Fuchsia session

Worked on an infomercial today, amazing American voice over artist.
The Fuchsia band first album session tomorrow- thanks to Stan for the extra equipment. It’ll be the first madtheory PT session.
Working on some new music, and reworking some old pieces too.
Ken is working on a concept album of guest vocalists.
I have some pics of Cashel Horgan the Shaggy Shiek VJ doing his thing at Cartoon. Great sound by Ber of PRoC fame.
Thomas Dolby is touring, but only one European gig, in London. Maybe some promoter might bring him to Ireland…

Cartoon

Cartoon album launch tonight! I mastered it.
Look out for Animal Rescue, Network 2 April 27th. Tomás did post production sound.
Check out the mastering page for new info on supplying a master to us.
The Fuchsia band have booked a few sessions for their album.
We might be moving the studio to a beautiful location soon…
Yamaha MLA7 8 channel mic pre added to gear list.
Selling on ebay is great!

Live album launch

Roaring Forties album launch today, two venues, two PAs, nice weather. See you there!

I recorded this in the Savoy on an Alesis 24 track. I took direct outs from FOH mic pre amps, and had the Sony ECM 717 at FOH for audience and PA. This is a great little mic! Mixed in Pro Tools with NS10M speakers, thanks to Rupert for PT guidance 🙂 I mastered it in Cubase so I could use the True Tape plugin.

Latest stuff

New service: band photography.
Colm O’Sullivan on electronic music in Cork, Evening Echo Sept. 8th article here.
Email Colm to suggest artists for the compilation.
•Liz: Complete track with real cellos by Adrian Curtin.
A review
of the premiére of Liz in May 2004, where it formed the musical part of a modern art and ballet performance.
Images from the performance.
Who can it Be Now? The classic Men at Work track, madtheory style.
madtheory live: rehearsals in progress (pics soon). VJ Cashel Horgan is on board for cool visuals.
•Radioplay: Tune in to An Taobh Tuathail on R na G, Cian plays madtheory tracks. Monday – Sunday 23.00 – 01.00.

Media activity

•Radioplay: Tune in to An Taobh Tuathail on R na G, Cian has been playing madtheory tracks. Monday – Sunday 22.00 – 24.00.
femmepop is Margaret O’Sullivan, produced by Tomás.
A review of the Accidental Tourist album, produced by Tomás, appeared in the Evening Echo Thu. Jan. 27th.
“I found that Tomás was challenging for me in that he brought out the best in the stuff” said Ray. “He was good and affirming as well.” Don O’Mahony on the album itself: “Good songs with high production values”.
•Full article here.

•Tomás’s studio diary is here.
•Album available in Virgin and The Living Tradition.

Free download– complete songs! Tomás recently remixed two songs by his old band Grand.
Scroll down to the bottom of the mp3 page.

•The Stanley Super 800 EP is due in April, mixed by Tomás. See their site for tour details.

Current Projects

madtheory live: Rehearsals in progress.
•It will be live sequencing, mixing, and a little keyboard and Theremin playing too.
-The two Kawai sequencers are synchronised and we’re setting up songs at the rate of one per day.
-Gonna keep it simple, otherwise I’ll never do it, so no video.

•The Stanley Super 800 album has been released, and the band is on tour.
Tomás mixed it, and even played some synth on it.

Accidental Tourist
-The album is set for release in August.
•The website is live- look out for Tomás’s studio diary and pics.

The visit to Realworld

In 1997 I was working in Secret Garden Studios in Glanmire Co. Cork with Rupert MacCarthy- Morrogh. The Kelly Family were living in Cobh at that time, and used to use the studio for CD copying and rehearsals. One time they decided to do a vocal overdub, and brought in their own engineer from Germany, a gentleman by the name of Stuart Bruce. At the time, he was moving back to England with his family and setting up a studio in the Realworld complex. The Kelly’s didn’t do much work, so Stuart chatted with us all day! He was a great story teller. He gave us some cool tips for recording. He was a modest chap and I discovered afterwards that he had worked on a lot of great albums from the eighties.

Stuart in the Big Room

The thing at the back with the basketball ring in it is the diffuser in the main studio. This photo doesn’t do it justice, because in real life it looks like a cathedral. The door underneath the ring leads to the smaller room, which looks like a chapel. It’s very impressive, but compared to the other rooms it’s a bit freaky, so not many people use it!

We got on so well that he invited us to visit his new studio and to have a look at Realworld. So in October, after the APRS show in London, we did. The atmosphere at Realworld was amazing, and the staff were very friendly and chatty. We looked in on the Pro Tools editing session for a Shiela Chandra album and met the producer Hector Zazou who was very warm and welcoming. The sound of Shiela’s voice was very beautiful on the studio monitors. The engineer was hard at work backing up the session onto ADAT while everyone else was having dinner in the sumptuous dining hall.There was a chef and a chandelier- amazing! Even though PT was fairly new back then, we thought it was a bit odd that he trusted ADATs more than a CD-R, because we were using ADATs then and knew how unreliable they could be. Of course, CD-R turned out to be not so great either!

The Work Room

We had an Ace Ventura moment when we opened the sliding door in The Bunker, because the water for the mill runs underneath the building. The soundproofing was very impressive with the door closed!

At the APRS, Sony had a nasty looking bouncer standing next to the Oxford mixing desk on their stand. We avoided him and instead Richard Chappell showed us Peter Gabriel’s Sony Oxford. Did I mention that everyone at Realworld was really nice? Richard looked tired (I think there was a party the night before) but he was very happy to show us around the writing room and talk about equipment.

Sony Oxford desk in the Writing Room.

A corner of the Writing Room.

The building is amazing, all wood and stone. The atmosphere is inspirational, and it feels like a great place to make music. In the writing room I was in heaven, because the Fairlight famously used to incredible effect on Peter Gabriel’s fourth album (which lists the Fairlight samples used) was right there. I he got to touch that actual instrument, instantly curing me of my geeky synth spotting affliction (not really).

The classic Fairlight CMI IIx as used on Security, and clearly gigged a lot too!

We were so blown away by the place that we didn’t take nearly enough pictures. For example, Stuart’s own studio was based around an Amek Mozart and a couple of ADATs. He had 3 Akai S1000s, a Prophet 10, a Fender Rhodes and a rack full of synths and tasty outboard. One wall had shelving covered by a curtain. These shelves contained an exotic selection of guitar pedals, baby synths and drum machines. Stuart kept them there to help inspire musicians and keep them happy. We saw all the different rooms, which used different materials in their construction to give a range of acoustic spaces. All of these rooms were beautiful places to be, and also looked very beautiful.

Stuart’s Oberheim Matrix 12 and Roland JD-800 with Alesis MMT-8 sequencer

Stuart’s stupendous Prophet 10.

The place was crawling with Eventide Harmonizers. There was gear everywhere. There was a Mitsubishi 32 track in the corridor, and Peter’s EII was being used as an ashtray. To give an example of scale, our studio was based around an 02R. Peter’s keyboard mixer was an 02R. But there was a distinct lack of gear lust in the place, and no snobbery. Peter records on anything- ghetto blasters, ADATs, Sony 3348 and Pro Tools. It was all about inspiration, not gear. The mic collection was extensive and impressive.

Peter Gabriel’s Yamaha CP-80 piano with MIDI.

Peter Gabriel’s Hammond B3

Peter Gabriel’s Prophet 5, a Rev 2 I believe.

Peter’s Fairlight CMI 3

Our visit really showed me that the single most important feature of a studio is the atmosphere. This is down to the people working there, and the building itself. I also learned that professionalism is really about trusting people.

Latest News

Rulers of the Planet is a new band that Tomás is producing, with former members of The Shanks and Semi. Tracking and overdubs were done at bpm Studios with Finny. Tomás reckons it’s the nicest sounding space in Cork… Colm O’Sullivan has been playing the rough mixes on his Green On Red Show, Red FM 104- 106. You can hear the band here, recorded by Kieran Hurley at Cork Campus Radio 97.4FM. Recording is now back on schedule after Barry (singer) had his jaw rebuilt- he now resembles Dave Grohl, giving the band a competitive advantage in the marketplace! Slated for release at the end of March. Look out for the studio diary, coming soon…

The music composed by Tomás and Ken for the Brian Friel play Translations is online. We would like to do some theatre work again, email us with projects.

Listen to the Theremin track on the mp3 page.

We’ve run out of server space! When this is sorted, the complete works of The Charms will be uploaded as mp3. In the meantime, I’ve got final year exams to study for, so you’ll have to wait…

THE GIG: Final year music degree at UCC, and all that producing means that we can’t gig til June. In the meantime, music work is still going on.

Ken is working hard in his ergonomically redesigned studio Latest addition is a Johnson J-Station, also being used on Rulers of the Planet. Quite a cool thing it is.

Tomás is studying away, remodelling his studio in his spare time. There are quite a few cool new tracks on the boil. Tomás now has loads of raw footage, and is very jealous of Mike Oldfield who makes his own videos and interactive computer games on a megabuck Silicon Graphics Machine. madtheory has to make- do with a souped up beige G3 running Final Cut Pro, and a Video- 8 camera :/