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Taking a Mastodon Album from Stereo to Immersive

Grammy-winning producer David Bottrill and Grammy-nominated engineer Ryan McCambridge recently created a Dolby Atmos mix for Mastodon's new album, Hushed and Grim.

Ryan McCambridge (left) and David Bottrill (right), plugging away on the Mastodon immersive mix.
Ryan McCambridge (left) and David Bottrill (right), plugging away on the Mastodon immersive mix.

Toronto, Canada (July 19, 2022)―Three-time Grammy Award-winning producer and mixer David Bottrill and his longtime freelance collaborator, Grammy-nominated engineer, mixer and producer Ryan McCambridge, employed Nugen Audio plug-ins while working on the original and Dolby Atmos mixes for Mastodon’s latest double album, Hushed and Grim.

Known for a unique sound that ebbs and flows between heavy metal and hard rock, Bottrill and McCambridge knew they needed to work on each song individually, giving each the attention that was needed. To assist with the process, the duo turned to a variety of Nugen Audio software, including Halo Upmix, Paragon and ISL, to help them achieve their goals.

“Mastodon is a progressive band that required a lot of intricate sound design and layering,” explains Bottrill. “I mixed the album in stereo and then the decision was made to turn it into a Dolby Atmos format release. It would have been a little more challenging for someone else to try and just match the mix that I had done, so it made more sense for me to do the Dolby mix. I knew what I wanted the sound to do and was able to turn that into an Atmos mix with Ryan’s help. We worked together, and it was a real education for me. It set the tone for everything Atmos as we go forward.”

 

To accomplish their creative goals, Bottrill and McCambridge turned to Nugen’s Halo Upmix software to take Bottrill’s Mastodon stereo mixes and put them into an immersive format. “Since I work on both the music mix and in post, I suggested Nugen for this project, which I had been using for years,” says McCambridge. “I use all of the company’s plug-ins and have come to rely on certain ones more as we are working on projects for streaming services and Dolby Atmos immersive sound.”

According to Bottrill, Upmix became integral to the project. “Everything went through Upmix in varying degrees,” he says. “It worked incredibly well for maintaining an album feel, while also giving the listener a sense of being surrounded by the music. Using Upmix, we also had the confidence that our mixes would still sound pristine when we bring them down into other formats. It doesn’t become sloppy, and it doesn’t turn into a phase nightmare. It’s very graceful.”

The duo also utilized ISL and Paragon on the Mastodon album to help them discreetly add things into the mix. “Paragon was good for when we were trying to smooth over the edges of anything we were adding into the mix,” McCambridge says. “We didn’t want to pinpoint any stems that we were adding; we just wanted them to become part of the whole three-dimensional image.”

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