Trina Shoemaker

Interviews

Trina Shoemaker

By Larry Crane

There are a few engineer/producers I've met along the way where I've meant to get an interview with them for ages, but for some reason it takes so much longer for us to find the time to do it. Trina Shoemaker has been one of these elusive folks ever since we first met in New Orleans. In...

Marc Daniel Nelson

Interviews

Marc Daniel Nelson: Keeping it Fresh

By Jonathan Morrison

For over two and a half decades, Marc Daniel Nelson has built a career rooted in musicality, technical rigor, and a deep respect for the lineage of recorded sound. A Grammy-winning producer, mix engineer, and creative director, Marc’s work spans an unusually wide spectrum – moving fluidly between...

Fela Kuti in the Studio

Interviews

Fela Kuti in the Studio: An Oral History

By Ian Brennan

In 2026, Fela Kuti became the first African artist ever awarded a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Grammys, something that I formally proposed in 2020 but took over five years to be realized. Fela took his rightful place alongside such giants as Frank Sinatra, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, The Beatles...

Adam Goldberg

Interviews

Adam Goldberg: This Autodidactic Journey

By Larry Crane
Many might know actor/producer/writer/director Adam Goldberg from having been in films...
Rachel White

Interviews

Rachel White: Creating the Coolest Thing

By Meredith Hobbs Coons
Rachel White is an engineer, guitarist, and producer who has lent her talents in the...

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MAY 22, 2026 INTERVIEWS
Kito

Kito: Music Anywhere

Kito, whose given name is Maaike Kito Lebbing, has a music production career spanning three continents, from Australia, to Europe (London), and to the United States by way of Los Angeles. In that time, she has produced music for many iconic artists, such as Mabel, Jorja Smith, and Empress Of, but 2025 found her landing her first executive production credit on Lily Allen’s much buzzed-about album, West End Girl. We spoke about songcraft, the importance of maintaining a sense of fun while making dance music, and the previous night where she had attended the 2025 ARIA Awards (Australian Recording Industry Association Music Awards) with many Aussie music industry friends in Sydney.

MAY 22, 2026 INTERVIEWS
Behind The Gear with  Roland's Paul McCabe

Behind The Gear with Roland's Paul McCabe

I recently had a chance to chat with Paul McCabe, Senior Vice President of Research and Innovation at Roland Future Design Lab, to talk about their new moonshot, Project LYDIA, as well as his views on AI in music that underpins its development. We first met at the 2026 NAMM Show where I got a chance to demo the product and later caught up over the phone so I could learn more. Paul is a bit of a Renaissance man, with interests ranging from music tech to science fiction to philosophy, thoughtfully combining them into the products produced by the Roland Future Design Lab team. This was a fascinating conversation that could have continued on for another few hours.

MAY 22, 2026 INTERVIEWS
Ben Schneider of Lord Huron

Ben Schneider of Lord Huron : Mystery and Beauty

Lord Huron first caught our ear with their 2012 release, Lonesome Dreams. The album's lush presentation, harmonies, and tinges of surfy guitars made it both decidedly West Coast-sounding and, at the same time, otherworldly. In 2025, the band released its fifth album, The Cosmic Selector Vol. 1, another fully-formed concept album of sorts that, like all of Lord Huron's releases, tells a story, is beautifully produced, recorded, and mixed, and is another step forward in the band's development. Geoff Stanfield caught up with founder, songwriter, guitarist, and frontman, Ben Schneider, to discuss the new album, their Whispering Pines recording studio, and more. This interview is transcribed and edited from Tape Op Podcast, episode #110.

MAY 22, 2026 INTERVIEWS
Scott Burns

Scott Burns: The Definition of Death Metal

For a certain breed of bored and angry teenagers at the dawn of the ‘90s, nothing made us feel more alive than Florida death metal. Pumped out of Morrisound Recording in Tampa at an alarming rate, albums by Obituary, Death, and Cannibal Corpse raised the bar on sonic extremity, opening up a brutal new world of neck-snapping riffs and inhumanly fast drumming. At the center of the whirlwind sat producer Scott Burns, bringing a new level of definition and impact through drum triggering and tight, close mic’d guitars. Hard-working, meticulous, and just plain cool, Scott developed a tight rapport with bands and created a standard for extreme metal production that still resonates today, as chronicled in the book, The Scott Burns Sessions: A Life in Death Metal 1987-1997 by David E. Gehlke. Having witnessed the explosion of the genre as one of the aforementioned teens, I was eager to hear more about the recording tech of Morrisound, as well as Scott’s decision to retire from recording after his historic run there.

MAY 22, 2026 INTERVIEWS
Stu Epps

Stu Epps: Golden Ears

Stu Epps is a British gem with an illustrious musical career as a recording engineer, producer, and manager. He has worked with some of our favorite British artists, like Led Zeppelin, Elton John, George Harrison, Jimmy Page, and The Firm. He began his career at 15 years old in London in 1967 at Dick James Music (The Beatles' first publisher). He moved on to work in the demo studio there, and he was lucky enough to be able to produce his first record for a duo named Birds of a Feather. He recorded it at Trident Studios with Elton John as the session pianist and Rick Wakeman on the keyboards. Stu went on to take a management role, working closely with legendary producer Gus Dudgeon at Trident Studios. At 20 years old, Stu was part of the "Rocket" team, serving as an A&R manager and co-manager for Kiki Dee, but also as Elton John’s personal assistant. This culminated in 1974 with John Lennon’s legendary appearance onstage with Elton at Madison Square Garden, which sadly marked Lennon’s final appearance live.

COLUMNS

TOC by Larry Crane
Welcome to issue #173 of Tape Op.
TOC

Welcome to issue #173 of Tape Op.

We're proud to announce the upcoming publication of a new Tape Op book, coming in September of this year! Titled, Making Music: Conversations With Record Producers, it will be published by our pals at Akashic Books in New York. We're hoping to host a series of books under the Making Music title,...

END RANT by Larry Crane
Why I Am a Bad Photographer
END RANT

Why I Am a Bad Photographer

I went to college, but not for music, recording, or even writing and editing. I obtained a degree in Communications, with an emphasis on Visual, plus a minor in Art with an emphasis on Studio. This meant most of my studies were in film, filmmaking, photography, graphic design, sculpture, ceramics,...

GEAR GEEKING by Andy Hong
Gear Geeking - Issue 173
GEAR GEEKING

Gear Geeking - Issue 173

Whenever I use great tools, I'm inspired to do great work. This is true whether I'm turning knobs on analog audio gear or tweaking the controls of software processors. The same goes for hand tools when I need to fix something. For example, my favorite screwdrivers are Wera Kraftform and Kraftform...

GEAR REVIEWS

Gear Reviews

ARA = Audio Random Access

BY ARA = Audio Random Access  |  reviewed by Larry Crane - editor

What is ARA? It has come up in this issue (in my review for NoiseWorks' VoiceAssist), and we've mentioned it in the past. I think it's an important concept to understand in digital audio production. Basically, think of this as two different computer applications working in tandem to supply audio...

Gear Reviews

Crème & Crème XL tube mics

BY Crème & Crème XL tube mics  |  reviewed by Tony Vincent

In my experience, microphones either feel like tools or they feel like instruments. Tools get the job done. Instruments make you want to work. When the Monheim Crème and Crème XL arrived at my studio, it was clear pretty quickly which category they belonged to. Monheim isn’t a mass-production...

Gear Reviews

DK7 Gen 2 drum mic kit

BY DK7 Gen 2 drum mic kit  |  reviewed by Geoff Stanfield

I have been fortunate to spend significant time using mics from Earthworks Audio. From their QTC omni line, the budget-friendly ICON USB mic [Tape Op #142], M23 Gen 2 and M30 Gen 2 measurement microphones [#171], and the drum mic kit packages like the DK6 Gen 2 [#165], which I have utilized on...

Gear Reviews

Evolution v.1 Studio Monitor Package

BY Evolution v.1 Studio Monitor Package  |  reviewed by Andy Hong

These speakers would be remarkable if they were several times their size. But given that they're relatively tiny, with a single 5.5-inch ceramic-matrix mid-woofer and a 2-inch Air Motion Transformer (AMT) tweeter, they're unbelievable. They have the extension and dynamics of a big, full-range,...

Gear Reviews

Hear Back OCTO headphone mixer

BY Hear Back OCTO headphone mixer  |  reviewed by John Baccigaluppi

Purchasing headphones and headphone mixing systems is not among the funnest parts of building and running a studio, but it is one of the most essential. If the artists recording can’t hear themselves, it’s not likely you’re going to get a good take, no matter what vintage mic and esoteric mic...

Gear Reviews

KSM32C, 40C, 44MP studio condenser mics

BY KSM32C, 40C, 44MP studio condenser mics  |  reviewed by Don Gunn

Shure first introduced its KSM line of studio condenser mics in 1998 with the showing of the KSM32 at the AES show; this was quite a departure from what was the company’s bread and butter for multiple decades – the SM57/58 (and the later Beta variants) were arguably the most common microphones in...

Gear Reviews

MDR-M1 headphones

BY MDR-M1 headphones  |  reviewed by Geoff Stanfield

For years, the Sony MDR-7506 headphones were in studios everywhere. I found them to be incredibly bright, but many of my friends used them regularly and loved them. I will say that I still own a pair, and even though the ear pads are a crumbly mess, they are operational and sound the same as they...

Gear Reviews

MeMore cue mixer/headphone amp

BY MeMore cue mixer/headphone amp  |  reviewed by Andy Hong

Since 2003, I've relied on a Furman HDS-6 headphone distribution amplifier and HR-6 personal mixers [Tape Op #38] for artists' monitoring. All the bands that I recorded in my Boston studio were happy creating their own headphone mixes on the HR-6, with its four mono and one stereo channels. When I...

Gear Reviews

ORIA Mini room correction system

BY ORIA Mini room correction system  |  reviewed by Adam Kagan

My professional life includes tuning acoustics and monitoring systems for both commercial and independent studios at every price point. The workflow always starts with acoustic treatment and monitoring geometry. The final step, and the icing on the cake, is electronic monitor calibration. This...

Gear Reviews

Paradise Guitar Studio plug-in

BY Paradise Guitar Studio plug-in  |  reviewed by Tim Pratt

Like many a reader, I am a full-on guitar tone junkie and audio nerd. I'll discuss amps, pedals, speakers, room acoustics, mic choices, and more with anyone. I’m fascinated by details such as the sag and feel of different amp power sections, the tonal role of an output transformer, and the way...

Gear Reviews

SoundID Virtual Monitoring PRO

BY SoundID Virtual Monitoring PRO  |  reviewed by Adam Kagan

We live in a portable world. With entire studios in our laptops and backpacks, every room – even the back seat of an Uber – has become a workspace. The main problem point now is monitoring. Headphones provide accurate monitoring on the go, but speakers in a well-tuned room remain the gold standard...

Gear Reviews

SST-206 reverb/effects plug-in

BY SST-206 reverb/effects plug-in  |  reviewed by Larry Crane - editor

My first digital reverb was a used Alesis MidiVerb II in the late ’80s. I'd previously built a Radio Shack echo kit, messed around with spring reverb tanks, and owned analog and digital delay stompboxes, but I wanted those cascading, long reverbs and gated drums I'd heard on then-current releases....

Gear Reviews

Studio 6 DAW

BY Studio 6 DAW  |  reviewed by Dana Gumbiner

It’s funny, but I’ve always thought of Bitwig as a somewhat younger cousin to Ableton Live – both companies were born in Berlin and share a clip-based, non-linear workflow for audio and MIDI. They serve well as writing, recording, or live performance tools. But with Bitwig Studio 6, I can see...

Gear Reviews

Studio Pro 8 DAW

BY Studio Pro 8 DAW  |  reviewed by Alex Ruger

I must confess, I never really used PreSonus Studio One [Tape Op #154]. While many of my friends are among its enthusiastic users, I was never able to find a place for it amongst my already crowded selection of DAWs. My workflow tends to look like this: Steinberg Cubase for film scoring (or Apple...

Gear Reviews

T805 500 Series tape emulator

BY T805 500 Series tape emulator  |  reviewed by Larry Crane - editor

Over 20 years ago, all the mixing I was doing was off analog 2-inch, 24-track tape and onto 1/4-inch stereo tape. I'd started with recording to DAT (digital audio tape) stereo decks for mixdowns, but I was concerned that their built-in digital converters were not of the highest quality (I was...

Gear Reviews

VoiceAssist plug-in/app

BY VoiceAssist plug-in/app  |  reviewed by Larry Crane - editor

We're getting into the age of intelligent plug-ins. They are doing so much that it's hard to keep track of how all these little changes stack up when in use. I recently began trying out NoiseWorks DynAssist on John McEntire's [Tape Op #23] recommendation, as he said it helped with cleaning up and...