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Q&A Session with Adam Williams - Producer, writer, engineer,
and former Powerman 5000 guitarist
Picture yourself in front of a double stack row of Marshall amps
feasting upon your heavily affected guitar signal chain. It’s all feeding
back into the four 20-inch floor monitors at your ankles as the massive multi-arrayed
concert sound system saturates your best lead and rhythm riffs into the hearts,
minds, and ears of 50,000 devoted concert followers.
Thus was the recently former life of Adam Williams.
The original guitarist of “Boston action rockers” Powerman 5000,
Williams called it quits in 2005 to focus on producing new artists and his friend
and PM5K vocalist Spider One, the latter for film and game audio projects from
Adam’s Los Angeles home location, QiLab Studios.
“It’s just my living room here,”he says from his QiLab apartment
where, thanks to a fast Apple, his sound is as large and dynamic as he needs
it to be. One of his top collaborators is an insightful, positive rising hip-hop
rapper named Life: The Guardian. “I’ve got a walk-in closet in here
that I’ve turned into a vocal booth. I’ve learned how to build bass
traps, and exactly where to hang overhead diffusers, too. Living in L.A., I’m
always trying to learn as much as I can about studio acoustics and sonic treatments.”

RED: What types of sessions have you chaired the past few months? What are you
working on today?
ADAM: I've actually been doing more programming than recording lately. Today,
I'm working on a hip-hop track using a sample from David Lee Roth's song "Damn
Good."
RED: Let’s start by chatting about your overall approach to miking. How
does it change from genre-to-genre or artist-to-artist for you—or does
it?
ADAM: Well, vocally speaking, unless I'm going for something extreme, such
as a very distorted vocal sound, I like to start with a pretty flat "normal
sound” at first. Then, depending on how and where we want to take it,
I'll start tweaking things with the mics from there. For guitar amps, for example,
it's usually one or two mics: One right up to the grill, the other moved around
[in the room] until something sounds cool. Sometimes I use phasing to EQ the
sound, and other times I'll try to find a strange little ambient corner of the
room to mic.
RED: Talk a bit about your audio chain and tracking with EQ and dynamics processors.
Does it change depending on whom or what you're recording?
ADAM: My latest piece of gear is Focusrite's Liquid Channel, so at the moment
I'm exploring what it is capable of doing with a mic signal. The mic goes right
into that and directly into Pro Tools.
RED: How do you choose which microphone you'll use in a given scenario? What
are the three most important criteria you look at when choosing a mic for a
given application?
ADAM: Sometimes, if scheduling is important, I'll go with something that I'm
familiar with and know will bring the results I'm looking for quickly. Other
times, I'll try something I've never tried before just to keep things interesting.
As for mic choice criteria, I always ask myself:
1. Are there any inherent EQ boosts in the mic's design?
2. Do I want something predictable, or unpredictable?
3. What are the tone and frequencies of the sound source I'm recording?
RED: Is there any difference in how you set up/signal chain a mic for your digital
audio recordings versus analog ones you do, or used to do?
ADAM: I definitely want to warm up the sound of a digital recording, at least
a bit in the digital domain and conversion of things.
RED: We also like to ask about crazy sounds you've gotten in the studio—maybe
you planned those, or maybe it was accidental? When have you tried a weird idea
that seemed like it absolutely wouldn't work, technically or creatively, but
it did?
ADAM: Hmmm...usually just sticking a mic into something odd works every time:
Inside a Slinky, a shoe, a toilet or wherever. Some of those ideas don’t
sound like they'd work acoustically, but they do.
RED: And then, of course, we have to ask about the times that an experiment
actually didn't work out.
ADAM: They all work. Failure is subjective.
RED: What would you say is the toughest thing that engineers consistently have
to deal with in the studio?
ADAM: The balancing act of keeping everyone happy. This includes the vibe,
as well as the sounds, that are captured through all the microphones.
RED: Thanks so much for taking the time to talk with us today, Adam. We always
end with the one that's toughest to answer: What's your all-time most memorable
gig?
ADAM: In terms of a playing gig, it would have to be a show I played with Powerman
5000 long ago in Atlanta as we were just starting to tour outside of Boston
in the early ‘90s. Robbie Robertson, who was working at Dreamworks at
the time, saw our Atlanta set and complimented me on my slide guitar playing
[Note: Wow!] Another memorable gig would be playing on the 50-yard line of Giants
Stadium for one of the Ozzfest tours. As for the studio recording and technical
side of things, I'd have to say that watching Chris Lord-Alge mix a Powerman
5000 record as he encouraged me to pick his brain—that was memorable.
www.powerman5000.com
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