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Tuesday, January 16, 2018

The Making of The Neil Young Archives Volume #1

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Back in 2009, Thrasher's Wheat posted a major examination of the "The Making of The Neil Young Archives Volume #1". Those were exciting times for both The Neil Young Archives Team at Shakey Pictures, as well as, us here at TW for our small role in the product rollout. So here's a journey through the past as we look forward to the next chapter in the long twisting road of the NYA saga.

This post's for you Archives Guy! Enjoy!



Needless to say, the making of The Neil Young Archives Vol. 1 1963-1972 was -- unquestionably -- a quixotic quest unprecedented in the entire history of commercial musical releases.

We've given you our thoughts on what the Archives really represents critically speaking. But there were a number of key players behind the scenes over the past twenty years developing the revolutionary "Shakey Platform" - the technology driving The Archives.

Now -- at last it can finally be told -- here's the story behind the music: the making of The Neil Young Archives (NYA).

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The Archives Vault
An Undisclosed Bunker Location

Over 20 years in the making, The Archives have been discussed, debated and eagerly awaited by fans ever since Decade -- the 3 LP career retrospective released in 1977. The next chapter was to be Decade II covering the next 10 years up to the late 1980's. From the Village Voice in 1989:
"Young feels he will be vindicated by this seven-CD anthology he's preparing for next year, his 25th anniversary in the music business. A compilation of approximately 100 songs - nearly half unreleased material - Decade II will encompass the original Decade, deleting some songs and adding some new ones, and then take on Young's work in the '80s.

'It's a big task, it wears me out just thinking about it,' says Young. 'I'd rather be making new music. But I want to set the record straight as much as I can. Through outtakes and chosen cuts I'm going to try to bring out more of the feeling that's hidden in those records. I think I can enhance the experience by putting them all in a long line, shortening them, and changing them.'"

Year after year, rumors came and went of the project being on or off or on hold. As time marched on, The Archives seemed to grow in scope and complexity. Finally, it had become somewhat of a morbid joke amongst fans with the Archives being referred to -- as Neil himself put it -- "The Bus Crash Tapes".

But then things looked as if The Archives might actually be released. From interview in Los Angeles Times by Randy Lewis:
"It's like a little tickle of some kind -- I don't know what it is -- to be able to find all these things you never knew about. They exist," he said, "so to be able to get through that in a way that enables you to enjoy it, and turns it into some experience that's not like going through a database -- that was the challenge of the boxed set. To make it like people actually had an album, an old vinyl album with a lot of liner notes."

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Joel Bernstein, NYA Archivist


Neil's long time archivist Joel Bernstein has stated that the original analog tapes were transferred to digital at least four times -- and that was from a report in the '90's.

The analog restoration and analog to digital transfers were handled by John Nowland at His Master’s Wheels in Woodside, CA and digital editing and mastering by Tim Mulligan at Redwood Digital, also in Woodside, CA. The sonics of the 24-bit, 96kHz digital audio resolution is considered to be an unsurpassed achievement in sound quality or as TONEAudio MAGAZINE's Bob Gendron succinctly puts it: Digital has never been better."

John Nowland tells Universal Audio Webzine:
"Neil called me back in 1990 and asked me to do some transfers for him, from analog to digital. He thought that was going to be a two- or three-week job; somebody else thought it was going to be a two- or three-month job. And I've been here ever since."

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John Nowland (left) w/ Will Shanks and the Green Board


Over time, the project eventually moved towards being released on the DVD format. Apparently, a release date was set but then the Bluray technology became available and the project was delayed once again. The original DVD author, Rich Winter (with Blackbird Digital) worked with MX Productions (who mastered the Bluray discs) to realize Neil's original vision of navigating while listening.

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Ben Johnson sets up a scene


Shakey Pictures and Total Media Group worked over four years sorting through the massive amount of archive material used to create the menu design and page structure under the guidance of Neil Young and his executive producer, L.A. Johnson. The team first revealed a preview of the project at the Sun Microsystems JavaOne Conference in May 2008. Sun Microsystems develops Java, Blu-ray’s programming language.

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Total Media Group's Toshi Onuki, Creative Director, recently said:
"People have spoken about the scope of this Archives as literally putting Neil Young's life in a box. But, in truth, we bring Neil's life out of the box, and allow the listener to explore and experience it. We pushed the creative boundaries in hardware and software in new ways to capture the essence and detail of the expansive universe of Neil's life and work."

With 128 tracks, over 13 hours of video content, more than 3,000 menus and 10's of thousands of navigation path codes, NYA represents a fundamental shift in how fans interact and immerse themselves in a musical experience.

Toshi Onuki blogs:

"The idea for the main program was developed with Neil when we worked on Greatest Hits album CD/DVD in 2004. We came up with the idea of video as “furniture” because visual footage for the recording did not exist. I thought of each scene as a diorama like you would see in a science museum.

We set up the original player for when the song was recorded - reel-to-reel, vinyl, cassette, and set up surrounding memorabilia and photos that were carefully picked by Neil. We taped the diorama in HD here at Total Media Group. I believe each visual scene has significance to Neil Young specific to each song.

I think the video of moving turntable is really seductive and it feels like looking at fireplace to me. The quality of the Blue-ray disc is phenomenal. I can see Neil’s fingerprints and dust flying around in the space. Neil Young’s studio also made a replica of the original tape, re-spliced and put on the original reel. That’s why you can see VU meter moving in sync with Music.

I think part of my inspiration came when I was first introduced to the project. There was a sense of obsession.

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Toshi Onuki continues:
In 2004, I had a meeting with producer L.A. Johnson and archivist / photographer, Joel Bernstein (who has managed Neil Young’s archives for decades). Joel handed me a binder as thick as a yellow phone book labeled “NYA Vol. 1 Disc 1” and explained about the project and his existing database. The conversation and descriptions went on and on for few hours I remember. It was just exhausting and overwhelming.

If the Blu-ray viewer can get the similar sensation like I had on that day, I think the Neil Young Archives are working the way they should be. Interactivity was the most important aspect in the design because we want the viewers to explore, learn and investigate without getting lost. I also wanted this to be as organic and realistic as possible. From the beginning, I was opposed to graphic treatments because I wanted to create a photo realistic environment with a sense of space so that you will feel the archives as they exist in front of you.

I really like the idea of the file cabinet with the exaggerated cabinet drawer (it opens about 5 feet out) because we can throw anything inside and maintain the integrity of the purpose of the file cabinet: organization.

To me, the Neil Young Archives Vol. 1 exists in a black box and we are opening only a portion of an endless expanding drawer. I like the humor and the idea of turning an ordinary object to an extreme object. I did not want to create anything new, I wanted to preserve the way things are.

That was my basic design concept.

I visited many museums to learn how documents and artifact are shown there. For the assets gallery pages, I used similar black fabric and placed the items on top because that’s what the museums use to display precious objects.

The song selection menu is an opened drawer with bunch of folders. On the tabs, you can find the collections of song titles, with Neil’s handwriting, taken from original manuscripts.

This is my tribute to Joel’s collections.

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From Guitar Player, Shakey Pictures Larry "L.A." Johnson:
It’s ironic that recording technology has gotten to the point where it can finally offer such realism, and yet the popular delivery medium is designed for a data-compressed mp3.

“We had cameras around all the time, because Neil has always been interested in film,” said Johnson. “And we’ve been assembling all this stuff for decades, but we waited until technology caught up with what Neil envisioned for the Archives. He didn’t want this material released on videotape, and he wasn’t all that happy with DVD. It wasn’t until Blu-ray where we thought the media would do the material full justice, visually and sonically.

There are many fascinating insights in the technical production such as this on Riverboat Recordings by Archives Guy:
The Riverboat disc needed a lot of work to correct speed and pitch issues.

Here are some details on that process:

This Archives Blu-ray/DVD disc has been compiled from the original 2 track, ¼” analog Riverboat master tape reels, which were recorded at 15ips.

The HDCD® 24-bit 192kHz digital transfers were edited into an assembled program and then sample rate converted to 24-bit 96kHz for audio restoration after it was discovered that the original recordings had varying and uneven speeds.

Through the series of performances, tape speed was found to vary 4% overall and at times as much as 2% during the course of a single song. Audio restoration techniques solved these inconsistencies and brought the program to correct pitch.

After the speed correction process was completed, the audio program was then edited and mastered at 24-bit 96kHz, becoming the DVD master.

In the case of Blu-ray, the audio program went through a final upsampling after the 24-bit 96kHz mastering. This final stage, utilizing a Pacific Microsonics HDCD® Model 2 processor, resulted in the 24-bit 192kHz Blu-ray master.
Or this comment by Archives Guy on Thrasher's Wheat:
Harvest Barn interview-

The Harvest DVD-A version is in stereo and 5.1.

The NYA version is just the stereo and is a few dB quieter to match other video content levels.

-Archives Guy
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Archives Storyboard

And here's some more NYA trivia on the "Behind The Barn" interview:
When the surround mix was created for the interview, we located the spot behind the barn where Neil had been lying and set up 5 Neumann mics in a surround array. Then we placed two big PA speakers where the original truck had been and played Words thru them at full stun.

This created a natural surround recording, bouncing off the hills just like in the original moment. The new recording was mixed with the original interview to create the same experience for the listener that Neil had.

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More NYA production trivia from Archives Guy:

Each of these tape reels are the actual, original tape reels, not fakes used for video purposes.

John Nowland at Redwood Digital made exact copies of each original tape including splices, leaders etc so what you are watching looking just like the master and is spinning on the original reel.

You will also notice the meters moving on the tape decks. This is because we were really playing the tapes during the video shoot.

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Also, see:

- Thrasher's Wheat's Review: of The Neil Young Archives Vol 1 (1963-1972)
- Archives Opinions and Commentary Open Thread
- Everything You've Ever Wanted To Know about The Archives But Were Afraid To Ask.

8 comments:

  1. From original posting @ 8/10/2009 09:52:00 AM, by Pinto (or Flounder) said...

    That was a terrific compilation, Thrasher. Many thanks.

    What I'd like to see now is a "business" version of the Archives story. I would really like to know how/why various decisions were made - how the pre-release of the live albums was determined and when the concept changed from leaving an open spot in the Archives for the live releases to including them and even throwing in an extra concert.
    -why three acoustic concerts and only one less-than-complete Crazy Horse concert.
    -why 90% of the remastered cuts were included (I know, I know...but someone should just come out and say it.)

    I'm not asking for this to rip on anyone, but here's what I'm afraid of, that the quest for audio fidelity has become the overriding factor in determination of what does and does not get into the archives, to the point where the nerdo Steve Hoffman types are the primary target audience. How else to explain some of the omissions from the first Archives set?

    As we journey into the heart of the ditch, I hope that passion rules, instead of technical perfection. I would vastly rather hear "Bad News" with guys talking in the background when the performance itself is so hot that it burns up the stereo, than a lesser version included because the tape was in better shape. Ditto "Stringman" from R&R Cowboy rather than "Unplugged" and how many others?

    I'm not against fidelity. I don't disagree that "Sound matters." It's just that other things matter a lot more and Neil Young has never been about technical perfection. He's been about passion and poetry and the sheer joy of gut-busting hot shit rock & roll. I, personally, would like to see that spirit reflected in the next versions of the Archives.

    Ultimately, of course, I'll buy and love whatever they come up with, but I'm not about to throw away my bootlegs, either.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Train of love
    Racing from heart to heart
    Running late
    Still in the lonely part
    This train will never run me down
    But only take me where I'm bound
    It's part of me and part of you
    I'll always be a part of you
    Sail along, sail along silver moon
    Don't be blue
    Throw shadows in my room.......

    Art chive Train
    really well these writings on the history of Arts Chives.
    Thank you gentlemen

    José PARIS

    ReplyDelete
  3. Life is an Archive, capture it well.
    Well done

    ReplyDelete
  4. Archives Guy has gone. Long Live the Archivist! The Archivist lives in the aether and communicates through copper wires and glass tubes. The Archivist has shared that there is a lot more to come! The Geffen titles should appear very soon. Physical releases for the unreleased titles in the NYA are planned. An NYA mobile app is on the wish list but will only be worked on if there is enough demand for it. The Archivist takes inputs and makes changes.

    I would encourage anyone who finds any errors, typos, inconsistencies, difficulties, with NYA to contact the Archivist and provide feedback. It will make a difference in how the NYA evolves. It will energize the Archives team. The Archivist is not hard to find. Just explore the NYA and look for a "Contact Us" link. Then select "Questions for the Archivist". The Archivist will communicate through the NYA site itself!

    ReplyDelete
  5. While we are on the subject of recording and ^John Nowland ^, I'll post these articles I found detailing the recording, remastering, the Redwood Studio setup, think ^Green board^ (Universal Audio 610 console).

    1/ "John Nowland — Neil Young’s Longtime Engineer"
    https://www.uaudio.com/blog/john-nowland-ua-interview/

    2/ "100% Ua, Part 9, With The 610 Console"
    https://www.uaudio.com/blog/100-percent-ua-610-console/

    3/ Andrew Baker, 2013, "Neil Young’s Studio Prowess Is More Than Meets the Ear"
    http://variety.com/2013/music/features/neil-young-audiophile-1200586875/

    4/ Andy Stewart, "Meanwhile Back at the Ranch" (pdf)
    http://www.audiotechnology.com.au/pdf/features/at53_broken_arrow_ranch.pdf

    Reading these articles you get a good idea of how much technology goes into the recording of NY sound and why it oozes audio quality.

    @peterrenshaw

    ReplyDelete
  6. You need the songs first so keep audio quality

    ReplyDelete
  7. Bad memories for me. Lots of promises unfulfilled.Lots of money wasted.But it was for the muse [sic]

    ReplyDelete
  8. @ LRR - Yes, Long Live the Archivist!

    @ seldomlogical - thanks for the links! Good stuff for future reference. Just posted update: http://neilyoungnews.thrasherswheat.org/2018/01/meanwhile-back-at-ranch-interview-with.html

    ReplyDelete

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