mark bingham: recording guru and far out dude
the older i get the more i realize how important it is for artists to master the business side of their craft. its not something that most artists have the aptitude for, but its becoming less and less possible for artists to afford the type of management and publicity team that pervaded the music industry for most of the twentieth century. i have been lucky in recent years to meet some really incredible folks who have been teaching me, as i have been ready for it, about the ins and outs of the now perhaps archaic music industry. one of these, a man i deeply respect, is mark bingham.
i met mark late last year at a performance that we both did with my then roommate’s band. before the performance we all had coffee and talked music. i was really thrilled to find that mark had studied in his younger days briefly with xenakis and was now a producer and studio engineer. in fact, he is one of the owners of piety street studios, a new orleans icon.
initially i approached mark about the possibility of interning at the studio. we started hanging out more and eventually shawn hall piety’s business manager, also an outstanding artist, decided to host my sleep concert at her gallery. through the process of the sleep concert shawn and mark asked me to help them launch their new label, piety street files and archaic media. the site isn’t up yet but the store and new website will be available soon. a portion of my blogging will be dedicated to chronicling my experiences with the piety label. i lucked out big time on this hit.
i consider this a really unique opportunity for several reasons. first, the vibe at piety is super chill and mark, shawn and the gang have become more like family and its just good to hang out in a musical bat cave. secondly, mark has worked with some of the giants in the industry including bands like REM but also greats like alan ginsberg and glenn branca. third, its rare to meet people who just get it, and mark, shawn and even the dog oliver just get it. finally, the label has agreed to release one of my own albums, a collaboration with mark, which is a real source of inspiration and excitement for me.
basically i will be using some of the same techniques that i have been developing for my own blog on their site. the idea is to create a buzz and to tell a compelling story about the work of mark bingham and the other artists on his label. two of mark’s releases, ‘back to doghead’ (screaming gypsy bandits circa 1970) and ‘psalms of vengence’ (mark bingham 2005) will be featured on the label. i will link to them as soon as we get the digital files up on the net.
in the coming months i will be writing lots more about mark and all things piety. so, stay tuned for more insights and thoughts about my time at piety and my explorations into the music industry.
check out mark’s eloquent thoughts about the nature of recording and his mission at piety:
Philosophy
WHY PIETY STREET and OTHER THINGS
YOU MIGHT BE INTERESTED IN…
by Mark Bingham
WHERE ARE WE?:
For those of you who have never been to New Orleans, Piety Street Recording is in the downtown New Orleans neighborhood known as the Bywater. This area is also called “the ninth ward”. It’s is home to many odd specimens of humanity: “hipsters”, fearless late night bike riders, geezers who drank too much to make it out with the 80’s white flight crowd, families of all varieties, and a smattering of celebrities. It’s a truly diverse place beyond cliché. There are guesthouses, resturants, coffee shops and bars where the bartenders will know you after one visit. The Mississippi River borders Bywater and the boat horns can be heard all through the day and night. (The studio is quite soundproof so you need to go outside if you actually want to hear the boats.) The studio is on the corner of Piety and Dauphine Streets on the original route of the Desire streetcar line, now the bus named Desire.
Piety Street Recording is housed in one of the many Leonhard buildings, built in 1927, scattered around the Bywater, this one being a former US Post Office and more recently, the Louisiana Center for Retarded Citizens. We still get mail for them. We actually have 2 postal addresses: the original 3240 Dauphine and our new 728 Piety, which is now our main entrance with doors facing Piety St.. There’s now a “dog park” across the street (which we have affectionately termed Mickey Markey “Poo” Park), and vintage furniture and junk shops around the corner. The neighborhood, like so many across the country, has gone through gayification and artsification and is now becoming officially gentrified. Post Katrina, the Bywater is now too expensive for the working hipster, though the squatting Fauxbeauxs still
have many the abandoned house to choose from.
WHAT HAVE WE DONE?:
We’ve tried to combine the best of all possible audio worlds so as to have a great place to work without leaving town: doing this in 2001 might have pleased Pangloss, but that’s what we did. 8 years later and we’re still here – and it’s 10 years after the NY Times declared the end of studios. Why have 300 SSL rooms gone the way of the dodo but we’re still here?
What we have is a huge A playing room with 8 large windows providing natural light. Both playing and control rooms have natural light. You can pull the thick beautiful curtains over the windows if you like it dark. The windows are thick, too, and only f-15 fighters flying low over the Bywater looking for terrorists will break the sound barrier and get into the room. Since Katrina we have had to re-seal the building, put on a new roof, caulk every seam and hope for the best.
We’re capable of recording an entire orchestra or more typically, being able to get mics 50’ away from the drums if so desired.
I’d describe the décor as a cross between an elegant Cajun fishing camp mixed with a turn of the century Storyville bordello or maybe your favorite grandmother’s living room. Comfort combined with sound quality was the goal. The superb acoustics of the 26’ x 65’ x 17’ playing room are complemented by four adjacent iso booths. Each iso room large enough to handle a drum set, with two iso rooms capable of housing either in- house Yamaha grand piano. Acoustically, the iso rooms can be live, dead or neutral depending upon what you like.
We put rough cypress on the playing room walls, added chandeliers that were thrown out of an old Masonic Temple, and found lots of vintage furniture. We left the rusted tin ceilings in the big playing room because they looked great and sounded good, too. We have lots of packing blankets and rolling bass traps and gobos.
Both control rooms are comfortable and accurate, with lots of room for visitors without bugging the engineers. There’s lots of room to roam around and get away from the session, too. There’s also a computer in the lounge and wireless internet throughout. There’s a TV room with a few hand weights and a rowing cycle if you need instant exercise. The back yard has ample parking and a basketball court.
Beyond amenities, this is simply a great space to play and record music, with variable acoustics and flexibility from session to session. Piety Street is one of the last great studios left standing.
SOME SESSION BASICS:
We keep the studio open ended, rarely leaving the same set-up from one session to the next. Both rooms have consoles that are simple to recall. We try to deal with each session individually, so the technology can serve the musicians, not force them to serve our habits. We also have a deep engineer/producer pool with people like John Fischbach and me who learned on analog and young engineers such as Wesley Fontenot and Aaron Hill who learned to record digitally without consoles before they ever worked on analog. There has been much in-house schooling to teach the old dogs the new tricks and give the young engineers a feel for recording actual instruments.
The musical and recording aesthetics at Piety Street will certainly vary wildly depending upon the artist and the producer. I still use old analog guitar boxes, spring reverbs, 2” tape, plate reverbs, 70’s drum machines and even overdriven cassette decks, along with the Pro tools.
About John Fischbach: he is a meticulous engineer who uses microphones, mic placement, acoustics and mic pre amps to make some of the most open and natural recordings you are likely to hear anywhere. John has actually gotten better since his seminal 70’s work on Songs In The Key of Life with Stevie Wonder. His experience is priceless. These days he is largely a mastering engineer, where his great ear has helped many the mix in need.
For basic discography information on any of the Piety Street producers or engineers, please go to allmusic.com or to ENGINEERS heading of this web site and click on individuals. Much of the stuff John and I did in the 70’s is not even listed, and stuff on our younger guys is slow to be listed, but it’s still a good reference to check on anyone in the music biz.
WHY PIETY STREET?:
What we really offer the working band or producer is a sonically upscale environment where they can work as quickly or as deliberately as they want, have everything they need, and not spend a fortune. We encourage people to come into the studio and record with the best mics and processing in a great sounding room with an experienced engineer and then take the results home to do overdubs and pre mixes and edits.
When it’s time to mix, you can use Piety Street with its massive processing power that no amount of plug- ins or home gear can compete with. Even bringing in your finished session and “bumping up” to a better sounding format is now a standard use of a modern recording facility. The Sony and SSL consoles will do wonders for your “no console” mouse mixes.
A caveat: I have recently mixed a few records “In the box” and I can testify that there is no longer a vast difference between console mixes and in the box. Up to PT HD 7 and 8, I had found “in the box” mixes to be inferior, with not so good imaging and lousy depth of field. My recent experience brings us to this: if you know where you are going and what you are doing, if you have all the right plug-ins, a good room and good speakers, mixing in the box is an option.
Once I got the records finished “in the box” I did hit 1/2″ analog tape and everyone preferred the analog versions to the straight up “in the box”.
I wish I knew why.
Mixing to 1/2” analog will typically add the last bit of ooomph to any digital or analog multi-track format. I myself use tape with the machine set to repro and send it directly to 24/96 digital via a good convertor back into PT, thus getting the best of both worlds minus tape cost.
Then again, I know people who get good results on any medium and others who can have the best gear in the world and make terrible sounds. Such is life.
In this day and age, when I can get on a plane and compose and sequence in flight with a lap top, it does beg the question why have a studio when you can do so much at home or anywhere?
The answer is simple. Having the means and the equipment to record does not equal having the skills to record and it is not an easy task. When word processing came into the world, it did not increase the number of great novelists, it just made things easier for writers.
To attempt to be the artist, the producer, the engineer, the arranger, the PR person, the label, the designer and the roadie is now possible and more of the norm minus the old music biz.
However, multi-tasking is no more efficient, creative or cost effective than making good decisions about people who can help you realize your dreams. Everyone must do the maintenance to keep day to day life going, but slighting the music in favor of web promotion or by doing everything yourself can be a mistake. The music has to be good or what good is all the hype?
A Selmer sax does not make you John Coltrane nor does an Akai sampler make you Dr. Dre either. Reality still dictates, despite what equipment manufacturers and software designers may have you believe. While we all love the great new equipment that is generally less expensive than equipment has been, working with other talented people is often a better investment than trying to buy cheap and do everything yourself. By the time we buy the latest stuff and learn to use it, it’s obsolete. Good mics, mic pre amps, compressors and eqs – the guts of a studio – never become obsolete. Storage mediums and post production options will continue to change but the recording of music has not changed much for 50 years.
There is an incredible talent pool in New Orleans.
We try to bring an intuitive quality to every project we do, walking the fine line between rudiments and improvising. We hope to make a place where people can move ahead artistically and add to the language of popular music. When you just try to keep up, you are always behind.
Thank you for your time.
Mark Bingham




