Giles Martin reveals how he
took The Beatles master tapes and remixed them in surround sound for
the Fab Four's new video collection. Abbey Road is full of gremlins.
Giles
Martin - son of record producer George Martin - can't play any music
through his mixing desk at the iconic North London studios.
He
re-boots his computer while two engineers crawl on the floor, plugging
in cables and fiddling with various switches. At one point, someone
unplugs a hard drive.
Eventually, the equipment springs to life. The producer dismisses a
workman, who has appeared to drill locks into the door, and apologises
for the delay.
"I just moved into this studio yesterday," he explains.
With
that, Martin loads up a file that contains dozens of versions of the
Beatles' back catalogue. There are the original recordings, mono mixes,
stereo remasters and various other snippets - all of which Martin can
flick between at will.
He
used these tracks as a reference while producing a new DVD compilation,
Beatles 1+, which sees the Fab Four's biggest hits re-imagined in
stereo and 5.1 surround sound, accompanied by restored promotional
videos and films.
"The goal is to bring the band closer to you,"
says Martin. "To have that same feeling at home that I get when I put on
the tapes in the studio."
Rather than viewing the originals as sacred, the band appreciate their music being tweaked this way, he says.
"My
dad went to see John Lennon in 1980 before he died, and John said to
him: 'Do you know what I'd really like to do? I'd love to record
everything again.'
"Dad said, 'Really? How about Strawberry Fields?'
"And John said: 'Especially Strawberry Fields.'"
Counter-intuitively, Martin's new mixes are often simpler than the existing stereo versions - but he has a solid explanation.
Up
to Yellow Submarine, the Beatles treated the mono mixes of their albums
as the definitive documents. The stereo versions were created as an
afterthought, often without the band's involvement.
"My dad was
never happy with the extreme panning that went on," explains the
producer. "You'd have the band on one side and all the vocals on the
other.
"And you have what I call the socks and sandals brigade
saying: 'The only way to listen to Sgt Pepper's is in mono.' To be
honest, they're probably right, but no-one does that any more."
So
he set about recapturing the power of those mono recordings. "In
Beatles world, if you can make something more aggressive, they want it
more aggressive," Martin says, cueing up Paperback Writer to prove his
point.
"If you listen, this mono mix is very crunchy, very in your
face," he says, as the textured harmonies give way to Paul McCartney's
guitar riff.
"The stereo sounds wider," Martin continues,
switching seamlessly to that version, "but the problem is that all the
action - the guitar and drums - are on the left speaker."
"The
guitar riff is what you remember about that song," he says, but it loses
its oomph by being shifted to one side. Accordingly, the new mix puts
the instruments into a focussed central point, while spreading the
vocals across the front speakers.
The rear speakers present a separate challenge. Rather than placing
Ringo's drums behind the listener, or making vocals circle the room,
Martin opts for restraint.
"Dolby came to see me with 5.1 when it
was new," he explains, "and they'd mixed What's Going On by Marvin Gaye
in surround sound, with the guitar coming out of the right rear speaker.
"But if you went to see Marvin Gaye performing and his guitar
player decided to stand at the back of the audience with his amp, you'd
go: 'Could you put him on the stage, please?'"
Over-using those rear channels is "really distracting," Martin argues, so he came up with an ingenious solution. He went into Abbey Road's Studio 2, wired up a "really big" loudspeaker and played the original Beatles recordings at full volume.
"We
acted like the band were playing in there again, and recorded the walls
using the original Beatles microphones," he says. Those reverberations
and echoes were then placed into the rear speakers to give "the illusion
of being in the room with the band".
"And they are really good as
a band," Martin says. "That sounds stupid, but they do actually make a
good sound. You want to get the least stuff between that and what's at
home."
With the later Beatles recordings, however, he had more opportunity to be playful.
"Strawberry
Fields is more of a sound picture than a song," Martin says, scrolling
over to John Lennon's masterpiece, and locating the descending
svarmandal figure (the one that sounds like a sitar) between the first
chorus and second verse.
"On the stereo remaster, the svarmandal
does something cool - it pans. So in our new version, we can steal that
and make it even better. Now it goes around all five speakers like a
horseshoe."
But Martin also made a more elemental tweak.
"The
mono Strawberry Fields - the one the Beatles mixed - is slightly more
intense and more condensed. There's a mellotron pulse under John's voice
which forms a sort of harmonic for his vocal. In the stereo it's off to
one side and, as a result, John's voice sounds thinner.
"I said:
'OK, if we're doing a new mix of this, we should do one that sounds
like the mono. So we came up with this," he says, pressing play on the
updated version which, it has to be said, sounds much more fulsome.
In making such decisions, Martin tried to put himself into the
mindset of John, Paul, Ringo and the two Georges as they worked - just
metres away from where he's sitting - in the 1960s.
"All of the
songs should sound like you remember them," he says. "It's not meant to
be the 'Giles Martin version'. I work for the Beatles."
Martin
confesses to one glaring mistake: The stereo mix of Lennon and
McCartney's kitchen sink symphony A Day In The Life is missing a piano,
because he opted to use the version created for the Cirque Du Soleil
show, Love.
"All of these fans will be going: 'Why did you take
this piano off?' And the answer is I didn't - I just used the Love
version," he cringes.
Martin is modest about his achievements,
saying more than once that "there's no talent in what I do". And he
admits his every decision will be pored over by Beatles obsessives.
"There
are people who know this material better than I do," he says. "But
generally I get a pretty good ride. They know I do it because I care,
rather than showboating and going: 'This is how I think they should
sound.'"
Ultimately, he would have liked to be more inventive with
the surround mixes but had to "rein myself in, because these are the
Beatles number one hits".
"If I was doing a 5.1 of the White Album, though? Let me at it!"
The Beatles 1+ is out now.
THE BEATLES 1 Available to order at Amazon HERE:
·1 DELUXE CD/2 BLU-RAY HERE
·1 DELUXE CD/2 DVD HERE
·1 CD/BLU-RAY HERE
·1 CD/DVD HERE
·1 BLU-RAY HERE
·1 DVD HERE
·1 CD HERE
They have all been a part of my life for so long,I look at all of it with great fondness. Everything Beatles touches me in a way that I can't put into words,and that includes Sir George,and Giles.What I would give to be able to sit there in #2 for a day and just push faders up and down,going through every song;
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