#source: matt adrian
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danganronpafakes · 2 months ago
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They might have passed a very pleasant evening had shit not gotten real.
Source: Matt Adrian (“The Mincing Mockingbird: Guide to Troubled Birds”)
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cerebipalsy · 26 days ago
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Favorite Ace Attorney (Mostly) Longfics
Subject to updates. Listed in rough order of chronology within the series timeline. Pairings, word count, brief summary, and content warnings included. Potential spoilers for AA1-5. (Mostly ignoring AA6 because I have very little interest in it.)
Mia x Diego - Turnabout Courtship by AGWFanworks
Pre-AA1 to immediately post-AA3. 158k words. Mia Fey/Diego Armando | Godot. Warning: canonical major character death by murder. Relationship and character study of the pairing.
Somebody That I Used to Know by Zarla
Pre-AA1 to Case 2-4 (Farewell, My Turnabout). 57.7k words. Juan Corrida/Matt Engarde, Juan Corrida/Celeste Inpax, Adrian Andrews/Celeste Inpax. Warning: physical and emotional/psychological abuse, alcohol abuse, canonical major character deaths by murder and suicide. Reinterpretation of canon events involving trauma and loss for everyone listed.
Good to the Last Drop by GGMoonyCrisco
AA3. 9.6k words. Mia Fey/Diego Armando | Godot. Character study of Diego's post-coma disability and transformation into Godot.
The Glass Vase. by Mx Big Gay (SuperDuperStarry)
Seven Year Gap. 43.5k words. Iris/Phoenix Wright, Miles Edgeworth/Phoenix Wright, Iris & Miles Edgeworth friendship. Warnings: major character death by unknown terminal illness, grief. A possible explanation of Phoenix's emotional state in AA4 and Iris' whereabouts following her release from prison.
Apollo Justice and Dual Destinies: Between the Cases (series) by joggingoctopus
AA4 and AA5. 285k words. Klavier Gavin/Apollo Justice, Miles Edgeworth/Phoenix Wright, Athena Cykes/Juniper Woods, Metis Cykes/Aura Blackquill. Warning: canonical major character death by murder. Novelization of the two games using context from elsewhere in the series to fill the gaps between cases in chronological order.
Lex Talionis by edelgarfield
AA4. 83k words. No pairings. Warnings: physical and emotional/psychological abuse. Character study of Kristoph Gavin, interpretation of his black psyche-locks, and relationship with his brother Klavier.
A Turnabout Toast by ideny
Post-AA4. 68.3k words. Miles Edgeworth/Phoenix Wright, Klavier Gavin/Apollo Justice, Adrian Andrews/Franziska von Karma, Maggey Byrde/Dick Gumshoe. Summary from the author: "Post-GS4, an estranged Phoenix and Miles respond to a friendly challenge from an unexpected source: do three things each to fix your lives."
Legal Partners by Miggy
AA5 era (plot-divergent). 132.2k words. Miles Edgeworth/Phoenix Wright, Klavier Gavin/Apollo Justice, Klavier Gavin/Ema Skye. Edgeworth and Klavier make a bet on who has the stronger relationship with the respective object of their affections.
Vacation All I Ever Wanted by JJsADragon
Post-AA5. 111.2k words. Miles Edgeworth/Phoenix Wright, Klavier Gavin/Apollo Justice. Warnings: brief alcohol abuse, suicidal ideation. The Wright Anything Agency and friends take a beach vacation, during which Edgeworth and Wright get engaged and everyone unpacks their trauma.
You Ever Been in Love? and Things Are As They Are (series) by hechima
Post-AA5. 116.7k words. Miles Edgeworth/Phoenix Wright, Klavier Gavin/Apollo Justice. In which the younger members of the WAA attempt to matchmake, and Klavier and Apollo take a trip (booked by one very drunk Edgeworth) to Joshua Tree.
Righteous Deliberation by digitaldreams
Post-AA5. 347.8k words. Miles Edgeworth/Phoenix Wright, Klavier Gavin/Apollo Justice, Maya Fey/Franziska von Karma, Athena Cykes/Juniper Woods, Ema Skye/Kay Faraday. Warning: graphic depictions of violence. Full-length original case fic taking the place of Spirit of Justice, in a universe where those events do not occur.
A Match Made in Neo-Olde Tokyo by Feriku
Post-AA6 (no spoilers thereof). 31.7k words. Simon Blackquill/Maya Fey. Simon and Maya build a friendship and eventually a romance on the foundation of the Steel Samurai.
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bikinibottomdayz · 4 days ago
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NOVEMBER 25, 2024 RELEASE
All my videos can be found here, full release under the read more! I am also offering the two Hadestown videos as a bundle for 30 USD! If interested, please contact me at [email protected]!
This release includes: Wicked (wicked day), Swept Away, Hadestown x2, Left On Tenth
HADESTOWN August 1, 2024 | Broadway | 4K MP4 (10.18GB) | bikinibottomday’s master Cast: Jordan Fisher (Orpheus), Maia Reficco (Eurydice), Max Kumangai (u/s Hades), Yola (Persephone), Stephanie Mills (Hermes), Jessie Shelton (t/r Fate Lachesis), BelĂ©n Moyano (Fate Clotho), Brit West (Fate Atropos), Emily Afton (Worker), Chibueze Ihuoma (Worker), Malcolm Armwood (Worker), Brandon Cameron (s/w Worker), KC Dela Cruz (Worker) Notes: Excellent 4K capture of Max as Hades! “Our Lady of the Underground” is almost entirely wideshot with two short blackouts in the middle. Some wandering and unfocusing throughout. Includes curtain call, audio is fed from external source. https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjBC7dC | ASKING $20 USD NOT FOR SHARING EXCEPT THROUGH ME UNTIL MAY 17, 2025
HADESTOWN October 16, 2024 (M) | Broadway | 4K MP4 (10.13GB) | bikinibottomday’s master Cast: Jordan Fisher (Orpheus), Maia Reficco (Eurydice), Eddie Noel Rodriguez (u/s Hades), Yola (Persephone), Stephanie Mills (Hermes), Grace Yoo (s/w Fate Lachesis), BelĂ©n Moyano (Fate Clotho), Brit West (Fate Atropos), Emily Afton (Worker), Max Kumangai (s/w Worker), Malcolm Armwood (Worker), Timothy H. Lee (Worker), KC Dela Cruz (s/w Worker) Notes: Excellent 4K capture of Eddie as Hades! Increased wandering / readjustment and unfocusing throughout, takes a while to get settled and there’s some weird framing. Includes curtain call and “We Raise Our Cups,” audio fed from external source. https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjBNqZp | ASKING $20 USD NOT FOR SHARING EXCEPT THROUGH ME UNTIL MAY 17, 2025
LEFT ON TENTH October 21, 2024 | Broadway (Previews) | 4K MP4 (7.6GB) | bikinibottomday’s master Cast: Julianna Margulies (Delia), Peter Gallagher (Peter), Peter Francis James, Kate Maccluggage Notes: Excellent 4K capture of this new play! Very minor head obstruction doesn’t block any action. Minor wandering / readjustment and unfocusing throughout. Includes curtain call, audio is fed from external source. https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjBP6R5 | ASKING $20 USD NOT FOR SHARING EXCEPT THROUGH ME UNTIL MAY 17, 2025
WICKED October 30, 2024 (E) | Broadway | 4K MP4 (10.81GB) | bikinibottomday’s master Cast: Mary Kate Morrissey (Elphaba), Alexandra Socha (Glinda), Jordan Litz (Fiyero), Brad Oscar (The Wizard), Donna McKechnie (Madame Morrible), Natalie Ortega (Nessarose), Jake Pedersen (Boq), William Youmans (Doctor Dillamond), Chase Madigan (Chistery), Christianne Tisdale (Midwife), Alison Jantzie (Witch's Mother), Michael Thatcher (Witch's Father/Ozian Official) Notes: Excellent 4K capture of the show’s 21st anniversary performance! Occasional obstruction from people passing by in the aisle, a few short blackouts in Act One (15 seconds or less each). Some moments of wandering / readjustment and unfocusing. Includes curtain call, audio is fed from external source. https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjBQati | ASKING $20 USD NOT FOR SHARING EXCEPT THROUGH ME UNTIL MAY 17, 2025
SWEPT AWAY November 24, 2024 (E) | Broadway | 4K MP4 (6.88GB) | bikinibottomday’s master Cast: John Gallagher Jr. (Mate), Stark Sands (Big Brother), Adrian Blake Enscoe (Little Brother), Wayne Duvall (Captain), Josh Breckenridge (Ensemble), Hunter Brown (Ensemble), Matt DeAngelis (Ensemble), Cameron Johnson (Ensemble), Brandon Kalm (Ensemble), Rico Lebron (Ensemble), Michael J. Mainwaring (Ensemble), Orville Mendoza (Ensemble), Tyrone L. Robinson (Ensemble), John Sygar (Ensemble), Chase Peacock (Ensemble), David Rowen (Ensemble) Notes: Excellent 4K capture of this new musical! Some obstruction on the far right in the opening number but disappears after. Some wandering / readjustment and unfocusing throughout. Includes curtain call, audio fed from external source. https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjBSWuB | ASKING $20 USD NOT FOR SHARING EXCEPT THROUGH ME UNTIL MAY 17, 2025
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sunburnacoustic · 1 year ago
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A DIP IN THE MUSE KITCHEN SINK
A wonderfully in-depth interview from 2013 with Muse producers/engineers Adrian Bushby and Tomasso Colliva, who worked on The 2nd Law. The interview goes into the recording of every part of the album, vocals and instruments, and as someone who has been teching bands for live radio sessions, you bet I'm reading every word of it :). Source.
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"Tomasso Colliva, Adrian Bushby and Muse at East West Studios in LA. Photo by Tom Kirk"
Muse is arguably the ultimate 21st century kitchen-sink act. Adjectives like “overblown,” “over the top,” “ridiculous,” and “pompous” are regularly used in describing the band’s music, and the British trioïżœïżœs master stroke is that they have turned these normally damning qualifications into badges of honour. Muse’s many fans adore the band’s bombastic intensity, the classical influences, the juxtaposition of heavily-distorted-in-your-face-over-compressed-monolithic rock with orchestras, choirs, diminished chords, key changes, and many other divergent ingredients, taking things to the limit and, well, far beyond. It makes the band’s music a love-it-or-hate it affair, but with their six studio albums selling 15 million copies to date the trio doesn’t have to worry about the nay-sayers.
Late last year saw the release of The 2nd Law, Muse’s sixth studio album and the follow-up to the commercially very successful The Resistance (2009). While the download era has seen Muse’s album sales are gradually declining, in line with those of any other act with any kind of longevity, in terms of chart figures the new album did almost as well as The Resistance, reaching to #1 in the UK and NZ, and #2 in the US and Oz. The band has gone on record saying that they were “drawing a line under a certain period” would do “something radically different” on the new album, and quoted influences of dubstep and electronic music as inspirations for a new direction. The 2nd Law does have some different touches in that it sounds more electronic than previous Muse albums and there are indeed some dub-step elements thrown in on a couple of songs, plus in other places the rather un-Muse sound of an R&B brass section. But overall it’s very recognisably Muse, as ever alternating moments of spine-tingling beauty with the more mundane, and overall admirably succeeding in obliterating the divide between the sublime and the ridiculous.
Unsurprisingly, perhaps, the kitchen-sink approach isn’t only a central pillar of Muse’s music, it’s also at the heart of their approach to recording it. Almost all their albums have been big budget productions recorded in ways that are reminiscent of the good/bad old days of the 80s and 90s, when spending months if not years and hundreds of thousands of dollars on recording an album was the norm rather than the exception. Apart from the band’s low-budget debut album Showbiz (1999) and The Resistance, which was recorded over a period of a year at guitarist/pianist/singer and main song writer Matt Bellamy’s own studio near Lake Como in Italy, their other albums were made over a prolonged period of time in a range of top quality studios located in different countries. The 2nd Law is a return to this way of working, as it was recorded from November 2011 to May 2011, mostly at Air Studios in London, with a couple of months in Los Angeles to record at East West, Capitol, and Shangri-La, and two string sessions in Milan at Officine Meccaniche (for the tracks “Explorers” and “Prelude”).
At the controls for The 2nd Law were Adrian Bushby and Tommaso Colliva, hailing from the UK and Italy respectively. Bushby also engineered The Resistance, with help from Colliva, and their accounts of the goings-on during the making of The 2nd Law are surprising in several respects, not least the fact that Muse turned Air studio 1 for a whopping six weeks into what surely must have been the world’s most expensive rehearsal space from mid-September to November 2011, and they then continued the recording process as described above. And that was before three of the world’s top mixers, Chris Lord-Alge, ‘Spike’ Stent, and Rich Costey, were brought into action. If the Muse guys are worried about declining album sales and how they’ll continue to generate revenue, their working methods don’t show it. There were other elements of excess, for example recording the drums with a PA system, the hundreds of tracks that were recorded for each session, the wealth of additional musicians and singers that were recorded, and so on. This was, undoubtedly, a Muse project

On the phone from Milan, Colliva took the story from the top. After Muse, he’s probably the person with the deepest insights into the band’s working methods, because he’s worked with them since 2005, when he helped out with the recordings of Black Holes and Revelations (2006). In addition to working on every Muse album since, he also played a central role in building Bellamy’s Lake Como studio, did the pre-production for the The Resistance tour and also is the band’s live Pro Tools engineer. “I used to be chief engineer at Officine Meccaniche,” added Colliva, “which is Milan’s largest recording studio and one of Italy’s top facilities. Muse came to record there at the end of 2005, and because I was the only person who spoke English I was asked to assist them. I ended up recording a bunch of things. Because Matthew had an Italian girlfriend at the time, he bought a house in Italy, near Lake Como, and I helped him turn the rehearsal space in his villa into a fully-fledged studio, with an SSL 4048 G+ series desk and tons of outboard, where we recorded The Resistance.”
Bellamy and his Italian girlfriend split up towards the end of 2009 and the Briton moved back to the UK. “For the new album the band wanted to record in London,” elaborated Colliva. “Like with The Resistance, they wanted to do pre-production using Pro Tools. They had done this at Matthew’s Lake Como studio for that album, but for the new album they asked me to set up everything they needed at Air. This took me three or four days. They wanted a big set-up, with quite a few microphones, and all signal paths and Pro Tools sessions ready to go. They like to be left alone during this phase, which meant that I set Pro Tools up so that all they had to do was open up a template that gave them access to every instrument at the touch of a button. They didn’t have to think about the technical side of things, and this allowed them to sketch out ideas and arrangements very quickly, and if they stumbled on new ideas these were also captured. There was an assistant if they needed some support, and other than that I was always on call via telephone. Every two weeks I’d go to London to check that everything worked and that the recordings were OK. In November Adrian and I then joined them in the studio to record everything properly.”
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"Tommaso Colliva in Brooklyn Recordings Studios NYC. Phot by Francesco Balatti"
The working method described by Colliva sounds sensible enough
 until that last sentence. Two things jar: first of all, why spend two months recording what essentially are demos in one of the most expensive studios in the world? Air wouldn’t say, but comparing it with the world’s other top facilities, Air Studio 1, with its 72 Channel custom Neve/Focusrite desk (it has 56 Neve 31106 and 16 Focusrite ISA110 channels) is likely to cost north of A$1000 per day. Spending A$40.000 (or whatever deal the studio offered) on six weeks rehearsal space, however deluxe, really is a throwback to the excess-all-areas eighties and nineties and not very 21st century at all. Moreover, aren’t demos a thing of the past? Isn’t the whole point of the DAW that anyone can record master-quality material anywhere, and going into a commercial studio is purely a matter of using these studios’ specific qualities (acoustics, monitoring, outboard)?
Colliva was almost able to hear the rising eyebrows on the other end of the telephone, and explained, “The band wanted to be able to do things in a very modern way, including the abilities to edit things and try different arrangement in Pro Tools. But they wanted to be able to do this without anyone around. If Adrian and I had been there, it would have been more expensive, and also, the days would have been standard production days during which they’d have felt obliged to go to the studio for at least eight hours a day. Instead they could go to the studio whenever they wanted, whether just for two hours or longer. It gave them a lot of freedom. It’s true that with the mics and signal paths that I had set up it would be possible to track any band and get top quality results, but when we switched to the actual recording process in November, with Adrian and I there, we did really step up things. We changed the miking of the drum kit, we put up many more room mics, we used different guitar and bass amplifiers, and we used a PA kit to enhance the drum sound. In September and October the band was busy writing sketching out arrangements, and in November it was a matter of: ‘OK we now know what the songs are, now let’s get the exact sounds we’re after.”
“Yes, we did replace almost everything they had recorded during the rehearsal phase, apart from some of the soft synth sounds, because Matthew had lived with them for months, and it would have been hard to abandon them. The main three soft synths they used were Pro Tools’ Vacuum, Native Instruments’ Massive, Rob Papen’s Predator, and we also had a separate computer dedicated to samples from VSL and East West. Many of the drum samples came from Battery, and East West’s Stormdrums and RockDrums, with the last one only for demoing. With regards to using the PA system to augment the drum sound, it’s something that I had done when working with Afterhours, one of Italy’s leading alternative rock bands, and when Matthew asked me for ideas, I suggested it to him. The set-up consisted of Roland triggers on the drum kit connected to a Roland TMC 6 trigger to midi converter, that fed a MacBook running Native Instruments’ Battery, with our own sounds in it. We ran these through the PA, and recorded them via the drum kit microphones together with the live kit.”
During the seven months of tracking, Bushby and Colliva had a fairly well-defined role division, with Bushby mainly responsible for the actual recording, ie mic choices and placements and signal paths, and the Italian manning the Pro Tools rig. “I was in fact doing two things,” adds Colliva, “one was handling everything that was digital, meaning Pro Tools, samples, synths and so on, and the other thing was coordinating everything else that related to the logistics side of production, meaning moving instruments around, making sure everything that the band needed was there, and so on. That was a lot of work when we were in LA, because we didn’t have the same degree of support from Muse’s management and the bands touring crew was faraway.”
Colliva’s logistic contributions were one reason for his additional production credit, which was also given the Bushby. The Briton added, “I think we received the additional production credits because recording The 2nd Law was more a group effort than The Resistance had been. We were five in a room, and when decisions had to be made, everybody put in their opinions.” Bushby is a London-based engineer, mixer and producer, who has worked with My Bloody Valentine, New Order, U2, Placebo, Smashing Pumpkins, Dashboard Confessional, Depeche Mode, and the Foo Fighters, and who has won two Grammy Awards, one for his engineering work on The Resistance and one for recording the Foo Fighters’ Echoes, Silence, Patience, Grace. He has a formidable reputation for his awareness of sound, and he reckons that Muse involved him “for the sonic point of view.”
From his state of the art studio in North London (see sidebar), Adrian Bushby gives his side of the story of the goings-on during the making of The 2nd Law, first of all clarifying that, for him at least, the seven-month production period for the album, November 2011 – late May 2012, wasn’t a nose-to-the-grindstone, 16-hours a day, 7/7 affair. “It was always a matter of work for two or three weeks and then I had a few weeks off. Having breaks like that meant that we didn’t get too tired. The approach was a bit different than with The Resistance, because when I arrived in Italy for work on recording that album they had three songs ready to go and the rest was very sketchy. But when I turned up at Air, there was a whole wall with write-ups and details of tracks that were ready to be recorded. In either case Matt always knows what’s going on, which is incredible, considering the complexity of their music. He always knows what has been done and what still has to be done, and where he is going.”
“When they were rehearsing and doing preproduction, they pretty much record the songs as a band, with everything miked up as if they were tracking for real. When we were recording them they regularly played as a three-piece but they also did many individual overdubs. We used the recordings they’d done during preproduction as a template. Sometimes we used the guitars and pianos that Matt had recorded for the demos as backdrops for Chris [Wolstenholme, bass] and Dom [Dominic Howard, drums] to play to. We made sure that everything was well separated, so we could overdub without spill. Chris’s and Matt’s amps were in different booths and rooms, so everything was very isolated. Also, the band works with in-ear monitors, which meant that we didn’t have any problems with things blaring from monitors. They control their own headphone mix with a 16-channel mix system by Aviom. They also use that live, and they’re really happy with it, which made my job a lot easier!”
According to Bushby, on his and Colliva’s arrival in November 2011, one of the first things they did was adjust the recording space, “The live room has a glass dividing wall, and during preproduction they had closed it and placed the drums behind it so the drums didn’t sound too loud in the room. But for some reason the drums sounded really uncontrolled with that partition closed, I think because there’s so much glass. It sounded really big and trashy with no focus on the cymbals. So we opened the doors and turned it into one big room, which sounded much better. It gave the extra close microphones on the kit a lot more focus. In general we carried on from where they had left off during preproduction, trying out new set-ups with different amps, and putting up additional microphones for a more in-depth sound. We first concentrated on getting the drums and bass tracks up and running, experimenting with many different sounds in the process.”
RECORDING DRUMS
Adrian Bushby: “Whilst the band had been demo-ing, Dom had treated many of the drum tracks with plugin EQs, going for very bright and attacky sounds. I decided to go along with that vibe for the drums. But instead of trying to record the drums very flat and natural and then EQ everything afterwards to get the sound they were after, I tried to get the sounds they wanted as they went down. I recorded the drums with a whole range of microphones, generally the same as most people use, but I did try various different ones. I always tried to have something interesting and different and set up lots of different mics in different places and gave them different treatments. Sometimes I used them all, sometimes only a few. I had some AKG D90’s floating around that worked really well, a Russian Lomo mic, which is one of mine, as well as an SM57 and an AKG414 on the floor behind the kit. There also was a Sennheiser, I can’t remember the model number, but it looks like a bullet mic, and it sounded great when put through an amp, just pulling it back from distorting. The drums for the track ‘Unsustainable’ in particular were recorded with many unusual microphones.”
“For more regular sounds I generally had a couple of mics on the kick, one of them the Shure SM91, as well as a 47 slightly outside the kick and an NS10 sub. The snare mics were an SM57 on top and an AKG414 underneath, and I also had a contact mic on the floor. I recorded the toms with 421’s on top and Neumann FET47’s underneath and I had AKG 451’s for the overheads, which I hadn’t used for a long time, but they gave the cymbals in that big room at Air some more focus. There also were a couple of Sennheiser MKH40 mics for closer room sounds and Schoeps from the orchestral set-up at Air for ambience, stuck as far and high back in the room as possible. Like on the previous record we had a piano in the room, and I used the piano mics for additional drum ambience. It’s something that I discovered by accident and it works really well. Because of the resonance of the piano you get some unusual ambience that you don’t get from normal drum ambience mics.”
“Regarding the signal paths, generally speaking everything went through the Neve 31106 mic pres in the Air desk, with some Neve EQ and Pultec EQ on the bass drum and the snare drum groups. I don’t like to compress the bass drum too much when recording, and the snare drum had some compression from a Distressor, but again nothing drastic. Most of the compression was on the room mics. I love compression on room mics, and we initially went for quite a compressed drum sound, but when we switched the PA on it obviously squashed everything down, so we tried to keep the room mics more open this time round. There were just a few close drum mics that were treated with some extra compression, while the room mics generally remained quite open.”
“The PA system was in the room behind Dom and pumped out quite synthetic, dancey sounds, really loud, while he was playing. I’d never done that before. The PA shifted a lot more air than just the acoustic kit, so we got this huge pumping sound in the room, which was very effective. The point of using the PA was to create a more dancey sound for the live kit, because they wanted to incorporate this dubstep thing. I miked up the kit as usual and obviously the room mics were going to pick up most of the PA. The close mics also picked something up, and altogether this added up to a bigger, very interesting sound. We occasionally put live bass and snare drum sounds through the PA, but mostly they were the synthesized sounds from Battery. We also recorded these Battery sounds dry, but generally speaking only used the sounds that had gone through the PA and that were picked up by the drum and room mics.”
RECORDING BASS
Colliva: “Both Matt and Chris are very fond of their live sound, but I always feel that their live setups include pieces that are not really needed in the studio, so the challenge was for them to have the same functionality in the studio, but with shorter signal chains and better sound quality. I had a Radial JD7 Injector splitter, and we would have three chains for the bass, one clean channel via his Markbass amplifiers [MoMark and SD1200], and two distorted channels, one with distortion coming from some kind of Big Muff or Animato pedal sound and the other channel would have a more fuzz-like sound coming from fuzz pedals by ZVex, like the Mastotron or Woolly Mammoth. There would also have been a fourth chain with a hot DI if we wanted an aggressive sound. Chris may also have used pedals, which we automated if they were midi controllable. We’d do a take with Chris playing via a wah-wah pedal and getting it roughly the way he wanted it to sound, and we then sent the DI through a pedal that we automated to make the wah-wah sharper and faster than a human could play it. We did similar things with Matt’s guitar.”
Bushby: “Chris’s sound is incredible. He knows how to get his sounds, and that makes it much easier when you are recording him. The Markbass set-up covered the clean sounds, I think we had two different heads and cabs on which I had an AKG D19 and an RE20 plus an NS10 sub, and they all came into the Neve desk with an 1176 on the clean bass group. The more distorted bass sound was played via two vintage eighties Marshall DBS heads going into two different cabs, placed in the back of the room, and on them I had a Shure SM7 and another RE20, panned left and right, and a couple of Neve compressors just touching things. When you have that much distortion on the track, you don’t really need compression. I didn’t want to squash the life out of the sound. Depending on the track we would sometimes changes pedals and triggered different effects from the computer. We generally speaking didn’t use the DI.”
RECORDING GUITARS
Bushby: “Matt used Diesel V4, AC30, Marshall 1959HW and HiWatt 100 amplifiers and Mills 4×12 cabinets and a Roland JC120 and a couple of Fender combos as well, like a Fender Twin. I’d normally have two mics on the speakers, like a Shure SM57, a 421, a Neumann FET, a Royer 121 (Matt really likes the sound of that), an AKG 414, or an AEA ribbon. The latter works really well because it can handle quite a lot of level. Generally every amp would have a Shure 57 and whatever went with it to taste. We also had a couple of Neumann 87 room mics, which usually picked up the 4×12’s, because they were in the big room, while other amps were screened away or in other rooms. I tended to use the desk Neve mic pres, and then a Pultec or AER EQ across the group, adding a bit more treble and bass overall. I EQ-ed the individual mics as well as the overall summed sound.”
KEYBOARDS
Bushby: “There were many keyboards in this album, with most of them soft synths. They went sort of Native Instrument crazy during the recordings. These generally speaking remained in the box, so for me the keyboards were mainly a question of miking up the piano and the Fender Rhodes. We went for the same set-up as with the previous record, with a couple of DPA mics for the nice classical sound on the piano, and also a couple of Telefunken Elam 251’s, and then I’ll generally add a couple of dynamic mics to do something unusual. These would be an SM58 in the sound hole on the sound board and this time round I also used AKG D19’s. Obviously the sound of the dynamic mics would be different than the lush, open classical sound, and I’d EQ and compress the dynamic mic sound for it to be more interesting, and pan the mics wide. When you balance them with the posh sound you can add some nice extra character. The EQ was mostly done on the desk, and any compression would have been whatever was lying around. I can’t tell you exactly how I did everything, because I just experiment until it sounds right. There is no formula. The Fender Rhodes was recorded with a couple of Neumann 67 microphones.”
STRINGS, BRASS, AND CHOIR
Bushby: “I don’t know why we went to LA, but it probably had to do with the fact that David Campbell, who did the string arrangements with Matt, is based there. I’d never done any classical recording work in LA and it was an interesting experience. The Americans were incredibly efficient, quick and focused. They’d look at a score, play it through once, and you couldn’t fault what they had done. Sometimes you did a second take, just to make sure there were no errors, and that was it. The first sessions in LA took place at Shangri-La, where Matt did guitar and Fender Rhodes overdubs, while the strings and brass were recorded in February at EastWest Studio One, which has an 80-channel Neve 8078 Console. We recorded the choir in a separate session at Capitol Studios.”
“I used Neumann 67’s above each section of the choir, and we also had this sort of Decca tree thing, with a 3-microphone set-up, and a stereo pair as well. The brass was recorded with Neumann 87’s as close mics and Telefunken Elam 251’s a bit further away for a more classical sound. I left the recording of the strings to the assistants at EastWest, because they do strings in that room day in and out and in my experience it’s generally best to go with their know-how. They used valve Neumann 47’s on the cellos and basses and Elam 251’s on the violas and violins. There was also a Decca tree and a couple of room ambience mics, but I can’t recall what they were. There was a Neve desk at EastWest, but I don’t recall the desk number anymore either. I’m too old to keep up with all the numbers. If it works, it works!”
VOCALS
“Chris recorded all his vocals at his house with the help of Paul Reeve, and Matt recorded his own vocals. You just set Matt up with some gear in another studio, and he gets on with it. It’s amazing what he does. Generally I set up a Neumann 67, a FET47, and a BeyerDynamic M88 and they went into a Neve-1176-Distressor chain and there also was an RCA ribbon mic, which went into a Mercury M72 Telefunken clone. Matt owns it, and it has a nice, warm valve sound, just like the original Telefunken. We set up these four mics with four stands and four different input chains, and he tried them out and chose which he wanted to use. He knows exactly what he wants. He’d say, ‘I’m going to do some vocals now,’ and you wouldn’t see him for the entire day, and then he’d come out with his vocals done, comped and everything.”
PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
Muse’s predilection for excess had a predictable effect on the size of the sessions. “Most of the sessions for this album were immense, off the scale,” remarked Bushby. “This meant that we regularly had to bounce things because we were running out of tracks and outputs. We did all the bouncing in the computer, so that the faders on the monitor side of the desk always remained at zero. We were always mixing what we had during the sessions, and this was a matter of whoever was closest to Pro Tools bouncing and balancing what was necessary. If I had just recorded four tracks of a guitar part recorded with four mics, I’d just grab them and balance them. Maybe they got tweaked later on, but the main thing for us was that we were always working to a mix, so we know whether what we have is working, and whether what we’re adding fits. I wasn’t involved in the process of selecting the guys who mixed the album, CLA, Spike and Rich. They obviously each have a different slant on things and the band wanted to use that. It’s a taste thing, and I don’t get involved. The band knows what they’re doing, and nobody needs to babysit them to make sure they’re not doing something crazy.”
There are skeptics who would dispute that. But millions will gladly second Bushby’s statement.
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astromechs · 2 years ago
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I posted 3,910 times in 2022
That's 1,276 more posts than 2021!
589 posts created (15%)
3,321 posts reblogged (85%)
Blogs I reblogged the most:
@novasforce
@agathaaharkness
@katekanemybeloved
@danvssomethingorother
@bogwitchlesbian
I tagged 3,651 of my posts in 2022
Only 7% of my posts had no tags
#asks - 226 posts
#peacemaker - 206 posts
#matt murdock - 180 posts
#art - 167 posts
#caitlin.txt - 157 posts
#adrian chase - 129 posts
#daredevil - 126 posts
#anonymous - 105 posts
#vigilante - 99 posts
#peter parker - 94 posts
Longest Tag: 139 characters
#maybe — in my smaller more niche corners of comic fandom — as someone who's knowledgeable of source material because i do get people asking
My Top Posts in 2022:
#5
chris conceding that "it is mildly interesting" when adrian brings up the possibility that an alien might have a favorite color and it might unexpectedly be teal lives in my head rent free
191 notes - Posted April 5, 2022
#4
adrian chase aka vigilante is a man of multitudes. he hums gimme gimme gimme by ABBA as he systematically slices through a whole gang of nazis, and literally fucking walks off being shot, but then complains for 12 hours straight when he stubs his toe.
207 notes - Posted June 23, 2022
#3
daredevil comic deep dive drinking game: take a shot every time matt and foggy get a divorce
207 notes - Posted September 11, 2022
#2
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465 notes - Posted March 5, 2022
My #1 post of 2022
been slowly rewatching the daredevil show again, and one piece of character portrayal i really love is — in 1x09, you see foggy and karen visibly emotional, falling to pieces in the morgue with mrs. cardenas's body, but you see no visible emotion on matt at all, save for that shot where his hands tighten their grip around his cane. you continue to see no emotion from matt, other than profound anger while fighting (and getting his ass kicked by) nobu, until the next episode, when foggy is grilling/confronting him after figuring out the truth.
then, and only then, do you see matt shed a tear at all, and then, and only then, do you see him start to break down.
and it's just... such a good encapsulation of the way he deals with emotions? (or, well, doesn't deal with them might be a better way of putting it.) he's all anger, very often misplaced, because he has no better way to deal with an unfair world, really, and he keeps shoving everything else down until he gets to a breaking point and he can't anymore.
it's one of the reasons why i think this adaptation is a good take on matt, because of the little understated show-don't-tell details in the writing and in charlie cox's performance like this.
492 notes - Posted September 16, 2022
Get your Tumblr 2022 Year in Review →
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an-apocalypse-of-magpies · 8 months ago
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(Source: The Mincing Mockingbird Guide to Troubled Birds, Matt Adrian)
Wait, I have something to give you!
[The heebie jeebies has been added to your inventory]
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lecameleontv · 2 years ago
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Comme en 2009, 2010, 2012 et 2013, le 13 juillet 2014 Ă  Minneapolis (USA), l’acteur James Denton a participĂ© au 2014 Taco Bell MLB All-Star Legends & Celebrity Softball Game qui a lieu au Target Field.
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En 2010, l’évĂšnement avait lieu Ă  Anaheim (Californie, USA) au Angel Stadium. 
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En 2012, l’évĂšnement avait lieu Ă  Kansas City (Missouri, USA) au Stade Kauffman.
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En 2013, l’évĂšnement avait lieu Ă  New-York (USA) au Citi Field. 
Ce tournoi est financé par Firestone, Captain Morgan White Rum et Buffalo Wild Wings.
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A ses cÎtés en 2010 : les joueurs Bo Jackson, Tim Salmon et Gary Carter.
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A ses cĂŽtĂ©s en 2012 : les joueurs Ozzie Smith, Rick Sutcliffe, Andre Dawson, Jennie Finch et Dave Winfield, et l’acteur Jon Hamm. 
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A ses cÎtés en 2013 : Ozzie Smith et le joueur du New York Met Mike Piazza.
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A ses cÎtés en 2014 : les joueurs professionnels Rickey Henderson, Adrian Peterson et Jack Morris des Minnesota Vikings et la personnalité de la télévision u.s. Andrew Zimmern. 
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Photos : Mark Sullivan, Rick Diamond, Tim Clayton, Mark Cunningham/MLB, Ron Vesley et Matt Brown, Daniel Boczarski et Adam Bettcher Sources : WireImage, Getty Images et MLB.com
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L’acteur a Ă©galement pratiquĂ© le baseball caritatif en 2010 durant le Steve Garvey Celebrity Softball Game.
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Son camarade Jon Gries se prĂȘte aussi Ă  envoyer la balle grĂące Ă  son personnage dans le film Napoleon Dynamite.
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Ryan Merriman au baseball : 42 (2013)
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Alias Mr Lyle dans la série Le Caméléon
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wrongmha · 4 years ago
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They might have passed a very pleasant evening had shit not gotten real.
Source: Matt Adrian ("The Mincing Mockingbird: Guide to Troubled Birds")
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dcau-incorrect-quotes · 4 years ago
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The joker: my only crime was that I was down to clown.
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hawklanthebard · 4 years ago
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Adrian: Why are you naked?
Matt: I-I don’t have clothes!
Adrian, opening Matt’s closet:
Adrian: You have Nickel Samurai shirts, Nickel Samurai jackets, Nickel Samurai sweatshirts, hey Juan, Nickel Samurai jeans—
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vickysmemecenter · 3 years ago
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I keep these in my meme folder.
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Tag yourself I’m the “Overdressed and Underappreciated”. Artist : http://www.mattadrian.com/ 
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danganronpafakes · 2 years ago
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Kokichi: My only crime was that I was down to clown.
Source: Matt Adrian (“The Mincing Mockingbird: Guide to Troubled Birds”)
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herecomesthefirstday · 3 years ago
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kind of a mess but i wanted to make a lil web weaving post of my own. quotes and sources under the cut
I've been through hell and come out singing - Matt Adrian, Guide to Troubled Birds
I hear a melody And just as suddenly I know who I'm supposed to be - They Might Be Giants, The Communists Have the Music
It's like singing on a boat during a terrible storm at sea. You can't stop the raging storm, but singing can change the hearts and spirits of the people who are together on that ship. - Anne Lamott, Bird by Bird
In the end, I wonder if the true movement of the world might not be a voice raised in song. - Muriel Barbery, The Elegance of the Hedgehog
You don't have to sing it nice, but honey sing it strong At best, you'll find a little remedy At worst, the world will sing along - Hozier, To Noise Making (Sing)
Just open up and sing -Marina and the Diamonds, I Am Not a Robot
Do you hear the people sing? -Les Misérables
What did they do? They sang. The whole community. - The Crown, Season 3 Episode 3
It was pleasant to think that men still sang, even in the midst of butchery and famine. - George R.R. Martin, A Clash of Kings
Lift every voice and sing 'Til earth and heaven ring Ring with the harmonies of Liberty; Let our rejoicing rise High as the skies, Let it resound loud as the rolling sea. - James Weldon Johnson, Lift Every Voice and Sing
Who found out that nothing can capture a heart Like a melody can? - ABBA, Thank You for the Music
Sing, sing a song Let the world sing along - Sesame Street, Sing
In the dark times, will there also be singing? Yes, there will be singing. About the dark times. - Bertolt Brecht (poster by Jason Urban)
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genya-ruination-safin · 3 years ago
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New Cast Members!
New update!
Corbin Bleu is returning some familiar territory a role in the third season of "High School Musical: The Musical: The Series." Bleu, Adrian Lyles, Meg Donnelly, Saylor Bell, and Jason Earles have all .joined the Disney Plus series, which has just begun production Season 3. Bleu, Donnelly, and Earles will appear in guest star roles, while Lyles and Bell will be series regulars.
Season 3 is set at Camp Shallow Lake, a family- owned sleepaway camp in California, as the Wildcats and their fellow campers stage a high-stakes production of "Frozen" and determine who is "best in snow." Season 3 will also feature music from "Camp Rock" and the "High School Musical" franchise.
Bleu will appear as himself, a star of the "High School Musical" franchise. Lyles will play Jet, Camp Shallow Lake's mysterious new kid. Bell will play Maddox, a bright-eyed, quick-witted "techie," who always follows the rules. Donnelly appears as Val, a confident and funny college student and longtime camper-turned- counselor-in-training, who is ready to choreograph the summer production of "Frozen." Earles will play as Dewey Wood, the stone-faced, killjoy of a Camp Director of Camp Shallow Lake.
The five new members join returning cast members Joshua Bassett, Matt Cornett, Sofia Wylie, Julia Lester, Dara Renee, Frankie Rodriguez, Kate Reinders, Olivia Rose Keegan, and Olivia Rodrigo.
All credit for the source above goes to Variety and Joe Otterson. Link to the full article can be seen here, Variety
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emcdraws · 4 years ago
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Big shout out to my friend Brendan for giving me the redraw insp for this!
Also gave me the chance to redesign my oc Adrian in the process😭
Source: Matt Fraction’s Hawkeye Vol. 1 from 2012.
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wortlby2 · 4 years ago
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Time to play the “Is My Rep a Dirty Rotten Traitor to The Republic?” game.  Reblog every election until every one of these antidemocratic, vote suppressing d-balls are out of office. Source Text of the list:
Senators who objected [to certifying Arizona and/or Pennsylvania’s votes]
Ted Cruz (TX) Josh Hawley (MO) Cindy Hyde-Smith (MS) Cynthia Lummis (WY) John Kennedy (LA) Roger Marshall (KS) Rick Scott (FL) Tommy Tuberville (AL)
House members who objected
Robert Aderholt (AL) Rick Allen (GA) Jodey Arrington (TX) Brian Babin (TX) Jim Baird (IN) Jim Banks (IN) Cliff Bentz (OR) Jack Bergman (MI) Stephanie Bice (OK) Andy Biggs (AZ) Dan Bishop (NC) Lauren Boebert (CO) Mike Bost (IL) Mo Brooks (AL) Ted Budd (NC) Tim Burchett (TN) Michael Burgess (TX) Ken Calvert (CA) Kat Cammack (FL) Jerry Carl (AL) Buddy Carter (GA) John Carter (TX) Madison Cawthorn (NC) Steve Chabot (OH) Ben Cline (VA) Michael Cloud (TX) Andrew Clyde (GA) Tom Cole (OK) Rick Crawford (AR) Warren Davidson (OH) Scott DesJarlais (TN) Mario Diaz-Balart (FL) Byron Donalds (FL) Jeff Duncan (SC) Neal Dunn (FL) Ron Estes (KS) Pat Fallon (TX) Michelle Fischbach (MN) Scott Fitzgerald (WI) Chuck Fleischmann (TN) Virginia Foxx (NC) Scott Franklin (FL) Russ Fulcher (ID) Matt Gaetz (FL) Mike Garcia (CA) Bob Gibbs (OH) Carlos Gimenez (FL) Louie Gohmert (TX) Bob Good (VA) Lance Gooden (TX) Paul Gosar (AZ) Garret Graves (LA) Sam Graves (MO) Mark Green (TN) Marjorie Greene (GA) Morgan Griffith (VA) Michael Guest (MS) Jim Hagedorn (MN) Andy Harris (MD) Diana Harshbarger (TN) Vicky Hartzler (MO) Kevin Hern (OK) Yvette Herrell (NM) Jody Hice (GA) Clay Higgins (LA) Richard Hudson (NC) Darrell Issa (CA) Ronny Jackson (TX) Chris Jacobs (NY) Mike Johnson (LA) Bill Johnson (OH) Jim Jordan (OH) John Joyce (PA) Fred Keller (PA) Trent Kelly (MS) Mike Kelly (PA) David Kustoff (TN) Doug LaMalfa (CA) Doug Lamborn (CO) Jacob LaTurner (KS) Debbie Lesko (AZ) Billy Long (MO) Barry Loudermilk (GA) Frank Lucas (OK) Blaine Luetkemeyer (MO) Nicole Malliotakis (NY) Tracey Mann (KS) Brian Mast (FL) Kevin McCarthy (CA) Lisa McClain (MI) Daniel Meuser (PA) Mary Miller (IL) Carol Miller (WV) Alex Mooney (WV) Barry Moore (AL) Markwayne Mullin (OK) Gregory Murphy (NC) Troy Nehls (TX) Ralph Norman (SC) Devin Nunes (CA) Jay Obernolte (CA) Burgess Owens (UT) Steven Palazzo (MS) Gary Palmer (AL) Greg Pence (IN) Scott Perry (PA) August Pfluger (TX) Bill Posey (FL) Guy Reschenthaler (PA) Tom Rice (SC) Mike Rogers (AL) Hal Rogers (KY) John Rose (TN) Matt Rosendale (MT) David Rouzer (NC) John Rutherford (FL) Steve Scalise (LA) David Schweikert (AZ) Pete Sessions (TX) Jason Smith (MO) Adrian Smith (NE) Lloyd Smucker (PA) Elise Stefanik (NY) Greg Steube (FL) Chris Stewart (UT) Glenn Thompson (PA) Tom Tiffany (WI) William Timmons (SC) Jefferson Van Drew (NJ) Beth Van Duyne (TX) Tim Walberg (MI) Jackie Walorski (IN) Randy Weber (TX) Daniel Webster (FL) Roger Williams (TX) Joe Wilson (SC) Rob Wittman (VA) Ron Wright (TX) Lee Zeldin (NY)
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