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At
any given instance in time, David Bottrill partakes in one of three activities.
He is either submerged in the realm of slumber, routing signals on a recording
console or is seated in an airplane high above the ground. In fact, he travels
so often that the next time you gaze up at the sky and see a plane scrawl across
it, he just might very well be inside it. And where would his destination be?
A place with a recording studio no doubt. And on an aeroplane, one can sleep.
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From an early age the native Canadian found himself in the
intimate work habitat of musical vanguards Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois. He was
not only responsible for skillfully operating world-class equipment, but was also
forced to push his own creative envelope. | A few
short years after his indoctrination into the studio he relocated to Real World
studios in the UK, where he worked on such notable albums as Peter Gabriels
So, Passion and Us. Bottrill is renown for being diverse with a forte of applying
his techniques to a wide range of artists: liner notes in albums by King Crimson,
Clannad, Tool, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and even Kid Rock immortalize his moniker. His
exceptional talents as engineer, producer, programmer and ace of spacious mixing
keeps him from staying put musically and geographically, as he constantly shuttles
back and forth from his decade-plus home base in the UK to locations across North
America and Europe. This is perhaps the reason why his verbiage remains free of
infiltration from British colloquialisms. Well, almost. At times he is heard referring
to a console as a desk...
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The blueprint that depicts Bottrills entry into the domain
of wires and microphones traces back to the dawn of the 80s in Hamilton,
Ontario - a modest-sized blue collar Canadian city known for its skyline plumage
of industrial smokestacks. Its a curious story, begins
an energetic Bottrill. I grew up in Dundas [a bedroom community outside
of Hamilton] and, like most people, I was unsure what I wanted to do with my life
for the most part and tried a lot of different avenues, including going to Mohawk
[Community] College for a Business Administration diploma. I never actually finished
[the program] because two personal and significant events occured that kind of
woke me up to the fact that I wasnt really heading down the right path. |
The year was 1983. Bewildered in a premature version of a mid-life
crisis, Bottrill decided to seek medicinal refuge in the ever-secure world of
music. I was always a guitar player and in a bedroom-basement band and I
was always interested in trying to do something with making music. My girlfriend
at the time said her uncle had a recording studio in Hamilton and said to go look
if there was something there for me as an opportunity. So I went to Grant Avenue
studio and her uncle was Bob Lanois [co-owner and brother of producer/engineer
Daniel]. The first time I walked into that studio, having made an appointment,
and looked at the control room and spent a little time there I thought, Well
this is a pretty fantastic thing to do! They didnt have a job for
me at the time but said I could hang out to learn. So I spent the day doing odd
jobs - washing windows and so on to make money so I could go in at night and assist
at making coffee, sweeping up and eventually I got to plug in microphones. |