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John’s History of Recording: Part Two

MULTI-TRACK RECORDING

The next step in my recording odyssey was to acquire a multi-track recorder. Instead of having to “bounce” tracks on a stereo, sound-on-sound recorder (see “John’s History of Recording: Part One”), I wanted to record at least four separate tracks either simultaneously or one at a time, process them separately, and ultimately mix them together while recording them on another tape recorder to create a master 2-track stereo recording. (See the Otari MX5050 at the end of this blog)

TEAC 3340S 4-Track Recorder

In 1977, I secured a loan from my parents to buy a multi-track tape deck, which I believe cost about $1,300 (or about $6,500 in today’s dollars).

It used 1/4” magnetic tape and ran at both 7.5 and 15 ips (inches per second). The tracks, like all tape machines, produced tape hiss in the recording process and the more tracks you had, the more tape hiss you got.

The machine also had “Simul-Sync,” which allowed me to monitor off the record head, making it possible to keep everything in sync when overdubbing. I spent many a happy hour recording and re-recording with that deck.

Here’s a piece called “Yellow Fire” that I recorded on the 3340S in 1978 or 1979:

The next stage of my recording quest involved getting a hold of an 8-track recorder. More tracks meant being able to record more instruments without having to “bounce.”

OTARI MX5050 8-TRACK REEL-TO-REEL TAPE MACHINE

In 1980, I got a job teaching recording skills to teenagers at a place called Somerville Media Action Project (SMAP) in Somerville, Massachusetts. Somehow, we were able to get access to an Otari 8-track recorder. This was a state-of-the-art machine that used 1/2” tape rather than 1/4” and had twice as many tracks as my 3340S.

Below is a picture of the control room at SMAP and a couple of the recording engineers (that’s me on the left). The transport for the 8-track is next to my right arm; the electronics for it are behind my head. They were connected by a large cable that allowed the two parts to be separated.

I wrote and recorded the following song (“Morning Madness”) on the MX5050:

The gradual improvement of recording quality among the examples I’ve included here demonstrates evolving tape recording technology, including more tracks as well as the recording engineer’s evolving skills and experience.

Next up, 16 tracks!

Otari MTR 90 MKII - 2” 16 track tape machine

This is a picture of me mixing music at Silver Linings, Inc. in Boston, Massachusetts, where I worked as an audio engineer from 1984 to 1991. We offered “mix-to-pix” for visual media (slide-shows, videos and television) and we had two Otari 16-track decks.

You can see part of one of them at the right side of the picture. Just to the left of the machine is the roll-around remote controller for it. All functions of the deck were available from the remote.

It was a very well-made and great sounding tape recorder and the 2” tape came on heavy reels that could run at 15 or 30 ips. We edited the tape with razor blades!

Here’s a composition of mine called “Bass Desire” that was recorded on that Otari 16-track:

All the multi-track recorders than I have been discussing here were the first step in the recording process.

Once I had completed the basic recording of tracks, those tracks would be mixed together through a multi-channel mixer and recorded on a 2-track recorder. That 2-stereo mix would then be transferred to CD, cassette, or other media for listening.

Here’s a picture of the deck I used most of the time for that purpose, the Otari MX505 2-track tape recorder.

In 1992, I stopped working with tape recorders and began to record exclusively via digital, first with Digidesign Soundtools and then with Digital Performer software on Apple Macintosh computers—but for that part of the story, see the upcoming “John’s History of Recording, Part Three!”

Introducing the Kusiak Music Library

If you follow Kusiak Music on any social media platforms, you may have seen some fun short videos in the past few months and wondered what they were all about. These were created using tracks from our Kusiak Music Library albums with some sample video clips to give you a sense of each album.

Kusiak Music Library is a newly-public boutique production music library featuring music composed by John Kusiak and several collaborators, including P. Andrew Willis, Kenny Kusiak, Billy Novick, Robert Van, Rob Jaret, and Caleb Sampson. Recently, music from the library has been used in Netflix's Tiger King, NPR's This American Life, and PBS' Poetry In America series, among others. Current projects in progress include Eric Stange’s Pony Boys and the third season of Poetry in America, which we are looking forward to sharing with you all.

Filmmakers, editors, music supervisors—do you have a film, TV series, commercial, or podcast in production that needs a score? We’d love to work with you and can customize existing tracks to suit your needs. Browse all albums—over 1,500 tracks—on the Kusiak Music Library website or get in touch directly if you’d like help with a search from one of our librarians.

To catch up on album videos you may have missed, hop on over to your favorite channel:

Kusiak Music & Kenny Kusiak In the News

John and Kenny Kusiak.jpg

John and Kenny Kusiak spoke with Marjorie Howard of YourArlington.com recently; here’s an excerpt:

“The scene is a busy street in New York City in 1910. A piano plays, and we see horses and buggies clip-clopping by as men in top hats and women in long dresses walk by. Chord changes and a background of strings move the action along until the focus is on the brand-new Penn Station. The music swells and horns join in as we see the grandeur of the building. We next see the men who built the station and the musical tempo picks up, not unlike a train gaining speed.

For the PBS documentary, “The Rise and Fall of Penn Station,”the background music provides mood and feeling. Often overlooked, music made for TV programs, commercials or movies is its own art form, evoking emotion and adding texture without overtaking the subject matter. With no music, the PBS film would have a narrator and scenes of people walking by and a building. But there would be no oomph.

Arlington composer and musician John Kusiak has been creating the oomph for television, movies and commercials for more than 40 years, writing music for the PBS show “American Experience,” numerous commercials and movies and lately for podcasts. He does it from his home studio equipped with synthesizers, computers and keyboards. His son, Ben, used to wander downstairs to watch his father at work and to listen, sometimes joined by friends from school…”

Read the rest of the article.

Notes from the Production Music Conference 2017

PMC2017-program

I've been going to the Production Music Conference for a few years now, and the attendance seems to grow exponentially each time. This year the foyer was so packed in between sessions that it was sometimes hard to squeeze through!

The quality of the workshops was great, divided into two tracks (creative and business). I was there primarily for the business angle, as there's always more to learn about sub-publishing, metadata, and the direction of the industry in general.

My daughter Jessie (in training to be the Kusiak Music Library manager) met me in L.A. and we navigated the conference together, sometimes splitting up to catch both sessions. The conference was at the Loews Hollywood and we had 10th floor rooms with views of the Hollywood sign in one direction and the pool and enormous Egyptian-themed mall complex on the other.

John-Kusiak-and-Nathan-DeVore-PMC2017.jpg

All of the panels that we attended had information that Jessie and I could use in developing and improving Kusiak Music Library. The session that stuck with me most was "Gratis and Multi-Title Licensing," which revealed an unfortunate practice that is becoming too common – clients wanting music for free or wanting to share or own the publishing. Pretty disheartening, but we composers need to stick together and resist this development.

It was great to reconnect with Nathan DeVore who was moderating the panel on "Valuing Your Performance License in New Media." Nathan interned for me when he was a student at Berklee College of Music and was a great help and always a positive presence. Glad to see him have so much success with Vanacore Music!

Update 2020: Another Berklee graduate has a new article you may find interesting on how to become a film composer. Check it out.