LONG-FORM
RADIO STUDIO
RELIES ON BAG END
SUBWOOFER SYSTEM
GAP Digital is one of the only recording studios in the
United States specializing in the production of long-form
audio drama. Once a staple of radio programming,
long-form dramatic audio productions and talking books
create an audio canvas on which listeners paint their own
visual pictures.
Located in the Chicago suburb of Wheaton, GAP Digital
is a 3,000 square-foot space containing three studios.
Studio A (420 square feet) is a complete 5.1 surround
facility that serves as the mai
n presentation
studio.
Studio B (225 square feet) features one of the only
Foley rooms, complete with pits, in the Midwest.
Studio C mirrors most of the functionality of Studio A
and is the home of sound designer and veteran mixer
Steve Wick.
GAP Digital has created scores of radio dramas,
including programs based on such classic stories as
Victor Hugo's “Les Miserables,” C. S. Lewis'
“Chronicles of Narnia,” George Eliot's “Silas Marner”
and the drama series titled, “Left Behind.” One of
GAP Digital’s most recent projects was the George
MacDonald classic “At the Back of the North Wind,”
mixed in Dolby Pro Logic II. It is the story of a poor
stable boy living in Victorian London in which everyday
lives are mysteriously enveloped by a power and a glory, personified here as
a beautiful woman known as the North Wind. It was broadcast recently in Europe
over BBC-7. It is currently being distributed for broadcast in the United States.
"We are sticklers for getting the sound right,“ said owner Todd Busteed. “Our
goal is to provide clients with a multipurpose, 5.1-capable facility, that supports
both radio, drama and audio-for-video projects, in a visually stimulating environment."
Because of that zeal to get the sound right, Busteed undertook a major redesign
of GAP’s facilities several years ago by Walters-Storyk Design Group (Highland,
N.Y.). In the process leading up to the redesign, Busteed talked with a number
of leading sound/studio designers, including Gary Hedden of GLH Audio in Franklin,
Tenn. “Gary convinced us that the BAG END INFRA bass system best fit our needs,”
Busteed said.
The 0.1 channel in Studio A’s 5.1 surround system is
directed into a BAG END INFRAsub-12 Pro. The
left and right main system is extended through the use
of a pair of BAG END S-10E-I single ten-inch
subwoofers controlled by an INFRA signal processor.
Studio A is the primary audio tracking room in the facility,
primarily because it is a large space and better suited for
performance use. In addition to actor voice-over sessions,
music and crowd
background sound are recorded
here.
Studio A can accommodate about 15 performers.
In an effort to create flair and personality in the space,
designer John Storyk installed a dramatic, curved,
built-in couch at that back of the control room.
The control room is also set up to support audio for
video production. For viewing ease, a 44-inch plasma
screen can be lowered to a position squarely in front
of the console. The control room itself is basically
symmetrical, allowing an accurate listening environment
for the producer and engineer. The back of the room is
designed to accommodate guests.
While guests are behind the surround monitors, staff members have been surprised
at how guests still get a sense of the surround field. “We have had a good experience
with the BAG END system providing accurate bottom end for our productions,”
Busteed said. BAG END’s Director of Engineering and Research, Henry Heine, helped
do the final tuning of the room. “His ‘tweaks’ improved the room’s sound even
beyond what we were already enjoying,” Busteed said.
He is equally happy with the finished product created by Walters-Storyk Design
Group. “Of all the rooms we have seen over the years, John Storyk's work has
consistently been the most aesthetically appealing. Visually, WSDG really transformed
the studios. The process of replacing a drab paint scheme on four walls with
a work space filled with striking colors involved lots of angular stretch fabric,
ceiling clouds, wall panels, and hardwood floors. Audio drama is our bread and
butter, so there is a constant flow of clients and actors coming in and out
of our doors. We want the atmosphere here to stimulate the imagination."
Each studio is equipped with a Fairlight MFX3Plus digital audio workstation
on a Medialink network and ProTools. Studios A and C each house a Sony DMX-R100
digital console. A centrally located machine room networks virtually all resources
in the complex and the entire facility is serviced by a 6 kva uninterrupted
power supply.
GAP Digital is located at 205 North Washington Street, Wheaton, Ill. 60187;
the telephone number is 630-871-1400. Its web site is:
www.gapdigital.com
.