Bob Clearmountain: The World’s Most Legendary Mixer
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In this episode, I sit down with legendary engineer/mixer/producer Bob Clearmountain, the genius behind the soundscapes of timeless classics like David Bowie's "Let's Dance" Bruce Springsteen's "Born in the U.S.A.", Bryan Adams' "Reckless" and Roxy Music's "Avalon" . Dive deep into the art and science of mixing, as Bob shares his experiences, techniques, and the stories behind the mixing desk.
My Beato Club supporters:
Justin Scott
Terence Mark
Farren Mahjoor
Jason Murray
Lucienne Kilpatrick
Alexander Young
Jason Wagner
Todd Ladner
Rob Kline
Nicholas Long
Tim Benson
Leonardo Martins da Costa Rodrigues
Eddie Perez
David Solomon
MICHAEL JOYCE
Stephen Stubbs
colin stead
Jonathan Wentworth-Linton
Patrick Payne
MATTHEW KARIS
Matthew Barouch
Shaun Samuels
Danny Kurywchak
Gregory Reedy
Sean Coleman
Alexander Verbitskiy
CL Turner
Jason Pappafotis
John Fulford
Margaret Carno
Robert C
David M Combs
Eric Flatt
Reto Spoerli
Herr Moritz Adam
Monte St. Johns
Jon Beezley
Peter DeVault
Eric Nabstedt
Eric Beggs
Rich Germano
Brian Bloom
Peter Pillitteri
Пікірлер: 1 100
I was Clearmountain's assistant engineer for four straight years at Mediasound and one of the first women engineers in the world. He trained me! I watched him mix for hours. It was great to hear this interview. He hasn't changed a bit. Always very humble and beautiful. And he looks the same, too!
@davidcollin1436
3 ай бұрын
What year was that?
@dapsign
3 ай бұрын
Lucky gal to get that gig! I was an assistant at a now-closed studio in the mid-90s myself.
@billguitarvin
3 ай бұрын
Wow, how cool it must have been to learn from one of the best, and apparently one of the humblest.
@ksteiger
3 ай бұрын
I worked with Bob on several projects at Electric Lady in the mid 80s. Learned a lot!
@cooldebt
3 ай бұрын
Wow, this chat has some famous people in it! I would love to hear Rick interview you!
Bob...."I'm not an expert." Dude, you are THE expert!
@fivebyfivesound
3 ай бұрын
Haha, right?! If he’s no expert, then there must be no experts lol.
@jimdukeproject
3 ай бұрын
Haha that was priceless.
@killyourtvnotme
3 ай бұрын
damn who is the expert 🤔
@eber66
3 ай бұрын
Such a super humble guy! Like most of the greats like Gretzky, etc...
@Hymn43
3 ай бұрын
When one thinks they know everything that needs be, they cease to learn.
Beato deserves 110% of everything he has accomplished with this channel. He has literally taken this to a new level.
@sevchyk
4 күн бұрын
Basic google level for pre-beginners, dude
23:04 “I don’t think about the numbers. I just turn the thing until it sounds right.” -excellent quote
@gregwhitcoe5411
3 ай бұрын
Very common in this industry... it seems... LOL 😂❤
@mikepettengill2706
3 ай бұрын
Being able to do that seems to be the trick.
A huge takeaway from all of these interviews is to STAY HUMBLE. You can see why all these legends were so successful - they all do the job without ego. Rick interviews the most successful engineers and producers of all time and none of them think they are anything special! Easy to talk to and communicate with, and always open to other opinions. Such a great lesson in life, being professional, and supporting the artists you work with!
@joshuatorres9772
3 ай бұрын
Absolutely agree!
@JamesVandevanter
3 ай бұрын
Yep for the music.
@BloodPact
3 ай бұрын
Yea. Like CLA
@dougplaysgames
3 ай бұрын
Except for Billy Corgan.
@davidduarte2887
3 ай бұрын
Next interview: Gene Simmons.
'Avalon' is one of the best sounding records ever, from start to finish. Golden.
@RageRockForNow
3 ай бұрын
Too bad it's also so boring.
@faddy24
3 ай бұрын
@@RageRockForNowsome tracks maybe but there's a lot of good songs on that album.
@powlobo.m.b.
3 ай бұрын
Timeless reference track!
@robgrano6814
3 ай бұрын
@@RageRockForNow If you think 'Avalon' is boring I don't believe the problem's with the album.
@khlee4069
3 ай бұрын
Peter Frampton often used this album to EQ his speakers.
"I'm no expert" 🙏♥ Pay attention kids. Humility.
@RageRockForNow
3 ай бұрын
Or maybe he largely lucked out and fell ass backwards into something that's easier than Beato makes it out to be. 🤪
@edwardjons8684
3 ай бұрын
True, but then Bob is saying here that he’s no expert on what earlier engineers were doing, which is probably also true.
@RickGraziano
3 ай бұрын
I think his idea behind saying that is this, and I subscribe to it as well: no matter how much you do, learn, innovate, and are able to do your job fantastically nearly every time, there is ALWAYS more to learn. When you stop learning, you stop growing, you stop thriving, and you grow lackadaisical. And that's when the world passes you by.
@BreakfastandDessert
3 ай бұрын
@@RageRockForNow not sure why you'd be watching this video if you think that
@rhalfik
2 ай бұрын
I agree, he's no expert
Rick, you are spoiling us lately with these brilliant interviews!
@michaelpaduch2917
3 ай бұрын
Agreed 100%. I feel so rewarded and enriched by the content I dreamed of to hear all my life listening to music.
@drssexy2142
3 ай бұрын
lol, or he's lining his own pockets with ad money and landfill merch revenue!
@jordanvincenzo464
3 ай бұрын
@@drssexy2142 Quality doesn’t happen for free.
@OZRIC1985
3 ай бұрын
You are so correct! I'm just blown away with all of the amazing people (musicians, etc.) Rick has been interviewing. So many of them are some of my all-time favorites that I have looked up to for several decades! :)
@c3dmf4s
3 ай бұрын
Yes... hes succesful.. if that bothers you perhaps you should have paid better attention in school.... anyway in 20 years you will make assistant manager at the movie theatre so keep grinding.@drssexy2142
6:51 Rick wasn't about to let Bob get away with saying he's no expert.
I was fortunate to experience him mixing my first "altered state" Warner Bros. record which he mentions here, from which he would choose "Ghost beside my bed" out of all the artists he worked on that year, Springsteen and the Stones included, to feature in an AES keynote. That was surreal. Got to hang out with him recently at Apogee studios ...a very talented, accomplished, yet surprisingly humble guy. So happy for his success. Great interview, Rick, thank you.
I actually could not imagine passing trough times like these we’re living today without Rick Beato and his interviews.. thank you for doing this Mr Beato. I’m really grateful
Omg the nerdy settings and gear talk about 10 minutes in is just geek-out gold.
@scottbaekeland9750
3 ай бұрын
yes, that's the stuff I REALLY like to hear. Let's get INTO IT!
@billguitarvin
3 ай бұрын
I agree and love the term “geek out gold”! What a fantastic interview. Only Rick can come up with some of these technical questions that everybody would love to know about.
@dwightburns6699
3 ай бұрын
You have to be an expert to understand what they're talking about though
@davidcollin1436
3 ай бұрын
@@dwightburns6699or a musician who has spent years in the studio turning those same knobs.
@billguitarvin
3 ай бұрын
@@dwightburns6699, but according to Mr Clearmountain, he isn’t an expert, so maybe you don’t have to be an expert. 😊
When Born in the USA and other mega records from the 80s came out, I loved reading the liner notes and kept noticing this name, Bob Clearmountain. As a young guy it was the first time I realized the importance of producers and mixing engineers. Thank you for doing this interview with Bob. The guy is a legend.
@geoffallan3804
3 ай бұрын
Same, really. I noticed Bob and Hugh seemed to be on almost all the records I really liked.
@firebald2915
3 ай бұрын
Rick, check out the interview with Jason Whitlock with Glenn Beck about the take over of the music industry by Black Rock and P Diddy's plight. You must know something about this mayhem.
@philburns5656
3 ай бұрын
Same for me with the Bryan Adams records. And I also noticed Hugh Padgham a little later... makes me quiet happy to have realized these people so early and often now that I have become a mixing engineer myself.
Roxy Music's Avalon is audio gold.
@herseem
3 ай бұрын
sublime
@humanactivated1017
3 ай бұрын
It’s incredible how sound has evolved from the prehistoric days of Avalon to modern works of art like Justin Beiber and Sam Smith .
@michaelpaduch2917
3 ай бұрын
Sublime and ethereal. The best sound ever.
@conorfurlong
3 ай бұрын
@@humanactivated1017😂
@lubie_ogorky
3 ай бұрын
listening to Avalon feels like watching a sunset in a convertible, such a beautiful song, and the whole album is amazing too
Woman in Chains, by Tears for Fears, is the most amazing mix ever. Every time I listen to it, I marvel at how Bob fit everything so clearly and each element has it's own space. Gorgeous mix.
@seymills
3 ай бұрын
so true !
@shoegazer93
3 ай бұрын
Remarkable track
@stephanlandshuter5237
3 ай бұрын
Yea, great sound. But I wonder why he kept the fine drums by Phil Collins so far in the background.
@maccafixx
3 ай бұрын
The whole album sounds amazing
@david_a_uno
3 ай бұрын
That's it exactly. Bob is amazing.
Fantastic interview. I first worked with Bob in 1978 when Power Station was being built, and just finished working with him a month ago when he mixed my new record. He's remained exactly the same person - just a sweet, humble genius of a guy. When you watch him mix it's like he's in a trance. He becomes the music. When the mix is done I don't think he even knows how he did it. Amazing.
@garyhambleton2374
3 ай бұрын
Wow, chills!
@antoinebunel
3 ай бұрын
That is EXACTLY what I would like Rick to film. Witness this magic.
It seemed Bob's name was on all of my favorites cassettes back in the 80s. I thought there was something so appropriate about his last name being "Clearmountain". His humility is stunning.
@YAMISOOLD2009
3 ай бұрын
I was going to say something very similar!!!
Had the pleasure to work with Bob on a few different projects. He is by far the most genuine, humble and gracious person I’ve ever dealt with. Super rare traits for someone with his talent and status / reputation. The man is a legend! Great interview.
This is the guy that made "Let's Dance" sound so good.
@GeorgeAmodei21
3 ай бұрын
I always thought the E. Gtr had an AMS 15-80S Delay from what I read years ago?
@mattmorris2867
3 ай бұрын
@@GeorgeAmodei21you just reached new nerd levels.
@GeorgeAmodei21
3 ай бұрын
@@mattmorris2867 sorry I just did COVER of Phil Collins “ In The Air Tonight” … uploaded around New Years. Check it out! I’m using AMS DMX16 & AMS 15-80S & I feel this is what Phil used on his VOX because he used it on his Drums ( only the Non- Liner Verb) I researched it and I feel I came in the 90+% if this FX. SO That’s why I was shocked to hear Clearmountain say what he did in this Video.
@GeorgeAmodei21
3 ай бұрын
@@independentfilmfestival what is BINGO? Explain yourself please?
@belturbet4
3 ай бұрын
Exactly. Let´s Dance is basically Bob Clearmountain. Incredible mixing.
Rick has done MANY amazing interviews, but this has to be the single most INFORMATIVE one yet for us Studio Rats. And Bob is SO humble! These men are GODS.
His work on INXS’ Kick was wonderful………
Robert John "Mutt" Lange and Bob Clearmountain were/are my musical production heroes. Such a humble guy. Another amazing interview by my 'New' musical hero. I give you Mr. Rick Beato!
@samiam5557
3 ай бұрын
Bob Clearmountain! Is the mixerman!
@SPiCOLi6
3 ай бұрын
B - B - BeATooo!
@TheDamageinc81
3 ай бұрын
Mutt Lange cheated on Shania Twain ... who in the hell would do that???!?
Bob mixed three albums for Crowded House after he became a fan of their debut album and the single Don’t Dream It’s Over. I can understand how this would happen since he mentions paying particular attention to the lyrics of a song. An interview with Neil Finn would be astonishing, one of the most Beatlesque musicians around.
@terrikesler1823
3 ай бұрын
@53greenhill, I would PAY to watch that interview. 👏🏻
Mr. Clearmountain is living proof that mixing is as much an artform as any of the music he's working with -- thank you Rick for such a stellar conversation ❤
The amazing thing is that Bob has worked in an industry that completely revolutionized itself at least 3 times in his career and he somehow managed to not only keep up with those changes but to take of with them and thrive. Going from live recording to tape, to multi track with a console, to digital with Protools, to mixing Dolby Atmos mixes. A comparable would be if you saw Henry Ford go from making Model T's to Teslas.
Avalon is a masterpiece. Bravo!
@fabrikk60
3 ай бұрын
It's a masterpiece of production, yes.
Rick's vast deep knowledge base makes these conversations incredibly fascinating. He takes the time to diligently research his subjects, and it seems they respond accordingly. Massive respect ...
My introduction to Bob's mastery was Crowded House's album Together Alone. The intro of the first track is incredible, crank the speakers and feel it wash and crash over you like the waves in the lyrics. Love Rick's interviews, so insightful and respectful to the participants.
I was working in a studio in London, Advision, in 1989 and he was in the studio next to me. He would blow in London for a couple of weeks and all the record companies would send their pop bands down so he could mix their latest hits. He also told me to get NS10s and Yamaha amp which he used. I still have them to this day.
@mavrosyvannah
3 ай бұрын
Same. So do I.
@wadeteo8282
3 ай бұрын
Which amp was it?
@iamnoti6162
3 ай бұрын
@@wadeteo8282 Yamaha P2250
Rick, you are doing a great job on these interviews. You are very good at it
That Divinyls story that ends the interview so totally sums up his Ethos: Serve the music. Thank you, Rick (and thank you, Bob).
I first became aware of Bob through Crowded House. He did some incredible work with them...Distant Sun, Into Temptation, Whispers and Moans. A true legend!!
@TheReubenKincaid
3 ай бұрын
Nice Shout Out.. His mix really put the icing on the cake on the Together Alone Record. You can hear and feel the vibe of the Kare Kare climate.
@mrsherwood2599
3 ай бұрын
Seconded. The crowded house stuff, you can walk around behind those mixes.
Rick, these interviews are great. Your latest interviews have been fascinating - even more than usual. From The Police guys to George Benson, to Tool's Danny Carey and this one with Bob Clearmountain. The Steely Dan players. All wonderful. And you're one of the only guys who could pull this off. Your recall of musicians around the early jass era Benson era to knowing what compressor or gate was used in the heady days of the transition to digital is second to none. And Benson and Copeland stories - I could watch those in a theatre setting. Food for thought...
Clearmountain is a genius!!! His point in regards too loud bass drums is spot on, and he is the only one that made the E-Street band sound great live!!
@storbjork4257
2 ай бұрын
HUH?? E street band is one of the only old school bands that sounds good and if not one of the most greats sounding bands live of all time. U know nothing about music
@stianmathisen4284
2 ай бұрын
@@storbjork4257 It is plenty consensus for the opinion that the E-Street live sound/mix has been somewhat patchy for decades. This is not the bands fault, it is the live production/mixes that causes this problem! Sound became significant worse after The River Tour (1981).
@storbjork4257
2 ай бұрын
@@stianmathisen4284 okay sorry i missunderstood you.
Holy moly! Bob Clearmountain is a legend! Rick is tearing it up lately!!
Got a chance to meet and speak with Bob briefly at NAMM a couple years ago. Whatta prince! Thank you Rick.
Man!!! You deserve all of the interviews you've filmed this year!!! I am SO glad your channel keeps getting more and more attention! Bob is a LEGEND.
The man, the legend! In the credits of almost every single album of my youth.
What a brilliant title. He's the best because he *hears more* than the rest of us.
@zebalby
3 ай бұрын
Yes, he is one of a group of elite listener/technicians - Roy Halee is equally gifted too
It's nice when the ones who really know what they are talking about and doing, squash a lot of the myths about analog and tape.
@zoltanszabados8445
2 ай бұрын
Yes! That was the greatest takeaway from this interview for me. I feel vindicated.
I was glad to hear Bob talk about today’s kick drum issues. I don’t find that many would agree with him but when I talk like that people look at me sideways!
@EgoShredder
3 ай бұрын
I totally agree with him, as this issue really ruins a lot of modern music production. Same goes for electronic synth bass sounds. Many would argue this is part of the style of the music, but I disagree.
@bazZzment
2 ай бұрын
AMEN! I hate going to concerts and all I hear is kick drum and vocals.
Best interview with Bob I’ve seen. I got to work with him on a Chic session with Niles & Bernard at Electric Lady. PS was booked, and we had a Neve 8068 he liked. Bob was one of the nicest guys I got to work with. During a break, he showed me a side chain parallel compression trick using a channel buss. Great guy and an amazing mixer.
The only reason I've heard of Bob Clearmountain is because of his mix of "Rock the Casbah" by the Clash. It's so much more dynamic and cool sounding. It's the definitive version that I grew up listening to on the radio.
@buddyalbert5808
3 ай бұрын
Man! The energy on that track is amazing.
@jackdempsey9644
3 ай бұрын
Glyn John’s mixed Combat Rock. What mix of Rock The Casbah did Clearmountain do?
@buddyalbert5808
3 ай бұрын
@@jackdempsey9644From what I understand Glyn Johns mixed the album version. But, Bob Clearmountain mixed the single.
That "Let's Dance" story is awesome! And truth be told, that unusual guitar panning really makes the song work!
@ChuckWortman
3 ай бұрын
When you're an expert and you make a " mistake"its not the same as when the rest of us do it.
Wow, real interesting interview Rick! You're basically a tier 1 pop music historian. A bona fide researcher. Nobody documents this piece of culture like you do. I hope you get paid enough for your work!
Rick, you keep on bringing so many important, creative musical people into our greater awareness and appreciation. You're crushing it! Hardest working man on youtube. Thank You!
Avalon and Marley’s Legend 5.1 mixes are sublime!!
Absolutely the best interview yet! The great ones are often humble and let their work do the talking.
Wow! This is gold dust. Hats off, again, Rick!
I'm SO glad when I hear the mixing/producer masters reiterating the same issues I have with modern mixes!! The kick in live concerts really hit home. And guitars are mixed out of EVERYTHING today!!
@GT-mq1dx
3 ай бұрын
Absolutely spot on! You can never hear the guitar the way it should sound in a song because it’s always faded way back, which really sucks and I believe detracts a lot from the music that young people nowadays will never experience unless they listen to something other than newer music. Bring the darn guitar up some more us what I’m always thinking in my head just before I change the channel.
Avalon is one of my all time favorite records. What a wonderful thing to listen to the guy who engineered that masterpiece!
..what a legend, what a great humble person!!! RESPECT BOB!!!
At 20:15 Bob talks about how the bass drum is mixed a lot of times too loud in modern music and this is also bothered me for a really long time and it was nice to hear this from a true expert confirming to me that something is just not right about that because the drum kit should have an overall balance and I understand sometimes it is intentional to have the bass drum emphasized but loved his comments on this I never hear anybody talked about this and kudos to Rick for once again bringing up things that we all think but nobody else asks but Rick does!
Bob is right, he’s not a expert he’s an ARTIST!
I recorded my record "A NIght Of Serious Drinking" in this room, and on that Neve... Great sounds... And Bob is great!
Bob's mixing on New Model Army's The Love Of Hopeless Causes album is some incredible work...He put so much clarity & separation in the mix it actually adds an element of mood & even sparseness to the overall album...Truly fabulous & very very clever mixing, an underrated real gem of an album. 👍👍❤👍
Rick, these interviews you do are historical, insightful, and inspirational. Thank you!
As often the case with Rick’s channel content, it’s way over my head and will never be something I will be involved in, but completely fascinating and fulfilling. New worlds!
Wow! I'm a musician and grew up in the '70s and '80s reading every liner note every thank you every player on every song.... Bob clear mountain is a legend. Thank you Rick No one else would even think to interview him! .... No one on the planet should be allowed to interview a musician unless they themselves are a musician..... Better yet only you get to do all the interviews
Rick disparages himself for asking so many questions but they were very interesting questions and shows Ricks depth on the subject. Bob was an awesome choice for an interview and he did not disappoint. The one thing I've never understood is how he manages the very quiet songs in such a way as to make them seem to be more "still" than most other mixers work in that area.
It's amazing, all of the interviews I've seen Rick do whether it's studio musicians, recording engineers, or mixing engineers, they all seem to have the same message: "Serve the song!" I learn more every day.
These interviews have changed the way I listen to music. I’ve always listened for the different instruments, baselines, etc. but now I’m paying attention to the position of each sound, the compression, all the stuff I never thought about before. I’m really becoming a nerd! It’s great!
He came to the U.K. in the 90’s to mix a Kinks record that I was working on….. a truly lovely guy.
From the Boss to The Pretenders and Bryan Adams Bob is a legend Awesome Interview
What a sweet man. I could listen to him for hours.
Anytime I flipped a tape/album/cd over (showing my age) and saw the name "Bob Clearmountain," I knew it was quality. The sonic difference between Simple Minds' Once Upon A Time vs. their previous albums? Unparalleled.
@RBS_
3 ай бұрын
...Not just 'you', Dude....I was a Professional DJ, and I saw Bob's name on SO MANY 12"s!! ...I almost thought he was a Producer! ...ha-HAAA!
@robgrano6814
3 ай бұрын
Not so sure that had as much to do with Bob's mix as with Jimmy Iovine's production. Still, to many of us who liked Simple Minds in the early days Once Upon a Time was a disappointing fall-off into arena rock. It would be interesting to see what Bob would have done with New Gold Dream, for instance.
I love watching two music geeks talk to each other.. that was an amazing interview
I became familiar with his talent first with his work with CHIC and then later with Byran Adams’ “ Reckless “ album in the early eighties!!!! Great interview with such a talented and humble person! Thank you 🙏!
Good to see Rick having so much fun in these interviews, and getting to interview the legendary musicians and engineers of the 20th century. This is another legacy that will continue to be useful and interesting through the 21st...
That was by far the best Clearmountain interview I've seen... because Rick asked all those questions that I'm sure many of us nerds have been dying to ask for years. So satisfying to listen to this one.
Cleanup the keyboard, and suddenly the bass sounds great....mind.blown!
WOW! Thank you Rick and Bob!
Love his simplistic answers to such technical questions!
Great questions and answers. Thank you both.
"You ARE an expert...." Best line ever! :)
What a talent. We grew up with those stunning mixes.
I was just at an Atmos event with Bob and got to talk to him. He’s so humble and so darn good. I build atmos systems for clients and getting his perspective on Atmos mixing was very enlightening.
This is amazing. Thank you so much for this interview, and asking such great questions 😊
Long time Beato subscriber and viewer (and fan). It pretty much goes without saying - Rick is as rare as they come in terms of his knowledge, brilliance, warmth, talent, and insight. He has managed to string together some of the all-time greatest interviews that I trust will be revisited over and over as the appreciation for these legendary artists, mixers, producers, musicians, etc. grows. A word on Clearmountain: to say I'm a fan is a patent understatement. A trailblazer, the real deal, a sweet person, on the right side of music as an artform. Back to Rick: I've spent countless hours watching interviews of my favorite musicians, producers, engineers, mixers, etc. So, I've seen numerous prior interviews of practically all of the people Rick interviews and Rick seems to ask all the questions that I wished others had asked and didn't. Hats off to you Rick.
@RickBeato
3 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@lauraelliott7441
3 ай бұрын
And, thankfully, these fabulous interviews will live on forever in KZread.
Great informative interview Rick, thank you
Wow...just wow. Love the techniques shared. Thanks!
This interview is an absolutely invaluable contribution to understanding production! Thank you so much Bob and Rick!
I like how he mentioned being practical. He's the guy who's ultimately going to mix the tones that he comes up with and its refreshing to hear he's totally cool with recording the drums with mics you can get at your local Guitar Center. Nothing fancy but they get the job done. Lesson to be learned there!
So brilliant. Just the ideas about "character" in mixing! Another great interview, Rick!
I'm soaking this in and still wanting to save and bookmark it. Thank you both, so much for this❣️❤️
Thank you so much for all these interviews with so much interesting and helpful insides making available for a large audience 🌻
Thank you Rick Beato again for sitting down and sharing these amazing interviews and studio techniques from all of the Legendary artists!!❤
So in May 1986 I’m in Air Studios at Oxford Circus with Rupert Neve, Rupert’s son John and Betty Watts delivering a Focusrite sub-mixer en-route to Montserrat to fit in their SSL and working in Air that day was Bob and the Pretenders working on Get Close.
Great interview! Love that you peppered him with questions, I think we need a part 2 in time!
Love that you’re back into the production content. Definitely wanna see more!
This is one we waiting for! Now we need a 100% Rolling Stones sequel regarding this albums and work improving the Archive releases.
What a great interview! Talking about gear from the past. Such a humble guy and down to earth. Temple of Low Men by Crowded House and Charlie Sexton second album are excellent examples of Bob Clearmountain's work. Fantastic stuff!
@richatlarge462
3 ай бұрын
I love Temple of Low Men.
Thank you for presenting this interview, it is truly ear opening!
Another fantastic interview. Thank you Rick and Bob.
When I was a kid in the eighties, a close friend and I would dream up different combinations of musicians we would like to see record an album - “yeah, man, so-and-so on guitar, so-and-so on drums…” we’d even pick a producer. “Oh, yeah - we got to get Bob Clearmountain to mix it!” You know you’re good when you’re a household name with young teenagers.
Easily my favourite mixing engineer. Woman in Chains by Tears for Fears, Avalon by Roxy Music are just two of Bob's perfect mixes. He's got a career full of others 😀
@philburns5656
3 ай бұрын
Absolutely! Also the album Into The Fire by Bryan Adams, the Miss You disco remix by the Rolling Stones...
@WarmVoice
3 ай бұрын
@@philburns5656 Spot on. Reckless is a brilliant album too. There are very few songs that are instantly recognisable by a single snare hit intro like Summer of 69.
These interviews are absolutely amazing!
Congrats Rick ! Great time with Bob, he is so humble !! And so pro ! I really enjoyed this interview !
Reckless is a phenomenally well mixed album.
@philburns5656
3 ай бұрын
It is. Actually, Bob himself prefers Into The Fire over it.
This guy is awesome!!!! The sound guy!!!