Using the MPS-420 - One Engineer's Experience
Philips of Japan was the customer, Jazz pianist
John Lewis the artist.
By Alan Silver President, Connoisseur Society, Inc. New York, NY
"In 1984 I was offered the opportunity to record the legendary
jazz pianist, John Lewis, in the 24 Preludes and Fugues from J.S.
Bach's Well Tempered Clavier, Book One. It was a large assignment
intended to take five years with completion scheduled for 1989.
Each prelude was to be recorded exactly as written on solo piano
and each fugue was arranged by John Lewis for piano, bass, guitar
and varied combinations of strings. In addition, an interlude
of jazz improvisation, played by Lewis, was to be integrated seamlessly
into each prelude and fugue.
The record company was Philips of Japan, and they wanted me to
match the solo piano sound they had heard on one of my Connoisseur
Society recordings recorded earlier in a New York church. They
ordered me to spare no expense in hall rental, engineering, or
any other part of the master production. I hired a renowned engineer,
his Schoeps microphones, and Studer mixer, and used the same hall
as before. Kiyoshi "Boxman" Koyama, a noted producer
of jazz recordings and writer on jazz subjects, was sent from
Japan to New York as executive producer for Philips.
Koyama and Lewis were satisfied, and four years of fascinating
music making followed, utilizing three different top-rated mixing
desks and two engineers. But at the end of 1988, as preparations
were being made for the final group of sessions in 1989, the engineering
staff for the last several sessions was not available, and I was
asked by Koyama to hire someone else. But in the preceding two
years my wife, Patricia A. Duciaume, had become my engineering
partner for all new Connoisseur Society records, and we had a
full complement of digital recording equipment of our own, including
a prized Benchmark MPS-420 microphone mixer. So I approached Koyama
with the idea of having the last sessions be an all Connoisseur
Society team. Koyama was concerned that our equipment didn't include
a famous name-brand mixing board with its dozens of faders, solo
buttons, E.Q., and pan pots. Also, he pointed out, we were customarily
using more than 4 microphones for these sessions, and panning
was essential.
Pat and I countered with a guarantee that we would provide pan pots
and up to 8 mic capability. Koyama agreed, and we faced the next hurdle
of getting more than 4 microphones into and out of our 4 channel
Benchmark mixer. We consulted with Benchmark president and chief
engineer, Allen Burdick, who recommended using two MPS-420 mixers. He
offered to design an interface so that the two mixers could be ganged
together, providing a maximum of 8 in and 2 out. Additionally, Burdick
designed new circuitry for adding pan pots to the mixers, with the
promise that they would not degrade the excellent noise and distortion
characteristics we had come to admire.
The December 1989 session finally arrived, and as we set up, Koyama
looked somewhat apprehensively at the two slim but elegant Benchmark
mixers now replacing the large mixing desks of earlier sessions. But he
politely said nothing and we began our work. After the first few
playbacks, Koyama moved over to my chair and said with a pleased look
that the sound was definitely the best of all the sessions since we
began in 1984. It was cleaner and more transparent. But since we were
using the same type of microphones and digital recorders he wondered if
the improvement could be coming from the Benchmark mixers. I assured him
that was the case.
Koyama is a sensitive man and I wondered if he was as enthusiastic
as he said. The question was answered a few months later when he invited
Pat, me, and our Benchmark mixers to record John Lewis again, this time
in a new project for Polygram, Paris."
Pan Pot Block Diagram
While this application note is now somewhat dated, the MPS-400
and the MPS-420 microphone preamplifier systems are not. We recently
received high praise from one of Canada's top mixing engineers who had
purchased a very highly regarded competitive preamplifier system, only
to return it in favor of the Benchmark MPS-400. These systems are
regarded by those who own and use them as the finest available.
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