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How To Get A Job In TV Sound: Kevin Duff Interview


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Mixdown Audio has been established by former London Weekend Television Sound Engineers; Kevin Duff, Cliff Hughes and Producer, Iain Russell. The credits of this bunch make impressive reading, and for those of us in UK, their clients are household names. In this interview we caught up with Kevin Duff who gave us some insightful info on how it really is to work with audio for TV.

AC: Kevin can you run over how you got into the industry? I'm sure it's an interesting story.

Kevin Duff: Having always wanted to mix sound I was involved in number of local theatres and clubs mainly doing sound for shows in my spare time. It was at one of these theatres that I met a then Gram-op (tv speak for tape- op/asst engineer) who worked at LWT studios in London. It was this guy who got me access to LWT and I did many days for free just getting my face known. A few months down the line a job came up and after a very fraught time following me failing the hearing test!! (I could hear the people chatting in the next room and the boats on the river but not the 16k tone J)….I was re-tested in a proper medical test and all was well and I got a job as a trainee floor sound person.

The training involved proving yourself on the studio floor as boom operator (also miking bands ,ob`s, radio mics etc etc). Once you had passed the 9 month training you joined a crew where you stayed unless you wanted to move to the control room. I got a job as a gram-op and worked on a wide cross section of shows (including many music sessions as we used to go to places like CTS and Angel in those days to record the theme music for shows). I was lucky to work a good deal with the two best Sound Mixers at LWT and gain invaluable experience from them.

Having left LWT to go freelance I was offered a job at Fountain Studios in Wembley where I became Head of Sound. The lure of working for myself was however too strong which is why after a couple of years I went Freelance again in order to run the companies I am now involved with

AC: Would you say your job is high pressured?

Kevin Duff: Yes it is a pressured environment. In tv you have to accept that sound are at the bottom of the pile behind cameras and lights…it is still viewed by many as a picture medium and a some production people will only notice the sound when it goes wrong. They will expect me to have an orchestra or band up in 15 minutes and sounding like the record!! Its good in some ways as it does make you very quick but its also frustrating at times. Budgets are tight nowadays….it would be so nice to have someone say `why don’t you multi-track this and then have a day to remix it`….but the reality is normally that jobs are straight to stereo with a multi running just incase of disasters.

Some shows wouldn`t have the time for remix anyway…a good example would be the Royal Variety Show. The last 2 years I have mixed the Orchestra Truck with another mixer taking my stereo feed of music and adding the rest of the show. I was up to about 100 inputs in my truck across a 3 hour show recorded as live. The stereo mix we produced goes to Vt and that’s basically it. We finished the show in Edinburgh on the Monday night, flew to London Tuesday morning straight to the dub. We then had the rest of Tuesday and Wednesday to dub the show as it came out of the edit with TX at 8 pm on the Weds night. In this situation there is really only time to tidy up the VT edits where they have cut stuff out, and add laughs and applause. I don’t think we remixed anything only perhaps had a play with the odd vocal here and there….it needs to be at least 95% right on the night.

Even on music shows I struggle for sound check time, often I will have to sound check while they camera rehearse where as in the past I used to get time off camera just for sound. I often think it’s a shame that Light Entertainment and music tv doesn`t get more recognition as the pressure of work is high which people don`t always see.

AC: What are the qualities needed to stay in this line of work?

Kevin Duff: Sense of humour, ability to prioritise quickly in pressure situations and to be able to get on with all sorts of people without killing them!!

AC: Educationally speaking are you qualified in anything related to your job?

Kevin Duff: Apart from the usual O levels (god I`m old) and several courses that LWT sent me on then the answer would be no…I learnt my trade on the job

AC: What are typical working hours for you?

Kevin Duff: Long…….0700-2300 isnt unusual, but if you really want to succeed in a job then you do have to put the hours in…most people I get in who are training don`t seem to want to go the extra mile these days.

AC: Can you outline how a "newbie" might break into this kind of work?

Kevin Duff: Get in with someone at a studio or industry team and just go in and work for free!! It’s an industry where this is still possible. If you put your face about enough it will eventually open doors but you have to be willing to just muck in and start at the bottom. If I get one more person who says `I`m not really interested in rigging the floor I just want to mix` I will go mad. Until you have mixed for a couple of years you wont start to appreciate exactly what your ears learnt from being on the floor and listening!!

AC: What are your thoughts on the monopolisation of ProTools, if in fact there is one.

Kevin Duff: Pro-tools is a fantastic tool but then so is audio-file, sadie etc etc…..the big plus points for Tools is that its relatively cheap by comparison to its competitors and it sounds very transparent. However, with all aspects of sound both pre and post its about the people working the kit!! A good mixer will produce quality work on shite kit that’s where you earn your money and experience pays dividends. Pro-tools is great as there 10 ways to do everything and because of its avid tie in, it makes file interchange easier than on some other systems. I think it’s a bit wrong to say it monopolises the industry but I would certainly say that it is a key player (certainly my choice but then I`m biased as I run a pro-tools room). However, having said that there are still things that other systems do better and this always be the case. The new pro-tools console which has just been released, will I think, take it into a new level where people who in the past viewed it with some sceptasiscm or as a low budget alternative will have to take even more notice.

AC: Can you define these jobs for us? Sound Supervisor and Dubbing Mixer

Kevin Duff: In tv terms a Sound Supervisor is the person who is responsible for the mixing and balancing of the tx sound on a show. He is also ultimately responsible for the floor crew and PA sound etc (although in many cases we may have a PA/FB mixer on the floor if the shows budget allows-however it is not unusual for me to be doing TX, PA and FB mixes all from the TX desk at the same time).

A Dubbing Mixer is a job on its own in that you can specialize to just work in post-production sound. However, when I was trained a sound super would follow his/her shows from the studio into dubbing in order to keep continuity, which is why I still do both. Film is a bit different, but in tv I think its vital that dubbing mixers should have experienced the live studio recording element. There are many dubbing mixers working in tv who have never mixed live and who tend to want to sanitise live recorded studio shows when they dub them. They might be fine on a basic show but when there is music and audience you need an understanding of how the studio colouration effects the way pull laughs in the dub and how you get between the different dynamic elements of the show and still maintain a relative balance for the viewer at home. There are obviously many great tv mixers out there but I have also had many shows ruined by dubbing mixers with no live experience.

AC: Are there financial benefits with this line of work?

Kevin Duff: Yes but you do have to put the hours in.

AC: Can you indicate some mastering concepts for TV sound, presumably there are "pescribed" levels?

Kevin Duff: I have to balance so that I have no peaks above PPM6 (+8)…I have to relatively balance all the sounds from speech to a rock band so that you don’t sit at home and have to keep turning the volume up and down. You will hear people (especially some music show balances) say that all tv should be pumping and compressed in order to make it sound loud on a small speaker on the tv. This is however a very coarse way of approaching the situation. Heavy compression is fine (I indeed use it a good deal) but it is applied in selective groups and not just driven into a finalizer or optimod which leads to that end stop
Compression that sounds so horrid on some shows. You have to re-create the dynamic so at least the ear still hears some difference be it artificial. I also hate music that sounds 'pinned' which it will do if you expect one box stuck on the end of the chain to sort it out for you.

AC: What's your favourite audio toy?

Kevin Duff: Focusrite comp/lims, Neve comp/lims and my eventide reverb

AC: What people qualities are let's say "standard" with guys who work with audio at your level?

Kevin Duff: The ability to work long hours with people and not get grumpy. The ability to perform well under pressure (especially big live broadcast)

AC: Would you say you work within a male dominated industry? If so why?

Kevin Duff: Its getting better but it would be great to see more women mixing….I use a few floor sound girls and two of the best people in post production at LWT (one mixer and one gram-op) are both female. It's a historical thing but as I say its is changing…I think positive training will play a big part in this.

AC: What do you look for in new employees?

Kevin Duff: People who aren`t scared of hard work and don`t mind learning from the ground up….you can teach someone anything if they have the right attitude it doesn't really come down to exams (although good basic knowledge is obviously a bonus)

AC: What's your view on some of the new services springing up that utilise the internet for transporting audio, such as mastering services, or internet radio?

Kevin Duff: Its all very clever as long as you keep an ear on it….a technical genius will tell you and show you that A going in will be A coming out of a digital path….in some cases it is and in some it definitely isn`t. Its developed such a long way and is so much more solid that back at the start but things do still
get lost on occasions. In terms of digital desks for example…I talk to engineers with bands on CDUK all the time who have been offered fab digital boards for FOH work but the keep going back to the analogue cos the digitals although streets ahead in functionality just don`t sound quite right….its all down to how anolgue saturates and distorts which the digits don’t . Its quite ironic that the pure digital signal path is in some cases exactly what you don’t want!!


About Kevin Duff

Kevin started his sound career at LWT in 1987, where he was trained on the studio floor in all aspects of sound. He was quickly promoted to Grams operator and worked on a diverse range of Light Entertainment, sport, drama, current affairs and outside broadcast productions. Moving on from LWT, he joined Fountain Television as a Sound Supervisor and became Head of Sound a year later. In 1995 he went freelance and has been in constant demand ever since. Whilst his forte is light entertainment and music, he is experienced in all areas of television sound (studio and post) as well as dubbing for film. A director of Mixdown Audio, Kevin or 'Kato' to his friends, is highly trained in martial arts. Very rarely has a client questioned his work!

A frustrated carp fisherman, he is very enthusiastic about the programmes he supervises and prides himself on his professional attitude and attention to detail. Credits include: Prince's Trust Royal Gala [Carlton Television], Audience With Ricky Martin [LWT], Audience With Diana Ross [LWT], Brits 2002 [Brits Television], Johnny Vaughn Tonight [Worlds End Television], Royal Variety [Orchestra Supervisor & Dubbing Mixer], UEFA.com [Input Video Facilities], BAFTA Television Awards [Talent Television], Who Wants to be a Millionaire? [Celador], National Lottery Live [Celador], Pride of Britain [LWT], Brian Conley Show [Talent Television], TFI Friday [Ginger Productions] and Celebrity Ready Steady Cook [Bazal Productions].

Contact Details:
Email: kev@soundsupervisor.tv
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