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FEATURE STUDIO PROFILE


SSL’s AWS 900+ console inside the studio control room


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Remote Control Far Heath


The Northamptonshire countryside may not be the first place you’d look for a top-notch recording studio but Angus Wallace’s upgraded facility is drawing attention to this secluded spot. Jake Young finds out why.


IT’S BEEN 26 years since Angus Wallace started charging his school friend’s band to record in the annex of his house. He was 18 at the time. From there he slowly built the studio up moving from an eight-track to a 16-track reel-to-reel. Today, Wallace is doing the rough mixes and recording all the backing for two songs by singer songwriter Peter Conway. Offering recording and tracking, mixing, mastering, voiceovers, sound design, and recording courses in the Northamptonshire countryside, Far Heath has come a long way from its humble beginnings. The location is one of the many things that makes Far Heath unique. The studio is surrounded by miles of walks, country parks, canals, and substantial areas of ancient


30 December 2013


woodland, making it the perfect place to disappear for a while. “I think it just gives people a different, more relaxed feel,” says Wallace. “No stresses. And mobile phone reception is bad so they can’t get interrupted. Deep, rural seclusion.” For those wanting even deeper immersion, Far Heath features an accommodation area for up to six people, providing a lounge, kitchen, and bathroom. “So now it’s a nice purpose-built bedroom area where people can sleep and get away from the music. It used to be just camp beds. For many years people were sleeping in the lounge.” According to Wallace there


are about six studios in Northamptonshire with his being one of the larger ones. “There’s a lot of studios starting up in many of the


counties around the Midlands now, I suppose some of them are almost bedroom studios. Because the price of equipment’s come right down you can start achieving high quality with fewer outgoings. I’ve always reinvested the cash so the equipment here is top-notch now.”


The studio is set up for live


bands, so there are a lot of vintage mics, a self-designed drum booth with a 10ft ceiling, and a 24-input Solid State Logic AWS 900+ console. Award-winning UK acoustic and technical design firm White Mark designed the studio control room as well as the live room. “They raised the ceiling and worked out how it was going to sound best with oak flooring and a huge window that overlooks it from the control room,” says Wallace. “White


Mark were excellent, very professional. They did the wiring as well. I think they did a cracking job. I’m very happy with it. The main reason I did the whole upgrade was to improve the monitoring in the control room, and then it sort of snowballed a little bit from there, but the monitoring is gorgeous.” Wallace’s main monitors


are Exigy 515s and the mini monitors are Focal Twin6s.


MOVING UP A recent upgrade included moving up to 32 I/O of Avid Pro Tools HD Series interfaces, which replaced the older Digidesign 192 I/O interfaces. The team at studio installation company Studio Creations assisted with the upgrade. “I used Studio Creations to help me go


through a lot of different interfaces,” says Wallace. “I wanted to get 32 inputs as opposed to my old 24 inputs. I’d heard that these Avid interfaces had a richer tone and they do sound much better, so everything that goes through them I’m very happy with. I haven’t gone for Pro Tools 11 yet but that will probably happen later next year.” Two more vintage


Neumann mics, a U67 and a M49, have been added as well as a pair of Schoeps Colette condenser mics with MK 4 capsules and a vintage EMT 140 Classic Plate Reverberator, which was originally commissioned for Polydor before it went to Chapel Studios in Lincolnshire. The unit has seen a lot of action over its life, with Jimi Hendrix,


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