Drawmer
1968 Illuminates Acoustic Instruments
Accurately capturing
the natural sound of an acoustic instrument in the
recording studio can be a tricky endeavor, requiring
some combination of time, money and experimentation.
But Tom Macomber, banjo player with the gospel band
Summer Church and the owner of an independent record
label, Walkin' On Water Records, believes he has
found what he has long been looking for with Drawmer's
1968 ME, a special edition two-channel tube/FET compressor
that simply illuminates the true character of his
instrument.
"When we put that Drawmer 1968 on my instrument two
weeks ago, on a Sunday, suddenly I was hearing the
banjo sound that I hear when I play my instrument," says
Macomber. The musician and producer started WOW Records
as an outlet for his own band with a little spare
cash 13 years ago and has since developed it into
a label with a growing roster of Christian music
artists.
The 1968 is the compressor section from the Drawmer
1969, a FET compressor with tube output stages. The
1968 is designed to deliver a transparent sound even
under the heaviest compression. "We have another
compressor that is the most transparent thing I've
ever used," says Macomber. "I like it a lot, but
to my ears, when I listen to the playback through
the Drawmer, it puts the richness the instrument
had in the first place right back in."
Macomber, who is endorsed by U.S. instrument manufacturer,
Deering Banjo Company, says that what he has always
experienced during playback has never quite matched
up to what he has heard as he performs in the studio. "I've
never lacked for signal to tape," he shares. "And
I've got some recording gear that I use that I like
a lot. But the Drawmer 1968 ME gave me what I'd always
heard in my head but I'd never heard coming out of
the playback."
He continues, "It's very warm and rich and musical
sounding without adding all kinds of artifacts that
sound like you've processed the signal. You hear
recordings where they put on reverb and EQ something
to death and it doesn't sound like any instrument
you've heard before. A banjo has a lot of bell bronze
and sometimes you want a chiming, bell-like tone
in certain hand positions. The Drawmer accentuates
that, and lets me hear what I thought I'd played."
Macomber shares, "I do a lot of work out of two different
studios in Upland and Ontario, California. One studio
is digital and the other is all analog; that's where
I prefer to track." But, he says, "I love the banjo's
signal going to tape, but I've never really been
satisfied with the mix that we get."
All that has changed with the addition of the Drawmer
1968 ME, which now brings a realistic character to
the banjo that allows it to sit perfectly in the
mix. "A perfectly neutral preamp does reproduce your
instrument faithfully," Macomber acknowledges, "but
somehow you do want to add something, some character.
The Drawmer gives me that character. It makes the
instrument sound like it belongs."
Macomber purchased the Drawmer unit through his favorite
dealer, Sweetwave Audio, located near Denver, Colorado.
I had a great response from Drawmer, a great response
from TransAudio, and Sweetwave is great to deal with."
As Macomber works toward completing the next Summer
Church album release, he is happy that he has finally
found the sound that he has been looking for. "I
told Richard at TransAudio, my banjo finally sounds
like my banjo."
"TransAudio Group, founded by industry veteran Brad
Lunde, has quickly become the premier U.S. importer/distributor
and/or U.S. sales and marketing representative for
high-end audio. Success hinges on TransAudio providing
dealers and end users with a higher standard of product
expertise and support far beyond the norm. TransAudio
Group's product lines include A Designs (USA), ATC
(U.K), Daking (USA), Digital Audio Denmark (Denmark),
Drawmer (UK), Enhanced Audio (Ireland), George Massenburg
Labs (USA), Heil Sound (USA), Pauly (Germany), Sabra
Som (Brazil), Soundelux (USA), and SoundField (UK)."
|