Producer Eugene Toale never considered himself a vintage preamp guy.
“I’ve been engineering since 1999 and never really reached for vintage
pres,” Toale says. “I’m kind of a hi-fi person, so I worry about what
transformers are in line and what I’m giving up and how much distortion
I’m causing.” But when a friend suggested he try the BAE Audio
1073DMP, he agreed to give the vintage design one last shot. “To my
surprise, I completely fell in love,” he says. Now the 1073DMP has
become the workhorse of his studio inside the Bedrock LA complex, where
he has developed a reputation as the go-to producer for Latin
Alternative music. The 1073DMP was featured heavily on Buyepongo’s Todo Mundo,
released in late 2015, and was used on all sources for the upcoming
record by Las Cafeteras. “Using the 1073DMP has been like a revolution
for me,” he says. “I’m using it for everything.”
The Sound of a Burgeoning Scene
Toale, who cut his teeth as an engineer in New York City working with
top hip-hop artists including Kanye West and Raekwon, relishes the
opportunity to use the 1073DMP in his work with the up-and-coming Latin
Alternative music scene in Los Angeles. “I’m now producing 12 of the
Latin bands that are coming out of here,” Toale explains. “We’re not
talking regional Mexican music. It’s more like the alternative music
that the kids in Silver Park and Echo Lake are doing but sung in Spanish
and always incorporating traditional influences.” That unique blend of
influences has provided Toale with an opportunity to test the mettle of
the 1073DMP on a wide range of sound sources, including some traditional
instruments less common to American studios. “I’m recording everything
from high-tech dance sounds to indigenous Mexican instruments, and the
1073DMP has been amazing at capturing the nuances of all of them,” he
says. “It has been an incredible addition to my toolbox to have a preamp
that I could lean on in new ways.”
Ready for Anything
Toale has been surprised by how universally applicable the 1073DMP has
been to all of his sources. “I’m not usually a one mic, one stand, one
cable, one knob person, but I’ve kind of been able to lean on the
1073DMP for just about everything on the Las Cafeteras record.” That’s
no small task, given that the band’s instrumentation includes
instruments such as the zapateado, glockenspiel, quijada, requinto, and
more. Pairing it with his favorite dynamic mic has become the de facto
signal chain for any instrument. “Instruments like congas and guiro
have incredible detail that I’m not sure many engineers are really
capturing. The 1073DMP preserves all of that.” It also helps him control
the harshness on metallic instruments. “The 1073DMP is not super dark
like some vintage pres, but somehow manages to make the really high end
frequencies sound very pleasant even when an instrument might sound
harsh in the room,” Toale says. “It’s remarkable how it softened my
cymbals and metal shakers without throwing away high end clarity.”
Coming Together in the Mix Room
Toale was able to fully appreciate the sound of the 1073DMP’s
Carnhill/St. Ives transformers when he brought the sessions he had
recorded into the mixing stage. “The weight of all those transformers
really adds up and gives the mix some heft,” he explains. “A lot of
recent Latin music has an overly slick, bright, overproduced sound that I
don’t care for. With the transformers in the 1073DMP, I’m able to
capture something that has the glued-together sound of old school Latin
music but with modern clarity.” He also notes how pleased he has been
with the construction and functionality of the stepped knobs on the
1073DMP, which he describes as “pro as hell.” Hand-wired and built at
BAE Audio’s facility in California, the quality of the components and
assembly pays dividends in the control room for Toale. “Sometimes I
realize mid-take on a vocal that I’m on the wrong gain step and I’m able
to make an adjustment without any kind of click or dead spot in the
track,” he says. “That has saved me more than once!”
A Classic Sound for Today
Toale has found the 1073DMP to be a versatile preamplifier that
simplifies his workflow in the studio and enables creativity. “You can
add color and saturation with 1073DMP if you want, but if you’re a
little responsible with your gain staging it also works great as a rich,
open preamp that will never do you wrong,” Toale says. “It just adds
happiness. It’s not a matter of recreating a vintage sound from my
favorite record. It just sounds good, plain and simple.” For this
reason Toale sees himself turning to 1073DMP for a long time to come.
“You can’t go wrong with one of these things and a good mic. I’m
thrilled to fall in love with it.”