Linus Valdemar – Synthing & Guitaring

1. Favourite knob or fader or switch on a piece of gear and why?

Peavey PA-600 mixer

The “reverb” knob on my old Peavey PA-600 mixer. It’s big and it’s beautiful. As the name suggests it’s an old PA mixer but It sounds amazing in it’s own way, and I run a lot of stuff through it. It’s brilliant on electric/acoustic guitar, vocals and drums. The preamps in itself are great, but that spring reverb on electric guitar or a snare drum –
WOW! Only problem is that weird enough it’s mono so wouldn’t work as a real mixer in the studio. I need to find someone who can make it work as a stereo mixer! 🙂

2. Do you have an ‘almost’ perfect bit of kit? What would you change?

As I’m a guitarist I have a lot of guitar pedals and my favourite one has to be the Strymon Deco. I recently traded my old version 1 to the v2. The v1 didn’t have a tone knob on it and no midi – it does now! To me it’s now perfect and I wouldn’t change anything as it now has the tone knob. Nice and smooth, crunchy and fat tape saturation on one channel and great wobbly tape modulation on the other. Great on guitar, but definitely also on synths, bass and even drums! It’s a Desert Island piece of gear to me! Guitar pedals in music production in general can be mind blowing!

Strymon Deco

3. What setup do you bring on holiday or tour or commute etc.?

I’m originally a guitarist and songwriter so I tend to always have a guitar near me,
whenever I’m away. But holiday sometimes is a weird state of mind for me as I try to relax but often end up feeling restless and guilty about not working and sometimes feeling more creative when I’m away and not able to work. Having a guitar around sometimes only makes it worse, as I’m supposed to be on holiday with my family – not working!

4. What software do you wish was hardware and vice versa?

Almost all the software that I use are some kind of emulation of old outboard gear. Hmm.. Fabfilter plugins wouldn’t be that sexy as hardware would they? Maybe the good old ValhallaVintageverb would be fun to have as an outboard gear! I would love to have more reverb outboard effects in general!
Although I don’t own one myself, It would be great fun if Chase Bliss Audio made their pedals as plugins as well. On second thought… that would maybe just make you craving their guitar pedals even more…

Chase Bliss Audio Mood

5. Is there anything you regret selling… or regret buying?

I’ve had a lot of guitars in the past – and present. Two comes to mind. I sold a Gibson Melody Maker from 1965 which used to belong to Kashmir’s Kasper Eistrup. That guitar was used a lot during the recordings of their last album E.A.R. I actually didn’t buy it because of him, it just really spoke to me and I just had to get it. I used it a lot in the studio and live, but sold it in a weak moment to buy something else.. Can’t remember what really… The other guitar that comes to mind was an all original white Fender Mustang from 1966. A really great guitar, but I sold it to buy the most precious guitar that I own, my all original 1965 Fender Jazzmaster. I do miss that Mustang quite often, but I know it’s in good hands.

Pedalboard of goodies

Regret buying.. Hmm.. I tend to buy nice things! Haha! Well.. I remember when I was a kid I had a Strat and an okay transistor amp and then I bought a Korg multi effects pedalboard. I never really learned how to use it and I kinda hated it, but I used way too much time with it. Should have stuck to pedals from the beginning. I did have some nice ones that I skipped for a long time. Had i just stuck to them I think I would have dug into the pedal world much earlier and developed my playing, musical style and songwriting much more and at a younger age.

6. What gear has inspired you to produce the most music?

Gibson J-45 acoustic

About 10 years ago I bought a 1967 Gibson J-45 acoustic guitar. That guitar made me write stuff so easily. Songs in me were waiting to be written on that guitar. It was quite amazing really, and somehow I always knew that I needed to get that guitar model at some point.
These days I find my Jazzmaster through my newly acquired 70’s Vibro Champ
pretty inspiring as well! Amazing studio amp.

7. If you had to start over, what would you get first?

As a producer you can’t live without your computer. Sad to say.. But what I’ve
learned over the years is that it’s not the expensive preamp or the vintage
microphone you record with that’s the most important thing. Of course it helps
indeed! But in the end it comes down to the instrument and the performance. So if I was to start all over and had the money, I would skip the bad decisions of buying cheap and bad quality instruments and get some nice ones from the beginning – and then find an inspiring teacher and start a band 🙂
Also I would have loved to learn how to play the drums! I love playing drums but I never really took the time to learn it.

Synths and keys

8. What’s the most annoying piece of gear you have, that you just can’t live without

The most annoying is when something doesn’t work. I am NOT a great technician or a computer tech guy – AT ALL. I wish I had the skills to repair my own gear but I don’t, and I don’t think I’ll ever have the time or mindset to learn it. Computer problems must be the most annoying part of music production.

9. Most surprising tip or trick or technique that you’ve discovered about a bit of kit?

I have definitely underrated the power of hardware gear. When I first started
recording music with my own band I didn’t really think too much about outboard gear.

Outboard and studio gear

And when I started off producing and recording music myself, I didn’t have much more than a laptop, a cheap interface and one microphone. And that’s all I used for a long time, but at some point I found out that just because the technology is so good now that you can hardly tell the difference between vintage outboard gear and plugins, doesn’t mean that I don’t need the hardware gear. I do. Hardware is so much more inspiring. Turning knobs on a synth while playing, running guitar through my PA mixer or Space Echo with worn out tape that keeps jumping around. There’s the magic. It’s inspiring. That’s the trick. That’s the technique. Don’t underestimate the power of the outboard gear!

Peavey PA-600 mixer

Artist or Band name?

Linus Valdemar

Genre?

Alternative pop, Indie, Folk, Britpop, Shoe-gaze and organic, nordic music.

Selfie?

Linus Valdemar

Where are you from?

I grew up in Lynæs (Hundested), a small town in the north of Sjælland, Denmark, but have lived in Nørrebro, Copenhagen for about 18 years now.

How did you get into music?

My dad was always a singer/songwriter and played his own songs in a local band, so I picked up the guitar at a young age because of him, learning from him and the local music school.

Also I was fortunate to have a few good mates and we made our first band before we could even play really.. We were 11-12 years old.

My mom has definitely influenced me as well, while my dad was the executive musician, my mom had a nice vinyl/CD collection and the knowledge about music in general. This combination made me fall in love with music.

What still drives you to make music?

Over the years I’ve only been more and more curious about new music. Discovering new great artists and producers and how they do it really inspires me. Doesn’t have to be new upcoming artists, as long as it’s new to me it’s inspiring. When I was younger and frontman/songwriter in a rock and roll band, I was definitely more narrow-minded and thought I knew exactly what I liked and disliked – what a fault that was! You can find inspiration and drive in any genre really.

Also new gear or new ways to use gear definitely drives me. And as my studio is based in a complex with other studios and great colleagues, we’re constantly talking and exchanging experiences which helps you and drives you on to the next project with new approach and ideas.

How do you most often start a new track?

It changes from time to time. Sometimes I have an idea on the guitar or piano, and
sometimes I try to make a drum beat and play some bass on it. I like messing around with the Logic Drummer – haha! Today I entered my studio and instantly sat at my upright piano and just started writing – before having my morning coffee! So yeah I don’t have a go to way to kick things off really.

A selection of instruments

How do you know when a track is finished?

I don’t. It’s really tough. I will always find things in my mixes that I want to change and edit, but working with deadlines can be a nice way to get things done. Also working fast is a nice way to get it done. I’ve composed some scores lately that I almost started and finished the same day. I’ve learned over the years that being in a flow and working fast is nice. Get it done and move on! Don’t dwell too much. In the end you are your own biggest critic and the audience can’t tell if you think it’s done or not.

Show us your current studio

Linus Valdemar’s studio
Linus Valdemar’s studio

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

Here’s one phrase that just came to mind: “Stay curious”. That’s what I intend to do! I keep searching the internet, talking to fellow producers, trying to find new methods to record stuff, write stuff and so on. Music is universal and can still feel different to each of us and hopefully I will never get tired of finding new ways to produce it.

Promote your latest thing… Go ahead, throw us a link

It’s been a while since I’ve released my own music but here’s a track I produced last year by Marie Fjeldsted.

Also please visit my website to see/hear my portfolio, thanks!

https://www.linus-valdemar.com


Steve Silverstein – Steveco Worldwide

1. Favourite knob or fader or switch on a piece of gear and why?

I like the stepped input gain on the dbx 786.  It’s easy to see and feels solid when I adjust it.

dbx 786
DBX 786

2. Do you have an ‘almost’ perfect bit of kit? What would you change?

The Studio Technologies AN-2 Stereo Simulator does a useful trick, but has a terrible interface.  A couple of knobs both affect the level, and I rarely want to adjust stereo width (which I do on my console) or add the modulation, so it’s confusing what to adjust if the level is wrong.

Studio Technologies AN-2 Stereo Simulator

3. What setup do you bring on holiday or tour or commute etc.?

So much of the work that I do involves analog gear, I don’t bring anything with me and do my work at the studio.  The separation is nice… mostly.

SteveCo Studio Desk

4. What software do you wish was hardware and vice versa?

I wish I had a box that did denoising like Izotope RX, that I could add to a single channel after processing and before the console.
I’m happy to do as much as possible without touching a computer!

Izotope RX

5. Is there anything you regret selling… or regret buying?

I feel like my mixes got worse while I was monitoring primarily through the ADAM A7x’s.  I’m not sure if this was related to the speakers, but the direction seemed to reverse when I got midfields at the studio.  I still like the speakers and they sound good, but they ultimately didn’t tell me how to improve my mixes, and I don’t know why.

ADAM A7X

6. What gear has inspired you to produce the most music?

My Toft ATB-16 mix console.  Being able to mix through a console with sufficient routing options that I can always have my hands on just makes life infinitely easier than any other workflow I’ve tried.

Toft ATB-16 mix console

7. If you had to start over, what would you get first?

Some frame or lunchbox for API 500 gear, and a Daking MicPre 500 to fit in it.  There’s a pair at my shared studio that I just find incredibly versatile, and a good preamp can be a go-to forever.

Daking MicPre 500

8. What’s the most annoying piece of gear you have, that you just can’t live without?

My B&B Systems AM-2B phase scope keeps losing alignment, which is annoying — maybe it needs to go back to the shop.  I can’t live without it because it can show me problems in a mix more quickly than I can hear them.

B&B Systems AM-2B phase scope

9. Most surprising tip or trick or technique that you’ve discovered about a bit of kit?

In mastering, a recent discovery was the utility of very-slow attack times on compressors.  When I do mid-side mastering, for the mid, I often use the slowest attack time on the compressor.  This tends to bring up the quiet parts without affecting the loud ones.  I often use my Buzz Audio SOC-20 for this step.

Buzz Audio SOC-20

Artist or Band name?

The studio is Steveco Worldwide.  I currently make music under my name, Steve Silverstein — my band Christmas Decorations has not been active for over a decade.

Genre? 

I record music in all genres, including many albums in the suburbs of rock music.  My own music is experimental electronic or ambient, or both, maybe neither.

Selfie?

Steve Silverstein

Where are you from?

I grew up in the suburbs of Baltimore, Maryland, a place called Pikesville.

How did you get into music?

It was on the radio in my parents’ cars, and on my older sister’s stereo and boombox.  I took piano lessons as a child.  Eventually, a passion developed and stuck.

What still drives you to make music?

I can’t imagine what else I can do now!

How do you most often start a new track?

Most tracks that I work on are for other artists, so they usually start.  With my own music, recordings sometimes begin with an improvisation on one instrument.

How do you know when a track is finished?

It depends on which step of the process.  For a mix, I usually double-check against references in similar genres, or other approved tracks by the same artist, and then check on a few pairs of speakers.  Mixes and masters are both finished by cleanup at the beginning and end of the track.

Show us your current studio

SteveCo Studio

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

A musician I work for tells the story that he used to think that a more expensive studio always led to a better result, and he’s learned that it’s more important to have a team of people he trusts for each step of his process where he wants professional help.

Promote your latest thing… Go ahead, throw us a link.

I’ve been actively promoting my studio’s new Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/steveco.worldwide/