Sonobeat Recording Company began more than modestly, without
facilities or equipment of its own. In its first year of operation
-- 1967 -- it borrowed two Ampex 354 quarter inch two-track
recorders and microphones from KAZZ-FM,
where Sonobeat founders Bill Josey Sr. and Rim Kelley (Bill Josey
Jr.) worked, and rented Austin-area night clubs to use as makeshift
recording studios. KAZZ's chief engineer, Bill Curtis, designed
and built a battery-powered 6-channel mixer for Sonobeat, which
was first used to record jazz combo The
Lee Arlano Trio at
the Club Seville in downtown Austin.
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The first few Sonobeat recordings
were not particularly challenging; the Lee Arlano
Trio sessions required only six microphones -- two covering
the piano, three covering the drums, and one for the bass.
There were no vocals to overdub, so the Arlano tracks --
two singles and an album -- were each recorded in a single
take through the homemade mixer directly to the two-track
Ampex and, therefore, the resulting stereo mix could not
be remixed or rebalanced.
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Recording Sonobeat's first single release, A Picture of Me by
the Sweetarts, a five piece rock band, was more difficult
than the Arlano Trio since there were more instruments
to mike as well as vocals. Sonobeat prefered
to record the basic instrumental tracks and vocals in separate
sessions. This required using both of KAZZ's Ampex two-track
recorders. First, the basic instrumental track was recorded
with six microphones covering drums, lead and rhythm guitars,
and bass. Then, two channels of the 6-channel mixer were
used as inputs for the stereo output of one Ampex, and the
remaining four channels were used for vocal and percussion
overdubs. The resulting mix was recorded to the second two-track
Ampex and, once recorded, was "locked" and
could not be remixed. This was the basic recording configuration
Sonobeat used during 1967 and the first half of 1968.
Sonobeat recorded its fourth single, Lavender Hill
Express's Visions and Trying to Live a Life,
in autumn 1967. The two songs were an upbeat rocker and
a slow ballad, respectively. Inspired by then-current top
40 hits such as Monday,
Monday, (You're My) Soul and Inspiration,
and All You Need Is Love -- Sonobeat producer
Rim Kelley wanted to add an orchestral
backing to the LHE tracks, but the cost of an orchestra was
too much for Sonobeat to undertake. However,
a string accompaniment was within Sonobeat's modest budget
for the single.
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The basic instrumental tracks for Visions and Trying
to Live a Life were recorded during mid-October 1967 at the
Swingers Club in Austin. The sessions were held during
the day, when the club was closed, so no audience was
present. In order to minimize sound reflection,
the band set up on a carpeted section of the club floor.
The Joseys, who had mounted one of KAZZ-FM's Ampex 354
recorders in a 2" x
4" wood
frame for portability, set up the recorder and 6-channel
homemade mixer about 20 feet from the band's equipment. The
left and right output channels of the mixer were plugged
into the Ampex line inputs, and Rim, who engineered
the session, monitored the mix through headphones plugged
in to the Ampex.
The instrumental tracks featured
Rusty Wier on drums, Leonard Arnold on lead guitar,
Layton DePenning on rhythm guitar, Jess Yaryan on bass
guitar, and Johnny Schwertner on keyboard. For Visions,
one
AKG tube condenser microphone was placed on a stand
slightly in front of and above the kit. The front skin
of the kick was removed, and the kick was filled with
blankets, into which an ElectroVoice 665 dynamic mike
was buried. The drums were miked slightly differently
for Trying
to Live a Life,
in order to get some stereo separation. The lead, rhythm,
and bass guitar speaker boxes were close miked for both
tracks, also using ElectroVoice 665s, but the output
from Johnny Schwertner's Farfisa transistor organ was
plugged directly into the mixer. No vocals were recorded
during the instrumental session. A "live"
stereo
mix -- one that could not be remixed or rebalanced
later -- was recorded to the Ampex, creating a first
generation master. The following sound bites are taken
from the original instrumental master .

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The Joseys engaged Richard Green to arrange and conduct
a string quartet for the first overdub
session and gave Richard an open-reel reference dub
of the basic instrumental tracks. About four weeks later,
when Richard had completed the string arrangement, the Joseys
scheduled an overdub session for which Richard engaged musicians
from the Austin Symphony Orchestra. The session
was recorded at the KAZZ-FM studios in downtown Austin. The
Joseys brought in a rented harpsichord, which was set up
in KAZZ's reception room and professionally tuned just before
the session. The reception room was barely large enough for
harpsichord and string quartet -- two violins, a viola, and
a cello. Producer/engineer Rim Kelley used the KAZZ production
room, which also housed KAZZ's two Ampex 354 recorders mounted
in racks, as the "control
room" for
the session. Using a technique that's come to be known as "bouncing
down",
Rim played back the basic instrumental tracks
from one Ampex 354 through two channels of the 6-channel
mixer and used the remaining four channels to record the
string quartet with three mikes and harpsichord with
a fourth mike. The output from the mixer -- basic instrumental
tracks plus strings and harpsichord -- was fed to a
stereo hi-fi amplifier that drove five sets of headphones
-- one for conductor Richard Green and one for each
member of the quartet. For no apparent reason, the left
and right channels of the original instrumental tracks
were reversed in the overdub. The resulting tape was
a second generation master that would serve as the instrumental
backing for the vocal overdub session. Here are sound
bites from the string-sweeten tracks .

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In the second overdub session, held on November 26, 1967,
the band recorded the vocals. Again, Rim used two
channels of the 6-channel mixer to feed in the instrumental
backing, now sweetened with strings and harpsichord.
Three of the remaining four channels of the mixer were used
to mike the vocals and reverb with KAZZ's ElectroVoice 665s.
This final session also was conducted at the KAZZ-FM studios,
but was recorded after business hours in order to use
the long hallway outside the KAZZ studios on the
10th floor of the Perry-Brooks Building in downtown Austin.
Rim set up the singers' mikes in the hallway just outside
the KAZZ office door, running the cables
into the production room. Why use the hallway? It provided
a deep, natural reverb, which was captured by placing a microphone
at the far end, some 50 feet from the singers'
mikes. A stereo hi-fi amp connected to the mixer output fed
headphones for the vocalists. The vocals were
"live" mixed with the instrumental tracks to create the
final stereo master -- now a third generation tape -- for
the Lavender Hill Express's first Sonobeat single. This master
tape was sent to Houston Records, which cut the lacquer master,
manufactured the metal pressing plates (matrices),
and pressed the vinyl 45 RPM stereo discs. Here are
sound bites from the final masters .

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Unfortunately, analog recording equipment in the '60s was far
from perfect. Each overdub session lost a generation of quality,
resulting in a loss of high frequencies and increased
tape hiss, so that the basic instrumental tracks sound muddier
in the final mix than in the original recordings. The introduction
of multi-track recorders, such as the 4-track Scully 280
that Sonobeat purchased in mid-1968 and the 8-track Studer
A80 used to record the Beatles' Abbey
Road album made the "overdub" process significantly
easier, reduced tape hiss, and preserved sonic fidelity that
was lost by "bouncing" tracks from one recorder to
another. Today, creating Visions and Trying
to Live a Life would be far easier using digital mixing consoles
and PCs, which didn't exist in the '60s.
Recording Visions and Trying to Live a Life was
a modest but important milestone for Sonobeat. It demonstrated
that the fledgling record company could produce relatively
sophisticated recordings on a shoestring budget, using unlikely "studios"
and marginal equipment. But, more importantly, it reinforced
the fact that small-town rock 'n' roll recordings could
transcend the typical garage sound of the '60s and compete
with national releases from the big record companies.
Visions, composed by Layton DePenning, and Trying
to Live a Life, composed by Johnny Schwertner, remain
two of producer Rim Kelley's favorite Sonobeat recordings,
not so much because they gave Sonobeat an opportunity
to push the envelope but because they're terrific tunes,
well performed by both band and string ensemble.
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