Latest News

(English) SCM19A Review – Hi-Fi Choice

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


ATC MONITORS TURN TO GAMING WITH STEVE KEMPSTER

Steve_Kempster

Although he is still best known for his work on over 120 films such as National Treasure, Remember The Titans, Austin Powers in Goldmember, Armageddon, Twister, Bourne Supremacy, and Training Day, veteran recording and mix engineer Steve Kempster has, as of late, turned his prodigious talents to the burgeoning world of high-end audio for gaming. Indeed, this year composer Austin Wintory won the ASCAP Composers Choice Award for Assassin’s Creed Syndicate and composer Gareth Coker won the Game Audio Network Guild Awards for Ori and the Blind Forest in the categories of Audio of the Year, Best Mix, Best Instrumental Track, and Rookie of the Year. Kempster mixed both scores at his private mix room, relying on his ATC SCM100ASL LCR midfield monitors and his ATC SCM25A LCR near-field monitors to ensure that the full emotional impact and intention of the composers’ works translate to gamers around the world, regardless of the sound systems they listen on.

“I’ve done most of Austin’s games and movies in the last few years,” Kempster said. “I helped him record the original ideas for Assassin’s Creed here in LA, and we were able to get very specific about the feeling and timbre we were after. He wanted a real tactile feeling so that the gamer would feel like the music was right there, not far off in the distance. Our early conversations and work held the project together, and so my mix was a natural extension of that.” Wintory introduced Kempster to Gareth Coker, which led to his work on Ori and the Blind Forest. Kempster is also working on new games with award-winning composer, Mikolai Stroinski.

Back in the late 1970s, Kempster got into the music business as a singer-songwriter. “I learned engineering so that I could get the right sound for the stories I wanted to tell,” he said. “I was inspired to do that because I found that if the engineer understood what I was up to, the song’s intention came through. But if he didn’t, it fell flat. It was an important place to get it right, so I trained myself on how to record and mix and worked with musicians on my own material. They said I had a better sound coming out of my garage than they were getting at the nice studios, so they started asking me to come work with them there. I think it’s helpful to keep the songwriter’s perspective as an engineer. I look at my job from a storytelling point of view first and foremost.”

Kempster explains that the biggest difference between mixing for records or movies and mixing for games is the inherent non-linearity of games. “Depending on the design of the game, the player will hear different things depending on their play,” he said. “If a player engages in a battle and loses, the game may reset to an earlier point. There can be a million different paths and outcomes, as compared to a record or movie with just a single linear arc. The music has to be composed so that it walks hand-in-hand with the action without becoming repetitious. It’s an amazing art that Wintory and Coker are adept at navigating. They build in different levels of the same cue. Those levels seamlessly transmute, and I have to be very careful that my mix works across all of those levels. That’s no easy trick.”

Kempster has two ATC setups: he has his LCR system of ATC SCM25As permanently installed in his home mix room and a large, but mobile LCR system of ATC SCM100ASLs paired with an ATC SCM0.1/15ASL subwoofer for use at different facilities around town. “My ATCs are the most important thing I own, and I own a lot of gear,” Kempster laughed. “With the 100s, I’m kind of like a mobile MASH unit. I’m pretty good at arranging them and working with the subwoofer’s cutoff and volume to get a nice even response. I have a few pieces of music that I listen to that help me calibrate things. Once they sound right, I know whatever I record or mix will translate.”

“All mixing is like sculpting,” he continued.” I chip away and remove the things I don’t want until I hear what I want to hear. With all the levels of a game’s mix, the details can add up in unexpected ways, and I rely on my ATC’s incredible clarity to alert me to any potential issues. When I have the mix right, the imaging on the ATCs is breathtaking and the mix sounds correct across all the volume levels. By relying on ATCs, my mixes translate to postproduction and consumer systems. If I couldn’t get that right, someone later in the production chain would have to do it for me. It’s great that there are talented people who can do that, but I certainly don’t want to be the engineer whose mix needs saving! Career longevity doesn’t come out of that equation!” (Spoken by an engineer who has been delivering spot on mixes for nearly forty years…).

Photo © 2016 Larry Mah

Steve Kempster IMDb

Transaudio Group (ATC U.S. Professional Product Distribution)


Hi-Fi+ Review the ATC SCM150ASL & Primare PRE60

Jason Kennedy has reviewed the SCM150ASL in the latest (May) edition of Hi-Fi+.  Here is just a taster of what Jason though of the loudspeakers.

“Real gravitas, there is no excess, no flab, just girth.”

“More important is that the music makes sense, the absence of thickness in the bass allows the tune to take precedence over the sound, it allows the message in the music to be communicated in a way that most systems struggle with because they don’t have the resolution and control that this one does…”

Jason Kennedy, Hi-Fi+, May 2016.

To downloand and read the review in full, here is the PDF of the SCM150ASL review.

HIFI-135_Primare_ATC_LR-page-001-724x1024HIFI-135_Primare_ATC_LR-page-002-724x1024HIFI-135_Primare_ATC_LR-page-003-724x1024HIFI-135_Primare_ATC_LR-page-004-724x1024


(English) SCM10 Signature Edition

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


Studiobizz Makes a Big Step Forward with New ATC Monitor System

After working on audio monitors of a well known brand for over 12 years, Ulmt of Helios suggested to have a listen at ATC.  After short deliberation the SCM45A Pro looked like the best option, so he brought a pair over to my studio. After all, it is best to check a monitor system in your own, familiar environment.

ATC_SCM45A-Pro_Studiobizz_1_BWWe played several CD tracks as well as some of my own recordings from a Pro Tools HD system.  I “clicked” with the loudspeakers immediately, though I didn’t dare to say it out loud just yet!  Ulmt suggested to keep the monitors in my studio for a while. “I’ll call you up in about a week to hear what you think of them”, he said.  Two days later I made the call and told him I couldn’t do without them anymore.

ATC_SCM45-Pro_Studiobizz_2_BW

Despite the fact the mixes I made on my previous monitors still hold their ground, the ATC’s give me much more detailed and accurate information, especially when it concerns layers of instruments, placement and depth of field.  After experiencing this, there simply was no way back.  But the most important thing for me was that, while so much more information was presented to me, the overall sound appeared more relaxing to my ears.  It caused, so to say, less confusion in my head.  The positive result of this is that it leaves more room for creativity in my mind. Making mix decisions is now so much easier!  Music is a story to be told and when mixing, all the track information needs to be brought into balance, giving each and everything the right dynamics.  The SCM45A Pro’s are a great support accomplishing this.

Peter van Tilburg, Studiobizz, Oss

Helios Pro Audio Solutions


ATC MONITORS DELIVER FOR TV’S PROLIFIC COMPOSER DEVIN POWERS

“I know it’s cliché to say, but it’s true.  The most important piece of gear in my studio is the monitor system.  My ATCs are the best overall loudspeaker that I’ve ever heard.”

Enlightened by Shine http://www.ohanaware.com/shine/

Like The Beatles, Madonna, and Nirvana, you’ve undoubtedly heard the music of Devin Powers, but you probably didn’t know it. Powers is arguably the world’s most prolific recording artist turned composer for modern television. He’s written, performed, and recorded literally tens-of-thousands of songs in every genre and style imaginable for all manner of TV shows. His clients include the pioneering reality show Blind DateThe BachelorThe BacheloretteThe Biggest LoserThe Amazing Race, and Naked & Afraid, the ground breaking #1 survival show for Discovery along with others for ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, The History Channel, MTV, A&E, and more. In fact, Powers has had music in over four hundred TV shows over the last seventeen years. He’s earned numerous awards from ASCAP, including “Most Performed Television Underscore” in 2006. The three keys to his success are a limitless wellspring of musical inspiration, the capacity to perform every aspect of his compositions, and the professional tools to nail the sound of the target genre and deliver a perfect mix on deadline. For the last two years, Powers has relied on ATC SCM25A active near-field monitors to craft those perfect mixes in an enjoyable, non-fatiguing way, day-in and day-out.

Powers didn’t start out aiming to be top dog in the world of television underscores. Instead, he was a bona fide rocker; an ace on guitar and vocals, with plenty of chops to spare on everything else. He wrote for and led the Universal Records band The Vents in the 1990s. With top-10 radio hits saturating the airwaves, The Vents toured the USA, opening up for bands like Smashmouth, Matchbox 20, Radiohead, Foo Fighters, and Wilco. Clearly, Powers had arrived. But alas, the vicissitudes of corporate mergers and steely boardroom decisions saw The Vents dropped from the label despite radio hits and an undeniably ascending trajectory.

It was a blessing in disguise. “My goal had never been to be a rock star, per se,” Powers said. “I live and breathe music. It oozes out of my pores. My goal was always to make a living making music. I started producing for younger bands when I met up with an industry friend who was looking for an authentic rock guy to write songs for a ‘reality TV show.’ This was back in 1998, and no one knew what a ‘reality TV show’ was! He explained the concept, and I thought it sounded like a fun opportunity to sit in one place and write punk, funk, rock, R&B, metal, you name it. I signed on, and it was way more rewarding in many ways than working in the rock world with no touring! In Blind Date’s first season, Powers wrote and recorded over 1,500 tracks, and at the end of five seasons, he had 7,000 tracks.

Now eighteen years later, Powers has a group of writers working under him, but his main focus is still on writing, recording, and mixing music for his biggest clients. And he has amassed the resources to be a true master of tone. He has all the guitars, amps, drums, keyboards, microphones, vintage outboard gear, and all the deep know-how to pick and choose among that massive arsenal of tools to get just the right sound for a piece. And he does it at a breakneck pace, often starting with nothing in the morning and leaving eight hours later with several completed mixes of songs he wrote and recorded that day!

“Only the biggest primetime scripted shows master or sweeten the music tracks before they’re incorporated into the show. On unscripted shows it’s on the composer to make sure everything is absolutely perfect before it goes out the door,” Powers said. “I have found that my ATC 25s reveal everything that’s going on in my mix, and they do so at any volume. Their midrange is fantastic, and overall, they have the right combination of rock, detail, and punch. And I can listen to them all day and not leave feeling fatigued.”

Powers notes that there are a few differences between mixing for traditional music outlets and for television. First, there’s no unity volume in TV, so Powers typically mixes in the green, leaving more room for dynamics than you might guess. Second, the effects of low volume on sustained sounds (e.g. synth pads) versus transients (e.g. drums) can wreak havoc with a mix. Although he doesn’t want to give away too many secrets, Powers always checks his mixes at low volume on Auratone Sound Cubes. “I listen carefully to the transients,” he said. “My mixes have to work well and translate at all volumes.”

Devin Powers

Transaudio Group


(English) SCM11 Reviewed By Hi-Fi Critic

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


(English) ATC LOUDSPEAKERS SPONSORS LEGENDARY RECORDING ENGINEER AND PRODUCER, MICHAEL BISHOP AT AXPONA

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


(English) dB HI-FI OPEN EVENT

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


(English) SIGNATURE EDITION SCM10SE CELEBRATES A LIFE IN SOUND

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


(English) ATC LAUNCHES ‘SCM19AT’ ACTIVE TOWER SPEAKER SYSTEM

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


(English) SCM19A Launches 21st March

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


(English) SCM7 Review: Hi-Fi Pig

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


(English) WHAT HI-FI’s BEST STANDMOUNTER NOW DOESN’T NEED AN AMP.

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


(English) ONE OF OUR MOST POPULAR TWO-WAYS IS GOING ACTIVE

对不起,此内容只适用于美式英文


Loudspeaker Technology Ltd, Gypsy Lane, Aston Down, Stroud, Gloucestershire, GL6 8HR.
Tel: +44 (0)1285 760561 Fax: +44 (0)1285760683 Email: info@atc.gb.net
CCCISO9001ISO9001

Copyright ©
Website Design: Five Fifty