| Death Cab For Cutie attacked me when I heard their first album,
"Something About Airplanes". I was floored by the melodies, and the
overall sound of the entire album. Their first album was constantly in my CD player
for five months; I was afraid of wearing it out. The best part about the album
was that it was recorded by band member, and all around nice guy, Chris Walla.
When their latest album, "We Have The Facts and Were Voting Yes",
came out I sacrificed food for a couple of days to be able to get it ASAP.
Through an almost constant bugging through
email I was able to get to meet the band and from there I arranged for Chris and
I to sit down in a Seattle coffeehouse and talk shop. Afterwards I gave him an
old Revox I had and he gave me a TEAC M-2A mixing board. I picked Chris
brain and realized that the mysterious sounds I heard on the new album werent
so mysterious. |  |  |
When did your interest in recording start? I remember
being six years old and listening to Sgt. Peppers with a pair of headphones
going, Oh theres something over here and something on this side. Why
is that? It used to drive my mom crazy cause I would balance everything
to the left and listen to just the horns like in Good Morning Good Morning
or something. I didnt know it at that time, but thats when I got interested
in recording. Then in high school I got a little further into it. Ive always
have been putting together Radio Shack adapters with crappy microphones. When
Nathan and I met we just wrote songs and recorded them together. I did a lot of
crazy shit. Like those three dollar Radio Shack microphones, we used to stick
them inside the hi-hat and then close the hi-hat and hit it and get this awful
noise - it was great. Was there a distinct point where you bought a piece
of equipment and said, Now Im committed. Now I know this is something
that I want to go into. Not really. I got a 4-track either my
senior year of high school or first year of college. I dont remember. It
wasnt really a conscious thing. I guess Ive always been interested
in recording, but I never knew that I was interested until I started doing 4-track
stuff. So I guess maybe the 4-track, yeah. And I was also making mix tapes for
people. Once you got the 4-track did you start accumulating different
outboard gear, mics and stuff like that? Was it a snowball effect? Kind
of. For a long time all I had was a 4-track and a [Shure SM] 58, and I guess my
parents bought an Alesis Micro-Verb for Christmas one year. I didnt even
have a guitar amp for a long time. I had a guitar and a Rat pedal and that was
it. So I went direct on all my guitars, like maybe a little bit of delay from
the Micro-Verb. But I didnt even put a mic in front of a guitar amp until
like three years ago. I didnt really start amassing stuff until I was out
of school, out of Shoreline [University]. Did you take any classes in
recording? Read a lot of manuals? Or was it just a matter of getting the equipment
and fiddling around until you got something good? I went to Shoreline
for two years and did the recording thing there. Failed both of my recording classes
there. Most of the reason for that was that there was fifty people in the class
and one studio, so getting any time in the room was a total miracle. The instructor
was great and its a good class and I learned a lot on the book side of it,
but I figured out really quick that the only way I was going to get any time in
the studio was to not go to recording class. So I would not go to class and screw
around in the studio instead. Record direct guitar and drum machines and crazy
stuff. Like write songs just to be able to record them. |