Murray allen, Ken kessie – Universal Audio UAD POWERED PLUG-INS ver.6.1 User Manual
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UAD Powered Plug-Ins Manual
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Chapter 57: History
and string dates. Among his recent credits are work with the Goo Goo Dolls, Alanis Morissette
and Green Day. Sides brings his different perspectives into play when he talks about using the
1176.
“The 1176 is standard equipment for my sessions. I just used them last night, as a matter of fact,
on a project for singer Lisa Bonet that Rob Cavallo was producing at Ocean Way. We were
recording drums and I used them on the left/right overheads as effects limiters. It's something
I learned from (engineer) Don Landy, who worked with Randy Newman a lot. I mult the left and
right overheads and bring them back on the console, then insert a pair of 1176s into a pair of
the mults. Push in 20 to one and four to one simultaneously and it puts the unit into overdrive
creating a very impressive sound.”
Murray Allen
Murray Allen is a veteran engineer and Director of Post Production for the San Francisco Bay
Area company Electronic Arts. He has a fascination for gear both old and new and he explains
why he thinks the 1176 has been so popular for so long. “It has a unique sound to it that people
like, it's very easy to operate, and it does a great job. You have just two controls relative to the
ratio of compression. You have input and output and you have attack and release. That's all
there is. It's still my favorite limiter for Fender basses and string basses, because you don't know
it's working. It doesn't change the way the bass sounds, it just keeps the level at a more con-
trollable place.
Ken Kessie
Mixer Ken Kessie (En Vogue, Tony! Toni! Tone!, Ce-
line Dion) is known for being experimental. “Seems
like everybody knows the basic tricks for the 1176,”
he says, “But here are two that might be lesser known.
If you turn the attack knob fully counterclockwise until
it clicks, the 1176 ceases to be a compressor and acts
only as an amplifier. Sometimes this is the perfect
sound for a vocal. And of course the unit can be over-
driven, adding another flavor of distortion in case
your plug-ins are maxed out!
“Then, for that hard-to-tame lead vocalist (the one that
backs up from the mic to whisper and leans in for the
big ending chorus), try an 1176 followed by a DBX
165. Use the 1176 as a compressor, and the DBX as
a peak limiter...it's guaranteed to be smooth as silk.”