our in-ear mixes. The crispness of the high end and the rejection as well … I could crank up a vocal in my in-ears without bringing up the roar of the stage behind the mics and without competing with things like cymbals.
How did you first become aware of Audix microphones?
Colin Loynachan: You know Peter Greenland? He was Willie Nelson’s front-of-house guy for a long time, and he’s sort of a legend in Minneapolis. He’s worked with the Commodores and Phil Collins, too. He was an early adopter of Audix in the late 1980s. Whatever their first live vocal mic was, he bought a bunch. Later, he brought several OM5s to a couple of gigs we were doing. After that, I knew we had to get Audix for Soul Asylum.
What else strikes you about their sound for particular uses?
Colin Loynachan: Working live, we go as fast as we can. Especially with Soul Asylum, we do maybe two songs max at sound check. We don’t want to be up there three or four hours troubleshooting some little resonance in the floor tom, for example. More like 20 or 30 minutes. We’re focused on the big picture. Out of the box, I’m 90 percent of the way to the sound I want if I choose the right Audix mic for the source and place it properly. I don’t have to spend a bunch of time creating that sound after the fact.
Jeremy Tappero: A lot of their mics have a signature frequency shape, which is nice. When we got the OM7s, we just plugged those into the same signal chain as always. There was no EQ change, and the first time I heard them, everything was instantly clearer.
Soul Asylum “Somebody To Shove” Live @ Manchester Ritz 11/11/22
Jeremy, how do you balance touring with owning a recording studio and producing bands?
Jeremy Tappero: I think one helps the other. When I’m working a lot in the studio, I look forward to getting out on tour, and when I’m on the road I look forward to getting home. It also focuses me in terms of scheduling. If I have to tell bands I’ll be gone for a month here or two months there, it narrows down the possibilities and everyone seems to get more serious. So, each keeps the other fresh.
We know you have a blast onstage. What’s your favorite thing about producing and recording other bands?
Jeremy Tappero: I really enjoy working with a band for whom it’s their first time in the studio. I remember how magical that felt when I was young. Now, to be able to be the person who’s mentoring a young musician through their first recording.... It’s really rewarding to see their music come together in a way they maybe didn’t imagine.
Can either of you speak to Audix’s durability? How do the mics handle the rigors of the road?
Jeremy Tappero: I’ve had an i5 as long as I can remember. I think you could literally punch a hole in drywall with it and it would work fine. Put it this way. I’ve never seen an Audix in anyone’s dead mics box. And both Colin and I have extensive boxes! [laughs]
What future projects or applications for Audix mics are on your radar?
Jeremy Tappero: We’d like to try the SCX25A—the “lollipop” mics—as drum overheads. In the studio, I could see them going anywhere, like on a grand piano. We also have some “unplugged” style shows coming up later this year, with a string quartet and some other acoustic players, so maybe we’ll even use them in that context. I’m sure Colin’s wheels are already turning as to which mic to put on which instrument!
Colin Loynachan: I’m also pumped about the SCX25A. We first tried them on a show when an audio production company brought them in. We put them on overheads, and they were very smooth, almost like ribbon mics but not as dark. For the unplugged shows, they’d probably be my first choice on acoustic sources.
Let’s wrap up a little differently. Tell us about a nightmare gig and how you survived it.
Jeremy Tappero: Soul Asylum did a big festival in Mexico City. Anything that could go wrong, did. It started off with our tour manager’s passport going missing. We made it to Mexico City, and the next morning, the van that was supposed to take us to the venue became unavailable at the last minute. [The next van] was three hours late and the driver had no idea where he was going. We were literally driving off the road through fields at one point. The band Filter was playing their final song when we arrived. We had literally minutes to set up. Somehow, we pulled through, started and ended on time, and had a great show. But getting there was more Spinal Tap than Spinal Tap!
Fender’s Jack White Collection dropped this week, and it includes what might be the most exciting tube amp design in decades. Fender’s Stan Cotey shares some firsthand insight into this unique amp’s design.
This week, Fender and Jack White dropped a new line that spun heads across the guitar-gear universe, proving that the Third Man’s brain knows no bounds. White has been blowing minds with Third Man Hardware’s line of collaboratively conceived gear. Working with makers of all sizes, each yellow-and-black piece is as unique as White himself.
Hooking up with Fender for the Jack White Signature Collection—which includes the Signature model hot-rod Jack White TripleCaster Telecaster and the stunning Jack White TripleSonic Acoustasonic—is as big as it gets, and this week’s announcement is proportionately epic.
The all-new Jack White Pano Verb amp looks to be one of the most forward-thinking advances in tube amps we’ve seen in … well, a very long time! Although it’s roughly inspired by three vintage Fender models—a 1964 Vibroverb, a 1960 Vibrasonic, and a 1993 Vibro-King—the Pano Verb is a rare all-new design that is poised to thrill. The single-channel stereo amp delivers 70 watts of combined power and features stereo harmonic tremolo and stereo reverb circuits, with unique routing options through the hip pair of 15" and 10" speakers. If you haven’t checked out Fender’s video announcing the amp, prepare to have your mind blown by the possibilities.
“It wasn’t based on what we could or couldn’t do, or what even was or wasn’t possible. It was just what Jack was looking to accomplish.”
Fender Vice President of Research and Development Stan Cotey, who worked closely with White to develop the prototypes for the Pano Verb, says, “There were no restrictions as far as how wild something could be. It wasn’t based on what we could or couldn’t do or what even was or wasn’t possible. It was just what Jack was looking to accomplish.” Putting those goals into action was a kick for Cotey. “I love the fact that we’re still pushing the idea of vacuum tubes and that there are things remaining to be done,” he says. “And [the Pano Verb] is a really crazy thing. It’s fun when one of the larger companies tackles a big crazy thing and releases it in a bold manner.”
We rang up Cotey to get the scoop on designing the amp as we wait to get our hands on one.
Cotey calls the Pano Verb “a really crazy thing,” and says, “It’s fun when one of the larger companies tackles a big crazy thing and releases it in a bold manner.”
The Pano Verb has a refreshingly unique and adventurous set of features.
Stan Cotey: There’s two separate power amps, there’s two separate preamps, there’s a reverb circuit. There are two separate harmonic vibrato circuits. There’s two full, separate amps in it—there’s one power supply, but everything else, there’s at least two of.
There are several different kinds of stereo interaction that could happen. The harmonic vibrato could be stereo. The reverb, even though it’s a mono tank, could be steered to the speakers differently, which kind of gives a stereo-imaging thing. So, that opens up myriad possibilities for how things could work.
How involved was Jack in the design?
Cotey: He was completely hardcore. He cared in great detail, exactly down to fine decimal points, how it worked. He was very particular about the voicing. He was very particular about the features he knew. He’s pretty studio savvy, so he had a sense of routing, how he wanted the stereo interaction of the sections to work together. He very much had an idea of stereo-ness for the amp at the outset of it. He talked early on about miking both speakers and panning them—he wanted to be able to do sort of startling things with each speaker’s content.
I think my role was to take the stuff that he wanted to do and figure out how we could do it. So, the stereo-ness of the amp, the 10" speaker versus the 15" speaker, the routing stuff you could do where the reverb goes to one speaker or both, all that stuff came from Jack.
Jack’s Vibrasonic was a touchstone for the Pano Verb.
Cotey: That amp lived with me for quite a while. He knew that he liked the harmonic tremolo.
The stereo harmonic tremolo, that’s a fairly part-intensive circuit, even in a normal brown amp. In this amp, there’s two full circuits in it, so it is literally double the parts of one of the more complicated earlier ’60s amps, just for that part of the amp. I worked out how that works. That’s two harmonic tremolos that are in sync, but opposite polarity. So, when one’s going up, the other is going down, and vice versa.
Stan Cotey is Fender’s Vice President of Guitar Research and Development and worked with White to design the prototypes for the Pano Verb.
The reverb mix on the Pano Verb is rooted in some vintage designs, but it’s handled a little differently here.
Cotey: In the video, he talked about the reverb tank in front of the amp, which forms the Vibro-King, and that he liked the idea. I think he liked the idea of having a more comprehensive, dedicated reverb circuit in an amp, not where it’s just kind of spread on the top, like margarine or something.
In a traditional Fender amp, there’s a feed that comes off the preamp circuit that goes to a driver, which is a tube and a little transformer, and that drives the reverb tank. Then, the output of the reverb tank goes into a recovery amp, a little gain stage with a tube, and that gets mixed with the output of the channel and shoved into the power amp. So, the reverb kind of occurs between the preamp and the power amp. It largely takes the tonality of the preamp on because the tone controls are upstream of it.
Jack has an old Fender amp from the early ’60s that had reverb added. I don’t know who modified it, but they actually used the second channel of the amp as the reverb return, which I think is really super clever. Then you get tone controls for the reverb. So that’s where that idea came from. He didn’t necessarily want the reverb circuit in front. He liked it between the preamp and the power amp, but he wanted to have it be more comprehensive than what would be on a typical mid-’60s Fender amplifier.
What was the most exciting feature for you to create?
The stereo harmonic tremolo was really fun, and the journey that we went on to get there was really cool. I have a tweed amp from the late ’50s from Guild that has tremolo in it, and it’s a stereo amp. It has two separate everythings. The tremolo only works on one side, and that gives the apparent sound that it’s kind of going back and forth between the speakers. We tried having just the harmonic tremolo on one side of this, and it really wanted to have two complete full circuits. So that was one of the changes that got made.
Getting the power amps to work well together was fun too. That was more about transformer and tube selection and working the power supply parts out, getting the amps where they would distort in the right way at the right times or right level. But the harmonic tremolo was definitely the elephant dancing on the bucket with the streamers going off.
What are Sadler’s favorite Oasis jams? And if he ever shares a bill with Oasis and they ask him onstage, what song does he want to join in on?
Once the news of the Oasis reunion got out, Sadler Vaden hit YouTube hard on the tour bus, driving his bandmates crazy. The Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit guitarist has been a Noel Gallagher mega-fan since he was a teenager, so he joined us to wax poetic about Oasis’ hooks, Noel’s guitar sound, and the band’s symphonic melodies. What are Sadler’s favorite Oasis jams? And if he ever shares a bill with Oasis and they ask him onstage, what song does he want to join in on?
Check out the Epiphone Noel Gallagher Riviera Dark Wine Red at epiphone.com
EBS introduces the Solder-Free Flat Patch Cable Kit, featuring dual anchor screws for secure fastening and reliable audio signal.
EBS is proud to announce its adjustable flat patch cable kit. It's solder-free and leverages a unique design that solves common problems with connection reliability thanks to its dual anchor screws and its flat cable design. These two anchor screws are specially designed to create a secure fastening in the exterior coating of the rectangular flat cable. This helps prevent slipping and provides a reliable audio signal and a neat pedal board and also provide unparalleled grounding.
The EBS Solder-Free Flat Patch Cable is designed to be easy to assemble. Use the included Allen Key to tighten the screws and the cutter to cut the cable in desired lengths to ensure consistent quality and easy assembling.
The EBS Solder-Free Flat Patch Cable Kit comes in two sizes. Either 10 connector housings with 2,5 m (8.2 ft) cable or 6 connectors housings with 1,5 m (4.92 ft) cable. Tools included.
Use the EBS Solder-free Flat Patch Cable Kit to make cables to wire your entire pedalboard or to create custom-length cables to use in combination with any of the EBS soldered Flat Patch Cables.
Estimated Price:
MAP Solder-free Flat Patch Cable Kit 6 pcs: $ 59,99
MAP Solder-free Flat Patch Cable Kit 10 pcs: $ 79,99
MSRP Solder-free Flat Patch Cable Kit 6 pcs: 44,95 €
MSRP Solder-free Flat Patch Cable Kit 10 pcs: 64,95 €
For more information, please visit ebssweden.com.
Upgrade your Gretsch guitar with Music City Bridge's SPACE BAR for improved intonation and string spacing. Compatible with Bigsby vibrato systems and featuring a compensated lightning bolt design, this top-quality replacement part is a must-have for any Gretsch player.
Music City Bridge has introduced the newest item in the company’s line of top-quality replacement parts for guitars. The SPACE BAR is a direct replacement for the original Gretsch Space-Control Bridge and corrects the problems of this iconic design.
As a fixture on many Gretsch models over the decades, the Space-Control bridge provides each string with a transversing (side to side) adjustment, making it possible to set string spacing manually. However, the original vintage design makes it difficult to achieve proper intonation.
Music City Bridge’s SPACE BAR adds a lightning bolt intonation line to the original Space-Control design while retaining the imperative horizontal single-string adjustment capability.
Space Bar features include:
- Compensated lightning bolt design for improved intonation
- Individually adjustable string spacing
- Compatible with Bigsby vibrato systems
- Traditional vintage styling
- Made for 12-inch radius fretboards
The SPACE BAR will fit on any Gretsch with a Space Control bridge, including USA-made and imported guitars.
Music City Bridge’s SPACE BAR is priced at $78 and can be purchased at musiccitybridge.com.
For more information, please visit musiccitybridge.com.