

Bag End Plays Key Role In University's Acclaimed Critical Listening Studio
The Music Department at the University of Massachusetts Lowell has a unique claim to fame: it is one of the few schools in the nation to offer a Master’s Degree in Sound Recording Technology. But beyond that, the school provides students with some of the most sophisticated recording facilities anywhere in the world.
“Our facilities - in particular our Critical Listening and Recording Studio
- don’t just represent state of the art,” said Bill Carman, the program’s
associate director, who is in charge of the facilities, “This room really
defines the new state of the art.”
The $500,000 critical listening room, recently rated one of the top five
rooms in the industry by a panel of sound engineers, features a 5.1 sound
system and serves as both a recording studio and laboratory. “We ask students
to identify and quantify by ear, specific aspects of sound, a necessary component
of recording any music, whether a complex orchestral score or a commercial
jingle,” Carman said.
Officially known as Room 114 in Durgin Hall, on the school’s South Campus,
the Critical Listening and Recording Studio is designed to be a super accurate
listening and monitoring environment in either stereo or various surround
formats for critical listening and aural analysis of recordings, as well mixing
and mastering in surround. Because of the high level of accuracy afforded
by the room, the performance of audio equipment can also be readily observed
and measured.
Dr. William Moylan, chairman of the UMass Lowell Music Department, told the
Lowell “Sun” newspaper the experience in the room is “being able to listen
to sound and describe it in a way that addresses the substance of the sound.”
The room is also a perfect setting as a multitrack recording environment,
incorporating four separate spaces including the main live room with variable
acoustics, an isolation booth and two amp closets. The studio also includes
multimedia projection capabilities to aid in lecture classes, demonstrations
or to provide mix-to-picture support.
Creating the foundation for the room’s 5.1 surround sound system is a pair
of BAG END D18E-I dual 18-inch subwoofer systems controlled by a BAG END INFRA
signal processor and powered by Stage Accompany amplifiers. The D18E-I subwoofer
system features extended flat frequency response down to 8 Hz. in a relatively
small enclosure (44 inches by 22˝ inches wide by 18˝ inches deep).
The designer of the room, Bob Alach, chief designer for Alactronics, a Massachusetts-based
design and installation provider, said he chose BAG END subs because of their
clarity and faithfully accurate reproduction of the bass range.
Other components of the system include SLS 1266 and 1065 monitors, an EMM
Labs Switchman III surround controller and an Integra DVD-A/SACD player. Mixing
and mastering is accomplished through a mobile production system that includes
a Steinberg Nuendo DAW, Yamaha DM2000 console, TC Electronix System 6000,
Genex GX9000 HD recorder and a Merging Technologies Pyramix 8-channel DSD/DVD-A
workstation. Recording is facilitated via 48 mic lines, a Furman
6-channel cue system and two-way video communications.
All the systems in the Critical Listening room, together with tracking in
the Multitrack Recording Studio (Room 213) and editing in Room 223, are integrated
via a new fiber channel SANmp Pro Storage Area Network from Studio Network
Solutions.
For more than a century, the University of Massachusetts Lowell has been educating
students to work in the real world, solve real problems and help real people.
The University began as the Lowell Normal School, founded in 1894 to prepare
students to become teachers, and the Lowell Textile School, founded in 1895
to train technicians and managers for the textile industry. Over the next
75 years, both institutions extended their offerings to meet the growing needs
of the region. Lowell State and Lowell Tech, as they were then known, merged
in 1975 to form the University of Lowell. In 1991, the campus became part
of the University of Massachusetts system.
Located in the historic industrial city of Lowell, 25 miles northwest of Boston,
the campus spans more than 125 acres along the Merrimack River. More than
12,000 resident and commuter students of all backgrounds pursue bachelor’s,
master’s, and doctoral degrees as well as professional certificates in the
arts, humanities and sciences; education; engineering; health and environment;
and management.
With the rush of new technologies that have revolutionized the recording industry
in recent years, and the opportunities that new media are opening up for recording
professionals, a higher level of training and education in music, media, and
technology is now required for any meaningful employment, even at entry level.
The Sound Recording Technology program at UMass Lowell is one of the few programs
in the United States offering this course of study, and provides the motivated
student with the practical
and theoretical background needed for success in the industry. Starting a
career in audio recording has traditionally involved training through an informal
apprenticeship system.
The goal of the SRT program is to produce a musically sophisticated and sensitive
professional, with sufficient technical knowledge to excel in today's production
industry and to easily keep pace with its rapidly changing technology. The
program combines studies in physics, electrical engineering, computer science,
and advanced mathematics, with traditional studies in music and at least nine
courses in the art and technology of recording.
Anyone wishing more information on UMass Lowell and the South Recording Technology
program can visit the school’s web site at: www.uml.edu.
Alactronics, Inc., is located at 192 Worchester Street, Wellesley, Mass. 02481.
The company’s telephone number is 781-239-0000. Its web site is: www.alactronics.com.