USES OF REEL TO REEL
1. Natural Compression
Unlike a
regular compressor or limiter, you can’t precisely pinpoint a ratio that you
want it to work to. You can ‘slam’ the tape by varying the volume and the speed
of the playback, but depending of the size of the tape it will affect the tone
and compression rate at different rates – yay for physics. Ideally, one would
never want to ‘slam’ tape; it’s certainly not common practice and it is
definitely a case of ‘less is more’.
Basically,
this type of compression is non-linear and it will add charisma to a track and
also take away certain things, which thankfully are usually the unwanted
elements.
Because it
is a natural way of applying compression to a track, it will also naturally
manipulate the audio into something that is comfortable and appealing for our
ears. It smoothes the high end, appearing to provide good quality “de-essing”,
immediately reducing the high-end pokey frequencies that have a nice habit of
making people cringe. Running any sort of track through a tape machine (leaving
colour and character of the model of tape/machine aside) will reduce
harshness in the high end, take out the muddiness of low end and boost the
whole middle spectrum to a subtle level of warmth that is really only
comparable to the warm-and-fuzzies from buttered rum or cotton candy.
2. Re-Amping
Re-amping
is an excellent tool for adding body and character to anything that’s coming
off a little lacklustre. Whether it’s a guitar tone that doesn’t sound quite as
good through your amp as you want it to be, a bass line that’s sounding a bit
thin or a synth that’s just completely apathetic, sonic improvement can be
introduced by re-amping the audio signal and pump a whole new level of life
into it.
I’m not going
to go into too much detail about re-amping itself, Mike Levine wrote a good
article about it for Electronic Musician a few years ago (which can be
found here) but tape is very organic way of
improving the volume and spectral properties of any instrument or track. Any
amplifier will have a personality that can bring some level tone and colour to
an instrument, but they’re all within their physical limitations and may not be
able to facilitate the sound that you’re chasing.
As
mentioned when overviewing qualities of tape’s natural compression, the
physical properties of this medium have a very good knack for making things
naturally sound good, and can be utilised in a way that the preciseness of
digital audio can’t always facilitate. These same principals apply to re-amping
of an audio signal, albeit with modified processing methods, and will
undoubtedly add substance and persona to your instrument tone.
3. Affects/Effects
I use the
slash between affects and effects because in reality, tape manipulation does
both. It is a sound effect, but it also tangibly affects the soundwave
and it’s properties are physically modified.
You can
have waaaaay too much fun playing this side of things. The most popular choices
usually being delay and echoes, sampling and looping, and you can make some
downright funky sounds by manipulating how you run the tape.
Tape
machines will nearly always have two ‘heads’ on them that the tape will run over;
one for recording and the other only facilitates playback. If you’ve got
something playing back from the machine and then you hit record, the already
moving tape is pushed against the recording head and the sounds playing back
will be momentarily warped and captured into the audio. The same kind of deal
works with fast forwarding, rewinding and stopping and starting of play.
Depending
on what you want from your track or song, you can apply a variety of these
processes purely to add cool affects/effects, or even to add narration and
semiotics to the project.
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Skinny
Jean - Informed
There are
a few awesome units that specialise in effects. Roland Space Echo and Chorus
Echo series RE-101 to RE-501 include echo, delay and looping and chorus
effects. Another lesser-known beauty is the Watkins Copicat Echo Unit,
originally working with valve electronics before moving over to circuits.
The Audio
Hunt are fortunate enough to have a few varieties of these machines available
for ASP:
4. Stereo Imaging
There are
some fantastic plug-ins for widening stereo imaging, in addition to the wide
array of pan pots that usually present themselves on a desk, but often you’ll
tweak and toy with it until the cows come home in a hunt for the right amount
of depth, and still not find what you’re looking for.
This is
another instance where the organic profile of tape can almost immediately give
everything a lift, and in this circumstance, create a wider sound field.
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