EXCLUSIVE Interview: Dave Grohl on Cutting the New Foo Fighters Album's Master Tape to Pieces--and Giving Them Away to the Fans

Categories: Off the Record

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Imagine our surprise when we received the advance CD of the Foo Fighters' new album, Wasting Light, and we noticed the following sticker copy:

Recorded Entirely On Analog Tape in Dave's Garage. A piece of the ORIGINAL MASTER TAPE included in this package.

Upon opening the cardboard case we found out that, yes, there was about an inch of magnetic recording tape inside the booklet.

Wait--don't bands often fight protracted legal battles to recover their precious, hallowed "master tapes" from greedy record companies and managers? Aren't these precious objects what you need to remix and remaster later versions of the album every time a new audio format replaces the previous one?

We were confused, and thus we did what we always do when we're confused:

We called Dave Grohl.

LA WEEKLY: Hey, what's up Dave.

DAVE GROHL: Hi--we're here rehearsing for SNL [that was last Thursday]

LA WEEKLY: So, am I holding a piece of the ACTUAL the master tape for Wasting Light?

DAVE GROHL: Yeah, basically we recorded the record in my garage to analog tape, and probably wound up with 20-30 reels of tapes, masters reels with all the takes on them, reels with alternate takes. At the end of the session I thought it would be an extraordinary move to destroy all the masters and give the pieces of the tapes to the fans.

Everyone was saying, "Can you do that? Is that gonna work?" People are so into digital recording now they forgot how easy analog recording can be.


I think it's much easier than using a computer- you just plug in the machine, and you put your microphone in input and get your levels and hit the red button and that's IT. You don't have to scroll through, don't have to install anything; it's really, really simple. Been about 15 years since anyone had recorded an album to analog tape.

First song we recorded was called "Miss the Misery." We finished it in three takes, it sounded really great; Butch went down to edit the drums with a razorblade, and Eddie was editing. He rewound the tape, and the tape started shredding. And the tape was falling apart. And he came upstairs and said, "You know what, I don't know if this is gonna work. The tape is shredding. I think we should back up everything digitally right after we record it." And I said, "NO, Butch, I don't want any computer in this house at all. Maybe it's a bad reel."

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The artifact and the sticker
And everyone was so nervous and precious about the tape! No one has any faith in the tape anymore-- everyone just relies on computers and considers the hardrive to be the safest option, and I don't. I think an analog tape is something you can hold ...

When you record digitally, the original version is digital, or does it ever go to tape?

Some people record onto tape, and then they pay for the tape, and download those onto a hard drive. Initially in a Pro Tools program. Other people go straight into digital, and use no tape at all. So after you've made an album on Pro Tools, you just have hard drives and store your hard drive. If you aren't using any tape at all, it's all going straight to a hard drive. But some people like the sonic advantage of using tapes. There's a specific sound analog has-- the tone and compression, and sound does something when it's etched in a tape- something it doesn't necessarily do when they're using digital equipment. People will download it into a Pro Tools session and then manipulate it within a session.

But we didn't want to do that; we wanted to go fully analog. For sonic reasons, and also because I feel like digital recording has gotten out of control. It's too easy to control. When you're recording to analog tape, it captures performance and you can't necessarily manipulate that in different ways. It is what it is.

When I listen to music these days, and I hear Pro Tools and drums that sound like a machine- it kinda sucks the life out of music.


My Voice Nation Help
11 comments
OKay
OKay

Did 2" analog in Mpls. he's not wrong about the drums (and vocals). The only bad part is it showed my digital piano to be a POS.

Dave Carroll
Dave Carroll

The important part is to record everything through the tape. Some people stupidly like to record a few things like the drums through tape and then for some reason they'll do the vocals straight to Pro Tools. People do a lot of stupid stuff nowadays, then they wonder why it isn't as good as it used to be.

Rp-cerney
Rp-cerney

i just got the album home, pumped to see on the package tehre was that piece of tape included., but it was not in my album. dissapointed

jamal
jamal

Should be stuck to the inside (front) cover of the booklet.

death by analog
death by analog

its so hard to find a decent producer who still records to tape... damned computers have taken a majority of the fun out of "cutting" original music to "tape"computers give you a highly processed sounding sterile copy of the music but a tape gives you some meat and rawness-and a finished product to grasp in your mits... make you feel a greater sense of accomplishment...

Nope
Nope

actually its not hard to find anyone who wants to record to tape. its a fad.

Dave Carroll
Dave Carroll

It's a fad that started around a century ago

Johhny
Johhny

Absolutely. And Digital recording doesn't create a cold sterile sound.  I get so tired of hearing that BS. It's not the medium, it's the artist and producer that are responsible for the sound. There is absolutely nothing cold and sterile about a digital recording...nothing, get over it.

Dave Carroll
Dave Carroll

Thou dost protest too much. Actually the artist and producer are the ones that have nothing to do with it, it can be the best artist and producer ever and if they're doing it to Pro Tools without any tape and without even any analog emulation plug-ins that recording is gonna fucking suck. Whether you like it or not.

Dave Carroll
Dave Carroll

No dumbass, the cd doesn't sound cold and sterile because it's a transfer from tape. Not the same as doing it straight to digital with Pro Tools. That's why cds were great for the first decade they were out because they were all just tape transfers and sounded great, the digital format actually made the analog master sound even better. Whereas music recorded totally digitally sounds like shit, 'cold and sterile' is an accurate description of it. Sorry you were born in the era when everything started sucking but that's just the way it goes.

Johhny
Johhny

By the way, the album came out on cd right? Oh, a digital recording, hmmm must sound cold and sterile.

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