Professional Sound - August 2019 | Page 36

STUDIO A LIVE ROOM STUDIO B MULTI-PURPOSE HALL (L-R) OCL STUDIOS’ MEGAN OWEN, JOSH GWILLIAM & SPENCER CHEYNE 4K console that Potter and one of his tech- nicians are in the process of restoring and is just about ready for action. Owen recalls a point where they had a client renting The Hall and a band working on an album project in Studio A; subse- quently, there were musicians and creative types all around the property, some focused on work and others enjoying each other’s company during some mutual downtime. “I was just standing there thinking, ‘This is why it all came together,’” he proudly enthuses. Cheyne was the first of the studio’s current crew to come aboard by a few months. In 2010, he and a partner founded The Station Recording Co. in Calgary’s West Hillhurst neighbourhood, which he continued to oper- ate concurrent with his first few years at OCL. Owen approached Cheyne about joining his staff when he was ready to reopen and, as Cheyne recalls, “The timing really worked out. I figured, rather than trying to compete with Dan and this big, beautiful studio, we might as well just join forces.” Around the same time, Cheyne’s stock as a mixer was soaring on the back of his work on Jocelyn Alice’s smash single, “Jackpot,” which helped attract industry attention and new business to his new professional home. 36 PROFESSIONAL SOUND With Owen deciding to invest in a dedicated mix room partway through 2018, Cheyne formally shuttered The Station late in the year and brought all of his work to OCL, temporarily setting up in The Hall. “I used to do a hybrid [analog and dig- ital] thing,” Cheyne begins about his current workflow. “I have an SSL AWS console and had a ton of outboard gear, but I’ve slowly been getting rid of things and right now am always working in the box. I mean, the UAD plug-ins sound so good and, really, I think I’m doing the best work I’ve ever done.” He cites instant recall as being one of the key advantages of working in-the-box these days. He also notes that, with Gwilliam working on the Neve and a collection of sought-after outboard gear, most of what he mixes has already absorbed the sonic advan- tages of analog circuitry. While OCL can and does cater to virtu- ally any musical style, both Cheyne and Gwil- liam acknowledge that country comprises a healthy percentage of their work, with high-profile clients like Brett Kissel, Leaving Thomas, and George Canyon spending some time there in recent years. Cheyne notes that, as country contin- ues to push into the pop world, clients are wanting an increasingly clean production that’s conducive to working in the digital domain; however, he plans to take advan- tage of the SSL 4K in his new space when it’s ready to go. Over in Studio A’s control room, Gwilliam brings nearly two decades of recording expe- rience to his current post. He started his career at Calgary’s MCC Studios before moving over to Audities Studio while also doing some free- lance work. In 2010, Gwilliam bought a retired CBC mobile broadcast truck and converted it so he could record music pretty much anywhere, from garages to old churches to abandoned warehouses and beyond. “That’s what got me really heavily into shaping sound and knowing how to work out a vibe in a room – walking into all kinds of dif- ferent spaces and understanding how they’re going to behave,” he tells Professional Sound. The engineer knew of OCL Studios in the first few years of its operations, though admits that his professional curiosity was only piqued when he heard about the Neve 88R coming north. “So right away, I gave Dan a call and asked when I’d be able to record some drums there.” Owen told him they were still about six months away from having the Neve being operational, so Gwilliam bided his time in the mobile truck until he got his callback.