In-Session: Bridges and Powerlines at The Buddy Project

ASTORIA, QUEENS: Over the winter, Brooklyn indie-rock band Bridges & Powerlines made their forthcoming record, Eve, with producer/engineer Kieran Kelly at his Astoria studio, The Buddy Project.

Bridges and Powerlines' (l-r) Peter Mucek, Andrew Wood, Keith Sigel and David Boyd

Bridges and Powerlines' (l-r) Peter Mucek, Andrew Wood, Keith Sigel and David Boyd

As fans of Bridges and Powerlines’ debut LP, Ghost Types, with its catchy-cool synth-pop meets indie-rock sound, we jumped at the opportunity to hear all about the making of their new album from Kelly and band bass player/vocalist Keith Sigel while getting the lay of the land at The Buddy Project.

This is the studio where Sufjan Stevens recorded most of his expansive orch-pop opus, Illinoise, a fact of recurring significance to Bridges and Powerlines as they worked through their ambitious recording plans after a year of writing and pre-production.

“The ghost of Illinoise is very palpable here,” says Sigel of The Buddy Project. Kelly adds, “Yeah, there’s something about knowing that the studio is capable of producing that record. It’s safe to say that it happened here once, it can happen again!”

Setting out to make a sprawling rock record of their own, Bridges and Powerlines had plans to build out their sound with varying degrees of orchestration, vocal harmonies and layers of sonic textures. The Buddy Project is not big, so the fact that Sufjan tracked so much of his massively orchestrated record here is not only a reassuring concept, it’s also quite an empowering one to a band on an indie budget.

“Every other day, we’d be like ‘what would Sufjan have done in this situation?”, says Siegel.

And with Kelly co-piloting, The Buddy Project became everything the band needed to produce what Siegel refers to as “the record I’ve been wanting to make my whole life.”

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PRE-PRODUCTION, RECORDING & MORE RECORDING

After Bridges and Powerlines had spent several months demo’ing their new songs, they had a couple conditions in getting started with a producer. “We knew we wanted to have more time in the studio than we had on our last album,” says Sigel, “And we wanted a producer that could work with us in pre-production.”

Kelly built in the time to work with Bridges and Powerlines in their rehearsal space, advising on song structure and arrangements.

Bridges and Powerlines tracking basics at Soundworks

Bridges and Powerlines tracking basics at Soundworks

“He went over all our demos with us and was really active in pre-production — he blocked off about two months to make the record,” Sigel notes. “It was basically what every band wants and what every producer promises, but Kieran actually delivered.”

When it came time to start tracking, they utilized the studio right next door to The Buddy Project, Soundworks Recording, to cut basics to the studio’s 2” tape machine with engineer Kamilo Kratc. Soundworks, Kelly notes, will soon be directly tied into The Buddy Project and, vice-versa.

After tracking basics, the group thoroughly explored their musical and sonic options inside The Buddy Project. Renting and borrowing instruments (Sigel’s friend, ex-Cult bassist Stephen Harris, leant his Gretsch White Falcon among other guitars), hiring string and horns players and recording multiple tracks of near-everything, Bridges and Powerlines left no stone unturned in satisfying every sonic curiosity.

“At the beginning of the session, I promised myself that if there was an instrument we thought of for the record, we would have it,” says Sigel. “We decided we wanted timpanis and we found this great place, Carroll Music Instrument Rentals, all the way on the west side of Manhattan, that has an amazing inventory — every instrument you can imagine — and allows you to rent for 24 hours. We got two gigantic kettle timpanis, crash cymbals and chimes.”

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Kelly adds, “Keith and I were very much of the mind to record everything we wanted, knowing that we’d pare it down later on. A couple of the songs are like 90 tracks.”

Band and crew! Kieran Kelly, second from left, and Soundworks owner/engineer Kamilo Kratc, third from left.

Band and crew! Kieran Kelly, second from left, and Soundworks owner/engineer Kamilo Kratc, third from left.

Accounting for some of that abundance are alternate tracks captured to a cassette tape deck, hand-held digital recorder and Fulltone Tube Tape Echo. “We tracked all the basics to 2” and simultaneously to a cassette deck so that we’d get one really dirty, warm, lo-fi track that we could potentially mix in,” says Sigel.

“It sounded really sweet, we loved it! But the cassette tape drifts; it runs at a different speed than the 2” and there were so many sync problems that ultimately made it too difficult to work with on drums. On grand piano, it was awesome — it gave us this super haunted piano sound that was amazing.

“We also tracked simultaneously to a little hand-held digital recorder because it had this bad-ass compressor on it and you could get that totally blown-out drum sound.”

String and horn sessions, led by Rob Moose (Antony and the Johnsons and Sufjan Stevens’ ensembles), were tracked at The Buddy Project, with singer/songwriter Will Stratton arranging a few of the songs and conducting. In “The Buddy Project” as collaborative studio concept, Stratton is one of the “buddies.” Kelly recently co-produced/mixed Stratton’s introspective folk record, No Wonder, and put it out through his record company, Stunning Models on Display.

The Buddy Project live room

The Buddy Project live room

“Bringing in friends and talented people I’ve worked with is all part of The Buddy Project concept,” says Kelly. “Will is classically trained and wrote some of the arrangements, along with Andrew [Wood], Dave [Boyd] and Keith. When you’re working with high-level players like we were you need to have properly mapped out arrangements and you need to move through sections quickly, so it really helps to have someone conducting.”

The string quartet was “semi-close miked” and the room sound was captured off the upright piano, a unique Buddy Project room-miking technique. “I mic the piano — about 1/8” off the soundboard — and depress the sustain pedal (by jamming a drum stick or something in there),” Kelly reveals. “You run that into a really fast compressor, like an 1176, with a super-fast attack and release. And then, what you essentially have is a wood-plate; a plate reverb. And it gives you these crazy, blown out sounds.”

This room miking technique came in big on Bridges and Powerlines’ guitar and drum sounds captured in The Buddy Project live room, as well as on all the unconventional percussion, i.e. church-stomp sounds.

Bridges and Powerlines' lead singer/keyboardist Andrew Wood

Bridges and Powerlines' lead singer/keyboardist Andrew Wood

“Another big technique we used was tracking all of the vocals through our Fulltone tape machine,” Sigel adds. “We would run a tape echo track that was not intended to be an echo or delay, and then line it right up with whatever we were tracking, and then mix that dirty, tapey sound in with the regular track. It does awesome things to vocals, gives them so much presence. These are the best sounding vocals we’ve ever gotten.”

As for backing vocals, Sigel mentions he tracked about half of them on his own, at home. “Kieran gave me the mic the Illinoise vocals were tracked on [Audio-Technica AT 4033] and the Manley ELOP compressor that Kanye West tracked all of College Dropout with and I went to town,” says Sigel. “I added all kinds of crazy tracks!”

This is not the first time Kelly has furnished his client with the means to record auxiliary tracks at home. His reasoning? “The records I work on are always co-producing arrangements. It’s not dictatorial; it’s not my record, it’s their record,” he explains. “ And I like everyone to be involved in the recording process. There are certain things that as a semi-literate engineer, I just would not do, whereas the artist will do these things that are so wrong that they end up adding a really nice flavor.”

As co-producer, Kelly kept Bridges and Powerlines focused but also let Sigel loose to add tracks to his heart’s content. Then it all went off to Scott Solter in North Carolina for mixing.

As fans of Solter’s work with Spoon and specifically John Vanderslice’s Cellar Door, they readily handed over their multitracks. “Cellar Door is one of my favorite sounding records, and we felt we could trust anyone who can make a record that sounds like that,” says Sigel, noting, “…Although our record sounds nothing like Cellar Door because it just has so much going on!”

Making use of another neighboring audio facility to The Buddy Project, the band went to Andreas Meyer for mastering. A mastering engineer formerly of Sony Studios, Meyer operates Meyer Media out of the same Astoria building.

THE BUDDY PROJECT SOUND

Bridges and Powerlines had 60s sounds in mind when producing Eve. “We were going for 60s, but not totally retro, more like ‘informed by…’” Sigel describes. “The ZombiesOdyssey and Oracle was definitely a reference point. But we also really loved The National’s last record, Boxer. And another big influence was Animal Collective’s Merriweather Post Pavilion, but I wanted it to sound more analog than that.”

Kieran Kelly in The Buddy Project control room.

Kieran Kelly in The Buddy Project control room.

Wherever digital sources were used in the production, for example Reason’s Abbey Road keyboards, Kelly amped them and ran them through the Leslie or the tape machine, or one of the fuzz pedals the band brought in. Plus, The Buddy Project has a lot of hand-built and customized analog equipment used throughout the recording process.

“Almost all of the mic pre’s that I use on this record were hand-built by Jens Jungkurth, of Eisen Audio, which is based in Long Island City with Coral Sound and Exile Recording,” Kelly notes.

“Jens is a genius. He built 10 of my pre-amps and two EQs. He really works with you to give you the tonal character you’re looking for. He’s really young but I think that in 15 years people will be using his name like Rupert Neve.”

The custom analog gear is a big part of the Buddy Project recording philosophy. “Keith and I love classic records like Pet Sounds, Sgt. Pepper’s, Kind of Blue, Odyssey and Oracle, The Kinks records — and on all of those albums, there was a really high level of commitment to the technical side of things, as well as the creative side,” Kelly points out.

“Historically, records were made using custom-built gear, equipment that was built for the studio as opposed to something off the shelf. I think that’s really great and I’m trying to do that here as much as I can. So when you work here, you’re getting a sound that’s unique to The Buddy Project, unique to this time and place.”

Look out for Bridges and Powerlines new record this Fall and in the meantime, check them out at http://www.bridgesandpowerlines.com. For more information on The Buddy Project, visit http://www.thebuddyproject.com.

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