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      <p><font face="Verdana, Charcoal, Sans-Serif" color="#000000" size=1> <img src="newsimages/ludwig.jpg" alt="Bob Ludwig" align=LEFT width="180" height="178" border="0" hspace="8" vspace="10"><br>
        We are extremely pleased to bring you an interview with one of the industry&#146;s 
        most respected mastering engineers. Bob Ludwig has won the prestigious 
        Mix Magazine TEC award seven times. He was the first person to be honored 
        with the <i>Les Paul Award</i> for &#147;...individuals who have set the 
        highest standards of excellence in recording and sound production over 
        a period of many years.&#148; His studio, Gateway Mastering, has won the 
        TEC award every year it has been eligible. Bob and the studio are nominated 
        once again this year. <br>
        <br>
        Gateway has mastered many Grammy award winning albums and their <a href="http://www.gatewaymastering.com" target="new">Web 
        site</a> client list includes just about every artist you can think of. 
        Anyone who visits Gateway Mastering Studios is amazed at the sound of 
        the mastering room, the bleeding-edge technology, the knowledgeable staff, 
        and the warmth, caring, and incomparable expertise of Bob Ludwig. Gateway 
        is leading the way again with 96kHz/24 bit, DVD authoring, and home theater 
        technologies. <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        Speaking for music lovers everywhere, thanks for bringing us so much wonderful 
        music. Can you summarize your years in New York and what led you to consider 
        building your dream facility in Portland, Maine? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        Thank you, Peter, for saying that. I&#146;m lucky enough to have, what 
        is for me, the best job in the world. I was finishing up my Masters degree 
        at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester when Phil Ramone came up to 
        teach the first Recording Workshop ever held at the school. I was Phil&#146;s 
        assistant as I was the only student working in the recording department. 
        I left to go work with Phil at A&#038;R Recording where my career started. 
        I learned the art of disk mastering there. I began doing work for groups 
        like The Band with Music From Big Pink, Peter, Paul, &#038; Mary, Jimi 
        Hendrix, and Dionne Warwick singing the famous Burt Bachrach and Hal David 
        hits. I learned how to hear from Julie Klages (Enoch Light&#146;s daughter) 
        and the production team of Lieber and Stoller. <br>
        <br>
        After a few years I left A&#038;R to go with a brand new company who had 
        the very latest Neumann solid state cutting equipment and all European 
        Telefunken and Studer machines. It was Sterling Sound. With Lee Hulko 
        as President, they soon became one of the major mastering facilities of 
        the world. At one point, Sterling Sound and Masterdisk were owned by the 
        same public company. After seven years at Sterling I left and joined Masterdisk 
        and became Vice President and Chief Engineer there. I worked there a long 
        time and did lots of albums including Springsteen&#146;s &#147;Born In 
        the USA&#148; which was the first commercially pressed CD to be made in 
        America&#151;before that all CDs were either made in Japan or in Europe. 
        <br>
        <br>
        Several factors led me to building my own business. Masterdisk is owned 
        primarily by an investment group and it became clear to me that no matter 
        how many years I remained there I would never be in charge of my own destiny. 
        Also, the quality of life in New York was getting to me: my car had been 
        broken into 7 times and was stolen from the gated, attended parking lot 
        across the street! My folks have lived in Maine for 30 years and I had 
        fallen in love with the State while visiting them. It seemed time to jump 
        off the cliff, start my own studio and take control of whatever would 
        happen. I spent quite a few years planning it with Dan Crewe who was my 
        original business partner. He made all of it possible by arranging all 
        the financing (six loans!) and keeping me on track when the going got 
        rough at times. <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        It has been about 5 years since Gateway Mastering Studios opened. Has 
        the move and the new facility been everything you had hoped for? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        Beyond my wildest dreams! We opened our studio doors January 8, 1993. 
        Our first session was from LA and we didn&#146;t even have my big studio 
        built yet, we were working out of a temporary room. They still wanted 
        to come. We told them we didn&#146;t have furniture yet, they still came! 
        It was like opening the doors and having a Mac Truck come through the 
        door. I was hoping to relax a little up here in Maine, but I have been 
        busier than I ever was in NY and that is saying a lot. Ironically we have 
        had more people attend sessions here than I did in NY which was a big 
        surprise. People have come from all over the world. <br>
        <br>
        I had always wanted to have as perfect a mastering room as was possible. 
        Working in NY high rise buildings precluded having high ceilings that 
        an acoustically ideal room demands. Here in Maine, with the help of Scott 
        McConville, my Director of Engineering, I was able to finally get a room 
        built that was as close to ideal as I could get. <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        Since mastering is the final creative step in the record making process, 
        you have a great deal of responsibility to capture art with technology, 
        as your slogan so wonderfully states. What in your background prepared 
        you to do what you do so well? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        I&#146;ve been heavily into music since I can remember. I am a musician 
        first and an engineer second. I used to be the Principal Trumpet player 
        with the Utica Symphony so I know what it is like to be a performer and 
        how important it can be to accurately capture every nuance in a recording. 
        I have been a Producer, so I can appreciate first hand what is going on 
        with a client who walks in my door to finish up their record. I know the 
        politics and the agony they have faced trying to bring their artistic 
        vision to their recording. I appreciate the sweat that has gone into making 
        each bar of music. I also know a fair amount about engineering. I&#146;ve 
        been in the Audio Engineering Society since 1968 and I was fortunate enough 
        to work with Phil Ramone and the amazing engineering maintenance staff 
        they had there at the time. There has never been an assembly of people 
        as existed at A&#038;R at the time. Each maintenance person went on to 
        become President of his own business. People like Bill Windsor, Larry 
        Dahlstrom, Aaron Baron, and Eric Small to name a few. It was a marvelous 
        apprenticeship. <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        I know you do your best to get what you hear in your room out to the public. 
        The CD has imposed sonic constraints on us for 15 years now. What excites 
        you the most about the current and future music and home theater delivery 
        systems? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        Almost 2 years ago when I first heard that the DVD Video was going to 
        support recording at 96kHz/24 bit I got very excited. We were (to my knowledge) 
        the first mastering studio in America to have 96kHz/24 bit recording ability. 
        Some of our 96kHz gear has serial number 1!! We made the first CD ever 
        done on a high sample rate Sonic Solutions Workstation. All the complaints 
        about digital being inferior in sound to analog fall away when listening 
        to 96kHz/24 bit recordings. Although we got into DVD in a big way as a 
        result of 96kHz recordings, it has been the 5.1 surround recordings that 
        have gotten our clients really excited! <br>
        <br>
        I&#146;m old enough to have seen Quadraphonic 4 channel sound come and 
        go, but 5.1 is here to stay. It is a whole new aesthetic and I couldn&#146;t 
        be more excited about it. The new DVD Audio standard uses the lossless 
        compression scheme invented by Meridian in the UK. This system will allow 
        us to not only have 96kHz surround channels but 192kHz as well! Again, 
        there is no loss of the music as is true of Dolby Digital and DTS. <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        There is a lot of emphasis on electronic technology and rightly so with 
        the incredible digital advances that are available in our industry. However, 
        sound must eventually travel the analog path from loudspeaker to listener. 
        I know you have gone to great lengths to create an ideal acoustical listening 
        environment to do your work. When or what event made you realize the importance 
        of the acoustics of the room you work in? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        When I first started mastering at A&#038;R and Sterling Sound, I was always 
        frustrated by never having a sonic standard I could trust. I was always 
        checking out what I had done on many systems and making a mental average 
        of what I was hearing. At A&#38;R I started on Altec 604E speakers which 
        were the standard of the industry. One never had the proper amount of 
        mid-range in the sound unless the speaker started hurting you! Low bass 
        . . . what was that? <br>
        <br>
        At Sterling we started with KLH5 bookshelf speakers which we considered 
        a high-average home system. Audiophile speaker systems began to be used 
        by mastering engineers. I was the first to use B&#038;W loudspeakers at 
        Sterling. It was the model with electrostatic mids and top with a bass 
        woofer crossover. It sounded pretty good, but one couldn&#146;t get much 
        dynamic range out of it. I recall Eddie Kramer tried using them at Electric 
        Lady and the heavily acoustically damped room just soaked up the sound 
        so it was always clipping. My room at A&#038;R was a large closet. Our 
        rooms at Sterling and Masterdisk were semi-living room oriented in an 
        attempt to approximate what things might be like in a home environment. 
        <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        The Project Studio has evolved with an emphasis on electronic equipment. 
        Acoustics is often ignored. What advice would you give to someone spending 
        countless hours making sonic judgements in a room with an unknown acoustic 
        signature? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        I&#146;d tell them to stop wasting their time! Knowing a room&#146;s acoustics 
        is crucial to making the final determinations one needs to do a proper 
        mastering job. What are the resonance frequencies of the length of the 
        room, of the width, or the height? If the room is too square one will 
        get the same resonances from more than one mode at once causing intolerable 
        listening conditions. The acoustics of the room and the speakers are an 
        inseparable marriage. One can&#146;t listen to one without the other. 
        There is no point in having super accurate, high resolution speakers in 
        a room whose resonance and lack of control of the first reflections spoil 
        every note one hears. If the room isn&#146;t right, the speakers can never 
        be right either! <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        We use the slogan &#147;Listen To the Music, Not the Room!&#148; to try 
        to stress the importance of transferability. Since one of your goals is 
        to reproduce the artist&#146;s vision in as many different listening environments 
        as possible, what acoustical steps have you taken in the design of the 
        Mastering Room to accomplish this? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        Fortunately, I have found that music that sounds correct on a very high 
        resolution speaker system in a room with excellent acoustics tends to 
        sound good on the widest range of systems. <br>
        <br>
        Our room is based on acoustical ratios that allow the resonances of the 
        width, length, and height to not interfere with each other until they 
        are high in the frequency spectrum where they are not noticeable. The 
        room is 30 feet long in order to be able to reproduce low frequencies 
        without problems. This then dictates a ceiling near 16 feet high as a 
        minimum, again to keep resonances from interfering with each other. Same 
        with the width. The walls have seven layers of sheet rock&#151;enough 
        to build many condos&#151;that are glued and screwed together with an 
        air space between some layers. The floor is acoustically floated along 
        with the ceilings and walls to prevent any outside sound from getting 
        into the studio and to prevent any sound from within the studio from bothering 
        our neighbors or our other studios. <br>
        <br>
        The sound reflections near the speakers are somewhat absorbed while the 
        rear of the room contains the world&#146;s first third generation <a href="../products/diffractal/index.htm">Diffractal&#174;</a>. 
        It&#146;s purpose is to keep the listening area somewhat live sounding 
        so the room sounds natural, yet no one particular sound frequency emanating 
        from the speakers is reflected back into the sound field from the rear 
        wall to cancel out meaningful music. <a href="../products/flutterfree/index.htm">Flutterfree&#174;</a> 
        panels are angled high on the ceiling to steer sound from the speakers 
        into the Diffractal&#174;. The angles of the first reflection are carefully 
        calculated and angled absorption is used to control this. If the first 
        reflection is not controlled, it will arrive at the listener&#146;s ear 
        only a few milliseconds after the original sound and with almost the same 
        amplitude as the original. It greatly smears the sound. <br>
        <br>
        A few years ago Q-Sound was in vogue. It was a system to generate sounds 
        outside of the speaker boundaries. It could take mid-range frequencies 
        and make it seem as though there were surround speakers set up. When the 
        original investors in the system showed it to me it was explained that 
        it only worked on near-field speakers mounted away from any walls. It 
        didn&#146;t work on their (famous LA studio) big speakers. Well, Q-Sounds 
        works just fine on my big speakers a great distance from them! Why? Q-Sound 
        depends on accurate phase relationships reaching the listener&#146;s ear 
        to create the surround effect. My room, fortunately, maintains these accurate 
        phase relationships all the way back to the listening position. <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        Many studios are now trying to decide how to configure their rooms for 
        the discrete digital surround formats. The International Telecommunications 
        Union has proposed a configuration with the left and right front speakers 
        30 degrees and the rear surrounds 110 degrees with respect to the forward 
        direction. Do you use this configuration or have you found something that 
        works better for you? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        I think that studios that demand speakers built into a wall soffit are 
        going to be in trouble! For the present, every major recording organization 
        around the world&#151;Sony, Philips, NHK, Denon, etc.&#151;all use the 
        ITU specification. Tom Holman, the man responsible for 5.1 surround via 
        Lucas Films told me that there are lots of papers and experiments that 
        show between 30 and 35 degrees for the front speakers is ideal and the 
        same with the rear. Unfortunately, many engineers like to work with speakers 
        placed in an equilateral triangle in the front and an equilateral triangle 
        in the rear. They design their mixes to be best this way and insist on 
        it being like this on playback. Better allow for both! One advantage of 
        the 110 degree rear is that it is closer to the average apartment dwellers 
        surround set up than the equilateral rears. <br>
        <br>
        The THX surround standard suggests rear speakers that are bipolar, somewhat 
        nondirectional and located up above the listener&#146;s ear, as in a theatre. 
        The center speaker is often a much smaller speaker than the left and right 
        full range speakers in order to fit on top of a TV and is used mostly 
        for dialog. The subwoofer channel is limited to low frequencies around 
        150 Hz (I think) and lower. Music only 5.1 surround calls for five equal 
        full range speakers. With DTS the subwoofer channel is actually full range. 
        The speakers are supposed to be the normal directional speakers pointed 
        at you from the rear. So studios who plan to be both music-only and THX 
        ready must be able to move those rear speakers into 3 different locations! 
        Or get to know the room and make accommodations for them! <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        Since your mastering room was designed and built before the current 5.1 
        surround formats became available, how have you adapted it to this new 
        format? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        Well, when the room is set up for 5.1 we have to put a sign on the studio 
        door to open it very slowly as there is a rear speaker within range of 
        the door if it were to swing all the way open! We actually did plan for 
        THX surround, and there is in fact room on our rear walls for a bipolar 
        high mounted speaker. So far 90&#037; of our 5.1 work has been music-only 
        surround. And the DVDs we have mastered have been ones that were mixed 
        as though they were music-only! The high spot on the wall remains bare! 
        When I first set up the 5.1 system in my room, I expected that the rear 
        speakers would need more absorption near them, but they sound just fine 
        the way they are. I am going to continue experimenting, and I need to 
        buy some <a href="../products/abffusor/index.htm">Abffusors&#174;</a> 
        from RPG&#174; to do this! <br>
        <br>
        I might add that our main stereo speakers weigh over 700 lbs. each! We 
        have special $250 casters mounted on them so they can come off their spikes 
        and be rolled out to bring in the five Eggleston Works Andras and the 
        wonderful M&#038;K subwoofer. If you think all subwoofers are the same, 
        you have an unpleasant surprise coming! We use Cello Duet amplifiers and 
        Transparent Audio Speaker cables for the surrounds. Our stereo amps are 
        bridged Cello&#146;s which cost $44,000 a pair last time I priced them. 
        We couldn&#146;t afford that for the surrounds! <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        5.1 DVD multichannel music and home theater are playing an expanded role 
        in your future plans. What was the acoustical design philosophy behind 
        your new home theater studio? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        We needed a Quality Control room for the DVD Authoring we do, so we built 
        a great home theatre studio with a line-quadrupled projector and a professional 
        screen. We use a Meridian controller for the 5.1 Dolby Digital, the DTS, 
        and it will even be DSD compliant. We knew we did not have the room or 
        budget to build a super room like my mastering studio so we did the best 
        with what we were given. We use RPG&#174; <a href="../products/skyline/index.htm">Skylines&#174;</a> 
        for the ceiling with a special painting technique that makes it look spectacular. 
        The rear wall is also all Skyline&#174; with acoustical fabric covering 
        it so it merely looks like a normal rear wall. The sidewalls are covered 
        from floor to ceiling with RPG&#146;s new flat diffusor. It is based on 
        a novel two dimensional binary amplitude grating, instead of the reflection 
        phase grating used in their original products. They call this the binary 
        amplitude diffusor or <a href="../products/badpanel/index.htm">BAD&#153; 
        Panel</a> and it is also upholstered in fabric. As of this writing we 
        are still about a week away from the room being commissioned. As I haven&#146;t 
        heard the room yet, it may need some additional RPG&#174; items installed 
        unless we got lucky. <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        In addition to acoustical design, listener and loudspeaker placement are 
        critical to optimally couple with the room, thus minimizing the modal 
        emphasis and speaker/boundary interference. I know you are sensitive to 
        these issues. RPG&#174; has developed the first multidimensional optimization 
        program to address these problems. How did RPG&#146;s speaker placement 
        suggestions work out in your mastering room? <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        Well, the speakers in our mastering room were placed as suggested by an 
        early version of RPG&#146;s <a href="../products/roomoptimizer/index.htm">Room 
        Optimizer&#153;</a> software program. In order to make sure that the sound 
        from the speakers was reaching us through the air before reaching our 
        feet through the studio floor (sound travels faster through a studio floor 
        than through the air), we constructed concrete pads that are isolated 
        from our floating floor. These concrete pads go down to the bedrock that 
        is not far beneath us. To provide some room for tweaking the loudspeaker 
        positions suggested by the Room Optimizer&#153;, we added an additional 
        six inches of concrete around the perimeter of the Duntechs. <br>
        <br>
        When we finished building the studio, we placed the Duntech 2001 Soveriegn 
        speakers exactly as Dr. D&#146;Antonio&#146;s Room Optimizer&#153; suggested 
        as a starting point. We opened the monitor pot and the sound was instantly 
        amazing. To be sure, we tried every other speaker position we could and 
        to our delight the location the multidimensional optimization program 
        suggested was the best possible position! <br>
        <br>
        Your mileage may vary of course, but perhaps because the construction 
        of our room with the very thick solid walls made the acoustic dimensions 
        of the room very stable, our positioning was exact! Fortunately, we are 
        now trying out a new super speaker made by Eggleston Works in Memphis 
        Tennessee. It is a very large speaker with 23 best quality drivers in 
        it. They weigh over 700 lbs. each, so the larger concrete platform has 
        come in very handy for this new monitor standard! <br>
        <br>
        <b>RPG</b><br>
        Based on your experience with RPG, what would you tell someone who is 
        evaluating the various acoustical products available in our industry? 
        <br>
        <br>
        <b>Bob Ludwig</b><br>
        RPG&#174; makes the acoustic sound tools used by professionals. These 
        acoustic controls were invented by the scientist who started it all. I 
        have mastered with RPG&#174; products for the past 12 years and consider 
        them an important ingredient in obtaining the sound I am looking for. 
        Through the years, RPG&#174; has consistently been very cooperative and 
        has helped us with many of our acoustical problems. They are as knowledgeable 
        as they come and you don&#146;t waste time and money trying things that 
        don&#146;t work. </font></p>
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 <div class="black" align=center>651-C Commerce Drive, Upper Marlboro, MD, 20774, Phone: 301-249-0044, Fax: 301-249-3912, E-mail: <a href="mailto:info@rpginc.com">info@rpginc.com</a></div>


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