Building a Studio Miracle on 14th Street
But nobody told Ovà¤sen Music and Tandem Sound principals Eric Offin and Mark Garcia those were problems. The two had been freelancers, but decided to go it on their own, shoehorning a makeshift 5.1 mix room into an upstairs space at the corner of 14th and Sixth Avenue, where they quickly found themselves specializing in down-and-dirty – but imaginative and expressive – sound design for feature films and commercials. Before long, filmmakers like Todd Solondz (who mixed Palindromes there) and Phil Morrison (Junebug) became clients, and Offin and Garcia realized they had to ratchet up their technology and develop a fully designed space where high-end creative clients could feel comfortable.
They leased out a larger 800-square-foot space on the second floor of the building, then shared their list of requirements for the new facility with the Walters-Storyk Design Group, which specializes in studio architecture.
- Two identical 5.1 mixing rooms
- A Foley room that would double as an isolation (iso) booth for voiceover work
- A kitchen/lounge area (this was very important)
- A screening area with a large, flat-panel monitor
- Restroom (also very important)
Because the mixing rooms are so small, Storyk said maintaining consistent sound from front to back was an issue. “The boundaries are rigid, which means that the client sitting in the back of the room will struggle with low-frequency build-up,” he explained. The problem was addressed by bringing in a brand-new product from Bag End Loudspeakers, the electronic bass trap – or the E-Trap for short – to electronically absorb low frequencies in the room. A loaner E-Trap is already in use in one of the control rooms, and Ovasen has dibs on the first four shipping products, which will be installed two per room. [
Offin reports that the business has quickly evolved to focus on 35mm features. Kelly Reichardt’s acclaimed festival hit Old Joy, now in theatrical release, was sound-designed and mixed there, and the studio also handled the concert documentary loudQUIETloud: A Film About the Pixies, which offered an unusual challenge – the sound elements were mainly live stereo soundboard recordings, with no audience tracks at all. To make the audio “film ready,” lots of work had to be done using sound effects libraries and Foley work to recreate the cacophonous crowd noise that attends a live performance. Ovà¤sen had just seven days to finish the job before the film’s premiere at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, TX. “One of the hardest parts of this mix was not blowing up the speakers,” Offin said. “It just felt right to always turn it up.”
More current projects include a Rosario Dawson-produced film tentatively titled Descent, Lake City starring Sissy Spacek, and The Skeptic, starring Tom Arnold.
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