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Mix Magazine
Interview - John Alagia
By Mr. Bonzai
Aug 1, 2005 12:00 PM
WORKING ALONGSIDE DAVE MATTHEWS, JOHN MAYER,
LIZ PHAIR AND MORE
At
The Village in Los Angeles, John Alagia and engineer Brian Scheuble
sit at the console tracking the new Liz Phair album. Not one to
just camp out between two speakers, Alagia also sits at the B3 overdubbing
some tasty organ licks and occasionally hoisting a bass or guitar.
Checking out Alagia's credits, you'll find him listed as a producer/engineer/mixer/musician,
and the artists he has influenced include Dave Matthews, John Mayer,
Jason Mraz, Simon & Garfunkel, Lifehouse, Ben Folds Five, O.A.R.
and Rachael Yamagata, among many others.
A resident of Maryland's Chesapeake Bay region, Alagia is tall,
affable, modest, polite and — judging from the steady string
of successful work he has produced during the past decade-and-a-half
— one of the more musically gifted people working today. Some
may call him a Renaissance man, but Alagia would most likely blush
profusely if introduced as such, so we decided to have a fireside
chat and see what makes the man tick.
First, where were you born, raised
and educated?
I was born in Louisville, Kentucky, and lived there until I was
18, when I left to study at Georgetown University in Washington,
D.C. I graduated in 1986 with a degree in English Literature, but
I was playing music throughout my school years. I was supposed to
become a lawyer, but that didn't work out. I played rock 'n' roll
at night, and made demos playing keyboards, guitars and drums. I
had a TEAC 4-track recorder, and then moved up to a Tascam 8-track
with dbx Noise Reduction. I didn't really have any training as an
engineer, except for a seminar at Omega Studios in Rockville, Maryland.
I learned mostly from being in studios and watching folks that had
experience. Bob Dawson at Bias Studios, outside of Washington, D.C.,
taught me quite a bit.
When you were a kid, did you have music in the house?
Yes, and I was the youngest of five kids. My brothers and sisters
had lots of 45s and LPs. One of the first songs I can remember is
“Winchester Cathedral,” and music on the Ed Sullivan
Show, Looney Tunes and Henry Mancini's “Theme From Pink Panther.”
I was the only one who wasn't forced to take musical lessons, but
I did study piano and guitar a little bit. I learned to play mostly
by ear, and I took a semester at the Berklee College of Music to
study theory.
How did you get from college to the minor leagues?
When I was a senior in college, I met an incoming freshman named
Doug Derryberry. He was the first musical genius I ever met —
plays almost every instrument, he sings, he writes — and we
still work together today. We got together in college and formed
a partnership called Derryberry and Alagia. We played up and down
the East Coast in colleges and clubs, and we made three records.
His knowledge of music was so broad and he opened up my ears to
all types of interesting music. We made our own acoustic-based folk/rock/pop
records. We took a lot of time learning how to get things to tape
and experimenting by ourselves recording our own material. I got
to engineering just out of necessity to get the sounds I wanted.
During our journeys on the road, we found ourselves working alongside
other bands in the same towns on that circuit. That's how we met
Ben Folds and Dave Matthews. I met Dave back in 1992, and it was
just serendipitous the way it worked out. I had taken a local band,
Kevin Johnson and The Linemen, down to record at Ardent Studios
in Memphis and had five days to make a record with them. Dave Matthews
had been at Ardent a few months prior to our sessions. Ross Hoffman,
who was Dave's agent at the time, called up Ardent and said they
were looking for someone to work with him in the mid-Atlantic area.
The folks at Ardent mentioned me and the work I was doing
Just around that time, I had been at a bar in Washington, D.C.,
and had heard the Dave Matthews Band playing, with an audience of
about 75 people. I couldn't believe what I was seeing and was wondering
how the hell you could capture that sound on tape. They were the
best thing I had ever seen live. I told everyone I knew that this
band would have a greater impact on music than anything we had seen
in a long, long time — right up there with U2, The Beatles.
The very next day, I got a call from Dave's agent about my recommendation
from the folks at Ardent.
I started going down to Charlottesville and Richmond, Virginia,
every Tuesday and Wednesday to the clubs Trax and The Floodzone
and recorded their shows. It was just live recording, but if it
sounded good, we were thinking of releasing it as just a snapshot
of the band. At that time, Dave was just interested in refining
his sound. They were also doing some recording at Flat Five studio
in Salem, Virginia. So they brought me into the studio to help finish
up some of those recordings. I was unhealthily obsessed. I pulled
back my performance schedule and put my guitar aside after hearing
what Dave was doing. I became focused more in the studio and much
less on the road. Every once in a while, Dave would come up to my
house and record some new ideas, which he would then take back to
the band.
Slowly, we decided to do an official live record with a couple of
studio tracks and that became Remember Two Things, their first record.
It was in June 1993 that Dave asked if I would like to help produce
that record. Between July 1992 and November 1993, we had this informal
recording process. I bought some of the first ADATs in June that
year, traveled with the band and recorded live shows through the
summer. Then we did some overdubs, some vocals and guitars. I wasn't
thinking so much about the possible commercial success as I was
about how important and how wonderful this music was. I was pretty
shy around those guys and was humbled by the mightiness of their
music.
I spent months on end with Dave at his house in Virginia, helping
with the pre-production for Crash and Before These Crowded Streets.
We'd sit around with a couple of guitars and he'd be pouring out
all these little musical ideas that would eventually become some
of his biggest hits like “Crash,” “Too Much,”
“Crush,” “Stay” and so on. I feel mighty
lucky to know him and to have worked with him. He taught me quite
a bit.
What a great way to get your career
in gear. Are you using those same recording/producing techniques
now?
You learn from every experience and I have come into contact with
so many amazing producers and engineers since then. I've learned
a lot from working here with Brian Scheuble on Liz Phair's album
at The Village.
Are you recording to tape?
No, we're recording straight to Pro Tools. I brought out my RADAR
recorder from my studio back home just to A/B. I'm using Apogee
8016 converters, recording at 96k. Brian is setting up all mics,
and I may dabble a bit with the EQ and compression. I've worked
a lot since 1997 with an engineer named Jeff Juliano — we
almost morphed into one brain for the recording process. I worked
more on the music side and he concentrated on the engineering, but
it became a dual effort between us.
Is there a difference between
these two engineers' approaches?
Mic selection, for one. Brian is using [Neumann] 67s and 87s for
overheads, and I have mostly used [AKG] 414s in the past with Jeff.
Brian uses compression differently, and for EQ, he likes to dial
up the midrange, whereas Jeff would tend to dial it out. But you
can't get too hung up in the details — you've just got to
listen and decide what sounds good at the time you are working.
You recorded Liz and the band
live in a big room. Is that your favorite way to record?
I think you get better performances with more people playing in
a close environment. I think it's best not to overthink the overdubbing
process. It's such a mystery to me how records end up becoming what
they become. I'm not a guy who has a grand vision beforehand, like
it's got to be exactly 112 beats per minute. I like to put everyone
in the room at the same time and then listen to the drummer: 112
might sound like 115 or 120. You've just gotta try it out. Hopefully,
everyone's checked their ego at the door.
How would you compare producing
live recordings with studio productions?
Live is more a job of organizing the recording event and overseeing
it. From a production point of view, it's more of a surgical effort
and the correcting of things. In a studio environment, you try to
bring together the best team for the job. I try to make it as comfortable
as possible for those who are recording.
How did Liz find you?
I met Liz a few years ago at South by Southwest after finishing
John Mayer's first record. She told me how much she loved it. Then
she heard my work with Jason Mraz and Rachael Yamagata, and she
liked those albums, too. I really liked her as an artist, and I
got a call last December to see if I could get together with her
and talk about her recording. I flew out one morning to L.A. from
Baltimore, had breakfast and then flew back home. We talked about
the concept and we agreed on all points.
I gravitate toward the strong songwriters and do my best to help
them communicate to the listener. I have a lot of respect for Liz
— she's really individualistic and has her own distinct way.
Did she play ideas or demos for
you?
Yes, she sent me some demos that were really great. The more I do
this job, the more I am amazed at how good the demos are these days.
In many cases, they could be the masters — depending on the
labels and the politics, of course. She came into the studio with
the same guys she had on the demos, and they did a great job. I
think I was brought in because I could bring some objectivity because
it's difficult to produce your own record.
I've produced my own work and I wish I could have had someone come
in with a new and objective view. When we were making the Derryberry
and Alagia records, we made an ungodly number of mistakes, and I
wish they had never been recorded. Someone should have been kicking
our asses to make it better and told us some of the lyrics were
a bit dodgy.
You also play on Liz's album.
I liked your B3 overdub, especially the way you stopped yourself
in the middle of a take three or four times until you had what was
working. What else?
I play some guitar, but I don't want to step on anyone's toes. I
don't need to play on the records, but if I have something that
might fill a gap, I will throw it in. I don't want to have my stamp
on a record; I want to help the artist get their essence recorded
well. The music producer is like a film director — you are
a motivator and, hopefully, a big picture person, and you most of
all want the artist to feel comfortable to yield the best results.
I learned a lot from Steve Lillywhite. After listening to a record
I had just produced, he told me, “John, this is just such
a beautiful, squeaky-clean record. There isn't one mistake.”
I asked what he meant, and he replied, “Well, not one of your
records has mistakes.” I got upset with that, and there was
a point 12 years ago where I was trying to make everything fit right
inside the lines. What he said hit me hard. It's easy these days
working in Pro Tools to just put that waveform up on the grid and
make it perfect. It's a phase you go through, but there is no such
thing as perfection in the real world. I don't want to be a detective
producer looking for each and every error; I just like to record
the track as if it was going straight to a tape machine.
Did you work with John Mayer on
“Daughters”?
No, he did that all on his own right after we finished his album.
He was actually down in New Zealand and wrote it in his hotel room.
He played me his demo and it was flawless; a perfect little tune.
How did you first meet John?
I met him through Courtney Hard and Sue Devine at ASCAP. I was paying
a visit in New York and they had John on the phone. Courtney told
me that he played great guitar. I heard a demo, and not only was
he a monster guitar player, but he could write beautiful songs.
We started a friendship over the phone and I flew down to help him
record a live gig in Atlanta a few months later. We started talking
about making a record and we drew up the list of songs. I got him
a drummer — he had a bass player — and we just jumped
into Loho Recording in New York City. We did the basics in eight
days and then finished it up at my studio in Maryland. Room for
Squares was done top-to-bottom in 28 days. We also did some more
mixes with Jack Joseph Puig at Ocean Way in Hollywood.
Any other studios you like to
work at?
It's been great working at The Village — great gear and really
nice people. I love The Magic Shop in New York City. I like working
with John Altschiller at his Chiller Sound studio. And I love my
little studio in Maryland.
Do you have any favorite microphones?
I just bought an old Neumann 269 that I like a lot. I cut most male
vocals through a Shure SM7 through a [Neve] 1073 mic pre. I also
have a pair of Neve 33102s, which I love. I usually hit it with
a Tube-Tech LCA-2B stereo [compressor] and then sometimes the Distressor.
That's pretty much the vocal chain.
What kind of console do you have
at your home studio?
I don't have a console; I have ProControl and an API 16-channel
summing amp, which acts like a console. Oh, I forgot to mention
the Universal Audio 610 preamps. Great pre-amp. I love all their
products. I like the Focusrite ISA-215, a great surgical EQ and
a great preamp. I guess I am a gearhead, but I really love instruments
more than gear. I've got lots of toys, but not to the degree of
[producer/musician] Jon Brion. I saw him perform last Friday night
at Largo [L.A.] — he makes me dizzy with inspiration.
Speaking of inspiration, who did
you look up to in your formative years?
George Martin and Phil Ramone are the two that first come to mind.
How did you get to work with Herbie Hancock and Paul Simon last
week?
I worked with Art Garfunkel on a Paul Simon track about a year-and-a-half
ago. It was going to be on [Simon's] Hearts and Bones, but Paul
didn't feel like it quite made it. Paul thought I did a good job
on it and invited me up to his house to listen to his new material
he was working on with Brian Eno. I really don't know how I ended
up on the Herbie session, but was secretly hoping that Paul had
something to do with it. Ends up that I've worked with a few other
artists who share Herbie's manager, so I went over to meet him at
his house and ended up spending hours and hours with him, just listening
to music and talking. We talked about technology and music, and
he is such a fine man.
The track we did is for Herbie's record, and because he's touring
and such a busy man, he asked me if I would produce it. We had a
concept, and we were working on the charts in the hotel the night
before we went into the studio. Paul came in a day early and he
had some ideas. I could hardly believe it: Here I was playing Paul's
guitar part with him singing, and Herbie on piano, Pino Palladino
on bass, Steve Jordan on a champagne kit, and Jamey Haddad and Cyro
Battista on percussion. It was a great little group of folks to
have in the studio at the same time. Paul was talking about how
a musician making music is similar to a preacher who is giving a
sermon. Those few days in the studio were a remarkable time for
me.
What is your responsibility as
a producer?
To create a team of people that will achieve the best results for
the artist. You've got to have mutual respect with the people you
work with. Music is a wonderful mystery, and the making of it, the
process, should never be taken too seriously. Focus and have a good
time at it.
Ideally, a great artist and producer challenge each other and together
yield great results. I respect the artists I work with, and if there
is any disagreement on the creative side, I'll most likely bow to
them, as their talent is what brought me to them. They are the reason
we producers and engineers do what we do. No producer has the right
to ever say he made an artist, at least not a great artist. Helpful,
yes, but not a maker.
Photographer and author Mr. Bonzai is currently working on a collection
of his photos and interviews titled Faces of Music: 25 Years of
Lunching With Legends. Visit www.mrbonzai.com for more information.
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