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http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/aug13/articles/classic-trac...
In this article:
The standout track from the Beastie Boys' smash hit Ill
Communication album nearly didn't make it onto the record at all
and when it did, it was the eight-track ADAT mix that made the final
cut.
Mario C
Delicious Vinyl
Hooking Up
Ill Communication
Too Rock?
Ad-Rock Saves The Day
"Musically, that record had a lot of dynamics and impact, says Mario Caldato Jr, who engineered and
co-produced the album. "We lived it and all of the pieces came together.
Mario C
A native of So Paolo, Brazil, who relocated to LA with his Italian father and Brazilian mother as
a two-year-old in 1963, Caldato also known as Mario C has production and engineering credits that
include Tone-Loc, Bjrk, Beck, Super Furry Animals, Money Mark, Marcelo D2, Seu Jorge, Young MC, the
Jon Spencer Blues Explosion and Hawaiian folk-rock singer-songwriter Jack Johnson. These are in
addition to his work with the Beastie Boys on Paul's Boutique, Check Your Head, Ill Communication and
Hello Nasty.
Listening to anything from the bossa nova rhythms of Srgio Mendes and Brasil '66 to contemporary '60s
and '70s pop, rock and soul while growing up in a predominantly black area of Los Angeles, Caldato initially
learned to play an organ and piano that his father bought for him.
"The next step was the neighbourhood band, Soul Sticks, he recalls. "A friend up the street named
Dwayne Allen had an electric guitar and amp a black kid who loved rock & roll and was a huge Beatles
fan. I didn't play the organ with him because that was at my house, but I did play percussion; he had
maracas and a tambourine, so we'd jam in his room. Then we hooked up with Calvin, another black kid on
the same street whose older brother was a jazz musician. He had a Ludwig drum kit, a Fender bass,
a Gibson 335 and a Wurlitzer jukebox, so now we'd go to his house and jam along to oldies like Smokey
Robinson's 'Tears Of A Clown'. It was really, really a fun time.
After that little setup had run its course, Caldato did finally get to play the organ in a school rock band.
"I wasn't a great keyboard player, I didn't practice, but I enjoyed being in the band and I ended up running
the lights and creating crazy sound effects with a synthesizer that I bought, he says. "I kind of got more
into that, and then I had another friend who joined the band; a real keyboard player whose name was Mark
Nishita, later known as Money Mark. I always drove the bands around with my station wagon, setting up
the PA and lights, and when several of my friends stopped playing I bought some of their instruments and
some microphones. The next thing I knew, I was DJ'ing at wedding parties, too. Armed with a little PA
mixer, I also did the sound for bands, and that whole thing took off when I quit playing.
"At around the same time, I set up a little studio with Mark. He had a four-track machine but there was no
room at his house. So he brought his equipment over to a back-house that I rented from friends and we set
up a little studio space in there. He taught me all the basics: how to run the tape machine and thread it, set
the sound levels, keep an eye on the meters and so on. He had a little Yamaha four-track PA mixer with
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Delicious Vinyl
"In '85, I was frequenting Power Tools, which was a really
unique alternative/artsy LA nightclub with a great mix of
people and music, continues Caldato. "One night when
I was there, the Beastie Boys were about to perform. They
had been opening for Madonna on her Virgin Tour and they
were going to perform a couple of songs that night, so they
walked on-stage, DJ Hurricane began scratching the intro of
the record and when the first 808 [kick drum] played, it took
down the sound system. It was like uh-oh, bummer
a thousand people in the club and there's no sound. The
Beasties threw their mics down onto the stage and they were
a little pissed they couldn't perform.
"Talk about embarrassing for the venue. I went up to a security guard and asked, 'Who runs this place?'
He said, 'That guy over there,' pointing to this cat Jon Sidel. So, I went and told him, 'Hey, you need
a sound man.' He said, 'Tell me about it! What do you know about sound?' I said, 'Well, I'm a sound man.'
He said, 'Then come and have a look at our system!' When I took a look, they had something like
a Marantz receiver and a small SAE amp powering four Cerwin Vega speakers. The system was
completely under-powered and it went thermal, heating up and shutting off. About five minutes later the
sound came back on, but by then the guys had left the stage.
"When I told Jon I had some bigger power amps and proper cabling and knew where to place the
speakers, he said, 'OK, come back next week and bring your stuff!' So, I did. I hooked it all up, they were
amazed at the sound and from then on I had the gig locked. I then became friends with the DJ, Matt Dike,
and one day, when he said he was interested in making a recording, I told him I had experience and some
equipment and could help him. He was to buy a Tascam 388 eight-track mixer-recorder and an SP12
sampling drum machine which he had heard everyone was using to make hip-hop records. So we went to
the music store, bought the gear and set up shop in Matt's Hollywood apartment. We turned the living room
into the control room and there was a little closet that we converted into a vocal booth.
"I had some mics an AKG 414, 451s and some Sennheiser 421s and I brought them to Matt's home
studio along with a Yamaha 2020 compressor and REV 7, SPX90 reverbs and some Ibanez outboard
delays, and he just went crazy; sampling and creating these breaks and loops and making songs out of
them.
"Matt had a friend named Michael Ross who, I think, was an A&R assistant, and he'd got hold of some
demo tapes that the record company threw in the trash. A couple of them he noted were pretty good:
'Who's this guy? Tone Loc? And Young MC?' He called them from his home instead of from the office and
said, 'Hey, we've got a little studio and we want to make some tracks. You want to come down and rap?'
Sure enough, they showed up and things started happening. That was the beginning of Delicious Vinyl.
"I'd had some experience recording demos with Mark, and now doing the rap stuff with all of the loops was
really, really cool; blending great music with a great voice. As the engineer, I was responsible for the
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Hooking Up
In 1988, following the commercial and critical success of their first album, Licensed To Ill which garnered
the immortal Rolling Stone headline 'Three Idiots Create A Masterpiece' the Beasties ended their
relationship with Def Jam Recordings and the label's founder, producer Rick Rubin, to sign with Capitol.
Immediately, Matt Dike saw this as his opportunity to step into Rubin's shoes behind the console.
According to Caldato, "He was saying, 'I can do this, I know this. I have a feeling we can do their next
record. Let's send them a couple of the Dust Brothers' instrumental tracks.'
Hip-Hop DJs Michael Simpson (aka EZ Mike) and John King (aka King Gizmo) had already produced and
sequenced tracks on the Tone Loc album when Dike thought of pitching some of their material to the
Beasties.
"They really understood the latest technology, Caldato says. "They knew how to sync up loops and they
were into the Public Enemy style of production, really trying to layer loops and sounds. They were very,
very helpful in the process of crossing over to a thicker layer of sound, with the whole looping thing. So we
sent the Beastie Boys some instrumentals for what would become 'Shake Your Rump' and 'Car Thief' and
the Beasties loved them. Having heard about the success we'd been having, they came out West from New
York to meet with us and check out the studio, and they then said they wanted to add vocals to the tracks
they'd been sent. They were excited to work with a new producer and a whole new scene. In the end, we
spent nine months putting together Paul's Boutique, we really had an incredible time and it flowered into
a beautiful record.
It was a record that, upon its July 1989 release, initially didn't match
the success of its predecessor Licensed To Ill, in terms of either sales or
critical plaudits. Sonically, musically and lyrically more experimental,
Paul's Boutique would, nevertheless, eventually be certified doubleplatinum while many critics would reappraise it as a landmark in the
annals of hip-hop. No fewer than 105 different songs were sampled for
its 15 tracks and 'Looking Down The Barrel Of A Gun' was the only one
of them to feature live instrumentation in the form of bass and guitar. Yet
another different approach was employed for the 1992 follow-up, Check
Your Head. Released on the band's newly formed Grand Royal record
label, this return to the Beasties' punk roots saw them playing their own
instruments, alongside Money Mark on keyboards at their G-Son studio,
while co-producing with Mario Caldato Jr.
"At first, we were horsing around, making music at their apartments
Mario C with Marcelo D2 in Brazil.
and houses, but then the neighbours started complaining, Caldato
explains. "So we went to a rehearsal studio and started recording stuff there while formulating ideas.
Money Mark, who met the guys during the making of Paul's Boutique, was key in that process, planting
seeds for the next record, and for the actual sessions the Beasties rented an empty space where we
installed some equipment and created our G-Son studio. I had mics and outboard gear, but I told them all
we needed was a 24-track tape machine and a console. So, they bought a 32-input Neotek lan console
and a Tascam two-inch tape machine and then we spent almost three years working on Check Your Head.
Ill Communication
A Top 10 record in the States that peaked at just 107 on the British chart, Check Your Head coincided with
the Beastie Boys' first concert tour in several years and served as a template for Ill Communication, their
second American chart-topper and second triple-platinum album, which climbed to number 10 in the UK.
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"The tour was a big confidence booster and everyone was on top of their game, says Caldato. "The
Beasties played half of the numbers, rapped the other half and came up with ideas for their next record.
This time, the studio was already dialled in and we did the album in six months, but we started out by
recording in New York for the first month, just to get a different vibe from playing in a different place. The
studio was called Tin Pan Alley and it was a super facility in the Tin Pan Alley area of the city, very old but
cool and funky. So we set up all of the band stuff in this one little room where there was, I think, an API type
of vintage console. The EQ had a low-end filter cut/boost and high-end filter cut/boost, and they also had
these really old custom valve preamps and an Otari 24-track tape machine.
"As I looked out into the studio from the control room, Mike Diamond's drums were to the left and then
there was Adam Horovitz's's guitar rig, Adam Yauch's bass, Money Mark's keyboard and, at far right,
a percussion kit that Eric Bobo played. My standard setup for drums was Sennheiser 421s on the kick and
toms, Shure SM57s on the top and bottom of the snare, AKG 460s for the overheads and 451s on the
hi-hat. By then, I myself had a couple of tube [Neumann] U47s and those were the room mics.
"Ad-Rock always liked to play cheap guitars live on-stage, including a Hondo, while in the studio it was
usually the Paul by Gibson, which was his main groove guitar. Adam Yauch played a Fender Jazz bass and
we put their amps inside these little soundproofed cases with a lid on top that you could open to adjust and
position the mics and settings. I think Ad-Rock had a Fender Deluxe for groove songs and a Marshall for
harder songs. I miked that with 57s and for Adam Yauch's bass we used an Acoustic 270 or 370 head with
the graphic EQ, as well as a Sennheiser 421 mic, along with a DI line. The Leslie cabinet for Mark's organ
was placed in another room or out in the hallway, miked with a 57 and 421, while the percussion was
recorded with just a couple of mics, again, a 421 and 57. That was the general setup for the band tracks.
Too Rock?
According to Caldato, none of the songs were completely
written prior to the band entering the studio. Instead, the
material either evolved out of jam sessions or was created
later with loops and editing.
"'Bobo On The Corner' was created live while jamming, he
says. 'The same for 'Sabrosa', 'Futterman's Rule', 'Eugene's
Lament', 'Ricky's Theme', 'Heart Attack Man', 'Shambala',
'Transitions' and 'Sabotage'. We didn't have any of those
numbers when we went to New York. When we returned to
LA, we had them as basic tracks and then crafted them into
fully fledged songs. The other tracks I didn't mention were all
rap songs created with loops, and within those loops we'd
add an acoustic bass, a live drum or something like that.
However, those numbers were mainly based on loops.
"The starting point for most of the songs was an idea that came from touring, and in some cases we even
pulled up cassette recordings of the soundchecks. However, there were also tracks that evolved out of
nothing, and a prime example of that is 'Sabotage', which just happened. Adam Yauch was in the studio,
working on his bass sound with the Superfuzz pedal that he loved, and he came up with that riff and kept
jamming it for a while. He'd really get deep into stuff and focus hard on it. Eric Bobo heard that riff while
sitting in the control room and he ran out and started playing a rhythm on the timbales, at which point Mike
D entered the control room and said, 'What's going on?' 'Go in there,' I told him. 'Follow Bobo.' So, that's
what he did, accenting the bass riff with his drums, because it's really the bass riff that drives and makes
the song.
"After that, Mark came in, heard what was going on and jumped in on the organ. He hit just one chord
and started turning the organ all the way up, causing the Leslie to distort while he moved the drawbars in
and out, modulating the drone. When Ad-Rock heard what they were playing, I told him, 'Go for it!'
Immediately, he began droning on the guitar and added some rock chord and it was like wow! The track
just came together, forming from Adam Yauch's bass line, and within a couple of minutes it became this
heavy thing with one chord and some hits. We kept working on it a little bit to form a quick arrangement and
just recorded it. Then boom, it was done, and we were like, 'Oh, that was fun!'
"When we first played it back, the guys were saying, 'It sounds too rock. We don't really want to go down
that route.' There was a long discussion about it, with everyone also acknowledging it was pretty energetic
and pretty cool. While we were listening, the owner of the studio a guy named Chris walked in. He
was an older rock dude with super-long hair, and although he'd never normally comment much about what
he heard when checking to see how things were going, he heard the 'Sabotage' rhythm track and said,
'Now that's what I'm talking about! This is rockin' right here! This is it!' He was super-excited about it
because that's the kind of music he was into, so we ended up naming it 'Chris Rock' and it kept that title for
the longest time. You know, 'It's Chris's theme.'
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"In terms of the vocals, there may have been an attempt by Ad-Rock to do something, but the song still
had no theme and no concept, and he finally said 'Nah, it ain't happening. Forget it.' So, we kind of left it
alone, went back to G-Son in LA and continued working on the rest of the record. We had a bunch of
tracks, a bunch of looping stuff that needed to be done, and I was also mixing some of the instrumentals;
adding different elements while finding little parts that we liked to create a finished track. We were at G-Son
from Monday to Friday for five months and throughout that time, even when we weren't working on the
music, we'd hang out, shoot basketball and girlfriends would show up. At other times, Biz Markie and Q-Tip
would also show up to record their vocals, along with the Jungle Brothers and whoever else was in town.
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