Skip to content

Country

Batik - The Old Man and the Sea

Regular price €12,55 Sale price €17,95
On Sale

Tax included

Format

“just about perfect imaging, left to right evenly laid out for your eyes and ears to see, piano, bass, drums, guitar and again a one room recording. Unbelievable why so few companies do this when it can yield very satisfactory results.”
- computer audiophile

Wolfert Brederode - piano
Ed Verhoeff - electric guitar

Mark Haanstra - electric bass
Joost Lijbaart - drums



Total time: 44:59


Original recording format PCM 96kHz.
All other formats are converted versions of the original.

"Everything about him was old except his eyes and they were the same color as the sea and were cheerful and undefeated"
- Ernest Hemingway


With the Suite; The Old Man and the Sea, the new ensemble Batik, presents them self, with a piece of music, that vividly brings to life Ernest Hemingway's classic tale of the old fisherman. Batik has composed and improvised a dramatic story telling Soundscape around the key elements of the novel. You can read the novella on line here, it is a unique experience reading the book and hearing the gorgeous Batik compositions at the same time:


http://centralschools.org/~shs/OWThe_Old_Man_and_the_Sea.pdf

Like the famous fabric from the Far East the music of Batik consist of multicolored lines creating fascinating patterns, blending traditional forms with new ideas and letting spontaneous interaction merge the elements into a very original sound. BATIK is the latest brainchild of Wolfert Brederode (ECM recording artist) and Joost Lijbaart (Yuri Honing). With guitarist Ed Verhoeff and bass guitarist Mark Haanstra (two of the most in demand musicians on the European scene) they have formed a quartet capable of visual and inventive music making.


Joost, Wolfert, Ed and Mark.

The 9 pieces of music were performed live in the studio in front of a select audience.
The musicians were placed in front of a stereo pair of microphones with additional spot microphones on each instrument. The musicians were playing without headphones, the reason being that we believe that when we get the musicians to play together in the same room, without headphones, it creates a number of musical and technical benefits:

As they are not ''separated'' by the headphones, the musicians, in order to hear each other are forced to create a natural and musical balance, a balance which is then easily captured by the main stereo pair of microphones. Because of the natural and musical balance the need for compression to control levels is no longer necessary. Since everybody is in the same room, the boxed sound which is so common in many modern recordings is absent and the sound of the room helps ''glue'' the sound of the recording.



This is all very well but there are also problematic aspects to this procedure:
The room (studio) has to have a good sound.
The musicians have to be very good and well prepared as it is very difficult to repair mistakes because of the ''cross talk'' between the instruments.

We have to be very precise when choosing and placing the microphones and the puzzle of placing the musicians at the right distance to the main stereo microphones and the right distance to each other, is also time consuming.

And when we have a live audience in the studio, we pray that they remember to turn of their cell phones and the ones with a bad cold choose to stay at home.

The room where the recordings has been done is the now legendary Studio Eleven situated in the building of the Dutch World Broad Casting Service. The Studio was used extensively in the 60's by European and visiting American jazz musicians like Wes Montgomery, Cannonball Adderley, Dexter Gordon and Eric Dolphy. The Dutch World Broad Casting Service asked Frans de Rond to bring the room back to life as a recording studio and Frans, after seeing and hearing the room, jumped at the opportunity. Sound Liaison has been allowed to use the room for our audiophile projects and we are eternally great full to the Dutch World Service for this opportunity.




Recorded at Studio Eleven (Hilversum) on March11, 2014.
Recording and mixing - Frans de Rond
Assistant engineer - Peter Bjørnild

Used equipment:

Microphones:

Guitar: Audio Technica 4080
Piano: Neumann TLM 170
Bas: Avenson Audio IsoDI, JZV67
Drums: SE Rn17 - overheads and JZ V67 - bassdrum
Main system - Schoeps MK5 (AB)

Micpre's: RME Micstacy (Analog > MADI)
Microphone cables: Grimm Audio TPR
Mixing headphones: Sennheiser HD800
Mixing speakers: Grimm Audio LS1
Master clock: Grimm Audio CC1

Photo cover: Milan Bjornild

Catalog Number: SL-1008A

Added to cart