Interviews » magnetophonesea-saw

Magnetophone/Sea Saw

This was originally going to be just a short review of a record I liked very much, but as time went by I listened to it way too much and wanted to know more about how it was recorded and put together. The album is by a band called Sea Saw and is called Magnetophone, although since there are so many bands using the see saw-type name the band name is becoming the album name. Hence, Magnetophone.

Magnetophone is really only Trevor Campmann, a one-man-band home recordist who used a four track reel-to-reel deck to it's fullest potential in creating Magnetophone, the album. His work is nothing short of meticulous, finding the right sounds for the instruments, layering a thick buzzing pop drone, and when it's time to write a catchy hook (and there's a good handful here) he delivers the goods. Plus, a lot of the tunes use lyrics about recording technology as analogies for personal trouble, like "microphone has died, lose the tone" or "erase my tapes, my batteries are low" which totally hit home here at recording-geek central.

I caught Trevor in the middle of a band practice, as Magnetophone also reluctantly exists as a live vehicle (with extra members added), and we chatted briefly about recording.

How did you get started doing recordings?

In college I took an engineering class. I was a politics major but I just decided to take one thing that I thought might be interesting. It turned out to be really interesting. I wasn't really super into recording but it was a fun class. It was an 8 track analog recorder but I wound up gravitating toward the 4 track.

Do you have any idea why?

It was easier to manipulate. Initially, the 4 track was it. When I was in my bedroom I had to keep things really, really quiet. With 4 track you can make things sound loud even though they're really quiet. It's like the opposite of big, multitrack recording. Things sound puny but collectively they become a big, huge thing.

You were just concentrating on individual sounds and making them big?

Yeah.

Are you still using the TEAC 3440 [1/4" 4 track], that's on the album cover?

I got this Scully flat-bed. It's a 1/2 inch 4 track industrial thing. It's the type Pet Sounds was recorded on.

Do you like the sound of it better?

It's amazing. It soaks in lots of low end but I want to sell it 'cause I just got an ADAT. It's not what people think it is. I'm going through a [Roland] Space Echo so it goes onto tape and the output sounds like analog tape, 'cause it is. I also did that with the Scully, have that rolling and do some drum things. You can only do that with the initial tracks 'cause there's a [tape] delay but I actually could delay it on my ADAT after I record it. The ADAT is a great medium.

You have 8 tracks to play with.

It's a huge plus. I like it 'cause I can do all these experimental things with degrading sound but it's there. It'll be there forever. I like using crummy mics that have really colored sounds.

Are there any mics you really like?

I work in the audiovisual department for this corporation that's really old and they have this "museum" of audio equipment. That's where I got the Scully from. I use this Electro-Voice, one of those real industrial-type mics. They're thin and they've been around since the '60's. It's a great, really bright sound. I always use that on vocals. I have this Shure Pro Log, the crummiest Shure you can find. I use that for warmer stuff. And just a host of Radio Shack mics. I just bought a real AKG, a real microphone! But the new stuff is still totally lo-fi. That's the funniest thing. I must just be drawn towards those sounds.

write to Trevor c/o Simple Machines Records, PO Box 10290, Arlington, VA 22210-1290.

MORE INTERVIEWS

Kid Harpoon
INTERVIEWS · ISSUE #172 · Mar 2026

Kid Harpoon

By Larry Crane

Tom Hull, better known as Kid Harpoon,  has produced, co-produced, and co-written with an impressive list of high-profile artists over the last 15 years or so, including Harry Styles, David Byrne, Kings of Leon, Miley Cyrus, Inhaler, Florence + the Machine, Shawn Mendes, and Maggie...

Robert Lang
INTERVIEWS · ISSUE #172 · Mar 2026

Robert Lang

By Larry Crane

"They said that the little man couldn't do it. 'Oh, you can't dig 35 feet below your home.' But I did it, one step at a time, man." Thus began our conversation with Robert Lang. Outside of Seattle – in Shoreline, Washington – there's an iconic...

Dan The Automator
INTERVIEWS · ISSUE #172 · Mar 2026

Dan The Automator

By Sam Retzer

It’s Sunday night in Manhattan at Irving Plaza, and Dan “The Automator” Nakamura takes the stage behind a mouthwatering wall of synths, across from Kid Koala [Tape Op#159] and his three turntables. Deltron 3030 is back to rock the same stage where they made their New York debut 25 years...

Regina Spektor
INTERVIEWS · ISSUE #172 · Mar 2026

Regina Spektor Collaboration & Experience

By Geoff Stanfield

The story of Regina Spektor is one of a truly self-made artist. In 1989, at nine years old, Spektor and her family emigrated from Moscow to the Bronx in New York. Her love and affinity for playing the piano found her studying in high school at the Manhattan School of Music, and as she...

Jeff Rosenstock
INTERVIEWS · ISSUE #172 · Mar 2026

Jeff Rosenstock

By Larry Crane

On the suggestion of Tape Op's Sales & Operations Director, Corey Reidy, I decided to check out the career of Jeff Rosenstock. His early bands, The Arrogant Sons of Bitches and Bomb the Music Industry!, built up grassroots followings via a DIY ethic, and, as Corey told me, “He...

Clarissa Connelly
INTERVIEWS · ISSUE #172 · Mar 2026

Clarissa Connelly Creating a Spacious Depth in Sound

By Meredith Hobbs Coons

Clarissa Connelly, the Scotland-born, Copenhagen-based composer, first captured audiences’ attention with her 2018 release, Tech Duinn, and has been creating medieval-tinged multidimensional soundscapes ever since. Informed by her masters' level composition studies at the Rhythmic...