Music from Champion Sound
Artists on Champion Sound
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Roles:
Groups:
Madvillain Lootpack Jahari Massamba Unit The Professionals The Eddie Prince Fusion Band Jaylib Cut Chemist & Madlib Joe McDuphrey Experience Sound Directions Monk Hughes & The Outer Realm Likwit Crew Yesterdays New Quintet Supreme Team Trouble Knows Me Talib Kweli & Madlib Liberation OJ Simpson The Crate Diggas Sextet Morgan Adams Quartet Plus Two MadGibbs
Gear Used On Champion Sound
Explore the instruments, equipment, software, and production tools used in the making of Jaylib & Madlib & J Dilla – Champion Sound (2003). Click more on each item to see exactly how it was used.
Madlib
Roles:
Studio Equipment used by Madlib on Champion Sound
Avg price: $48.68
Used for Champion Sound and Madvillainy, according to the following sources:
Remix September 1, 2003 (linked)
Recorded under the name Jaylib, Official (Stones Throw, 2003) is a chopped-up, fractal, freestyle swingfest with both artists building loops for the other to rhyme over. It's the perfect vehicle for what Madlib jokingly refers to as his “caveman method,” in which the main ingredients are a Roland/Boss SP-303 Dr. Sample and a Roland VS-880 digital 8-track.
yeloocproducer on Gearslutz, November 22, 2006 (discussing MF Doom's Madvillainy vocal chain)
Madvillain I think was straight into a VS880... no preamp or compressor...unless it was maybe a mackie preamp.
I'm guessing Dangerdoom was a bit more mid/hi-fi, again not sure.
Definitely not "rocket surgery"
yelooproducer on Gearslutz, August 3, 2008
Madlib... SM57, SM7, or AT4033 if I remember correctly.... pre's would be mackie or VS880 straight in for the most part.
Doom... AT4033, don't know what kind of pre.
This is just what I remember....not positive though.
George Massenburg Labs (GML) 8200
Avg price: $5,980.00
Used for the vocals on Champion Sound, as stated in this September 1, 2003 Remix article.
“I think Madlib pretty much just invents his own rules,” Peanut Butter Wolf muses. Studio engineer Dave Cooley claims that holds true even when a different setup is needed. For “React,” Jay Dee's beat and 'lib's turntable cuts were flown into Digidesign Pro Tools from separate stereo and 4-track masters. Madlib then tracked his vocals on an Audio-Technica 4033A and a Shure SM7, from there going into a Neve 1099 preamp, a GML 8200 EQ, a Universal Audio 1176LN limiting amplifier and finally a dbx 902 De-Esser. “We usually de-ess maybe 4 dB off of the vocals and then compress with a ratio of 8 to 1, which is pretty high,” Cooley explains. “But Madlib likes his shit loud, and it's mixed loud to begin with. He has a really cool ‘angular’ mixing style: Something is always sticking out.”
Avg price: $2,466.75
Used for the vocals on Champion Sound, as stated in this September 1, 2003 Remix article.
“I think Madlib pretty much just invents his own rules,” Peanut Butter Wolf muses. Studio engineer Dave Cooley claims that holds true even when a different setup is needed. For “React,” Jay Dee's beat and 'lib's turntable cuts were flown into Digidesign Pro Tools from separate stereo and 4-track masters. Madlib then tracked his vocals on an Audio-Technica 4033A and a Shure SM7, from there going into a Neve 1099 preamp, a GML 8200 EQ, a Universal Audio 1176LN limiting amplifier and finally a dbx 902 De-Esser. “We usually de-ess maybe 4 dB off of the vocals and then compress with a ratio of 8 to 1, which is pretty high,” Cooley explains. “But Madlib likes his shit loud, and it's mixed loud to begin with. He has a really cool ‘angular’ mixing style: Something is always sticking out.”
Used for the vocals on Champion Sound, as stated in this September 1, 2003 Remix article.
“I think Madlib pretty much just invents his own rules,” Peanut Butter Wolf muses. Studio engineer Dave Cooley claims that holds true even when a different setup is needed. For “React,” Jay Dee's beat and 'lib's turntable cuts were flown into Digidesign Pro Tools from separate stereo and 4-track masters. Madlib then tracked his vocals on an Audio-Technica 4033A and a Shure SM7, from there going into a Neve 1099 preamp, a GML 8200 EQ, a Universal Audio 1176LN limiting amplifier and finally a dbx 902 De-Esser. “We usually de-ess maybe 4 dB off of the vocals and then compress with a ratio of 8 to 1, which is pretty high,” Cooley explains. “But Madlib likes his shit loud, and it's mixed loud to begin with. He has a really cool ‘angular’ mixing style: Something is always sticking out.”
Microphones used by Madlib on Champion Sound
Avg price: $423.50
Used for vocals on Champion Sound and Madvillainy, according to the following sources:
Remix September 1, 2003 (linked)
“I think Madlib pretty much just invents his own rules,” Peanut Butter Wolf muses. Studio engineer Dave Cooley claims that holds true even when a different setup is needed. For “React,” Jay Dee's beat and 'lib's turntable cuts were flown into Digidesign Pro Tools from separate stereo and 4-track masters. Madlib then tracked his vocals on an Audio-Technica 4033A and a Shure SM7, from there going into a Neve 1099 preamp, a GML 8200 EQ, a Universal Audio 1176LN limiting amplifier and finally a dbx 902 De-Esser. “We usually de-ess maybe 4 dB off of the vocals and then compress with a ratio of 8 to 1, which is pretty high,” Cooley explains. “But Madlib likes his shit loud, and it's mixed loud to begin with. He has a really cool ‘angular’ mixing style: Something is always sticking out.”
Dave Cooley, yeloocproducer on Gearslutz, November 12, 2006 (discussing MF Doom's Madvillainy vocal chain)
AT 4033 I believe. We did some stuff on SM7 on the unreleased (internet circulated) madvillain, but Doom decided to go for a more laid back, lo-energy feel (in his delivery) for the final Madvillain.
Agno on Gearslutz, January 7, 2007
He's right... it's an AT4033.
Dave Cooley, yelooproducer on Gearslutz, August 3, 2008
Madlib... SM57, SM7, or AT4033 if I remember correctly.... pre's would be mackie or VS880 straight in for the most part.
Doom... AT4033, don't know what kind of pre.
This is just what I remember....not positive though.
Avg price: $417.00
Used for vocals on Champion Sound and Madvillainy, according to the following sources:
Remix September 1, 2003 (linked)
“I think Madlib pretty much just invents his own rules,” Peanut Butter Wolf muses. Studio engineer Dave Cooley claims that holds true even when a different setup is needed. For “React,” Jay Dee's beat and 'lib's turntable cuts were flown into Digidesign Pro Tools from separate stereo and 4-track masters. Madlib then tracked his vocals on an Audio-Technica 4033A and a Shure SM7, from there going into a Neve 1099 preamp, a GML 8200 EQ, a Universal Audio 1176LN limiting amplifier and finally a dbx 902 De-Esser. “We usually de-ess maybe 4 dB off of the vocals and then compress with a ratio of 8 to 1, which is pretty high,” Cooley explains. “But Madlib likes his shit loud, and it's mixed loud to begin with. He has a really cool ‘angular’ mixing style: Something is always sticking out.”
Dave Cooley, yeloocproducer on Gearslutz, November 12, 2006 (discussing MF Doom's Madvillainy vocal chain)
AT 4033 I believe. We did some stuff on SM7 on the unreleased (internet circulated) madvillain, but Doom decided to go for a more laid back, lo-energy feel (in his delivery) for the final Madvillain.
Dave Cooley, yelooproducer on Gearslutz, August 3, 2008
Madlib... SM57, SM7, or AT4033 if I remember correctly.... pre's would be mackie or VS880 straight in for the most part.
Doom... AT4033, don't know what kind of pre.
This is just what I remember....not positive though.
Studio Gear used by Madlib on Champion Sound
Used for the vocals on Champion Sound, as stated in this September 1, 2003 Remix article.
“I think Madlib pretty much just invents his own rules,” Peanut Butter Wolf muses. Studio engineer Dave Cooley claims that holds true even when a different setup is needed. For “React,” Jay Dee's beat and 'lib's turntable cuts were flown into Digidesign Pro Tools from separate stereo and 4-track masters. Madlib then tracked his vocals on an Audio-Technica 4033A and a Shure SM7, from there going into a Neve 1099 preamp, a GML 8200 EQ, a Universal Audio 1176LN limiting amplifier and finally a dbx 902 De-Esser. “We usually de-ess maybe 4 dB off of the vocals and then compress with a ratio of 8 to 1, which is pretty high,” Cooley explains. “But Madlib likes his shit loud, and it's mixed loud to begin with. He has a really cool ‘angular’ mixing style: Something is always sticking out.”