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  • Phil McGowan: Kick Ass Score Mixer

Phil McGowan: Kick Ass Score Mixer

Phil McGowan is up for an Emmy for his score mixing work on Cobra Kai and TINA.

By Christopher Holder

26 July 2021

‘Cobra Kai’ is a guilty pleasure. Once I knew I was interviewing gun film score mixer Phil McGowan I wanted to ensure I was prepared. Who knew that blasting through three seasons of the ‘Karate Kid’-inspired Netflix phenom would be so much fun — irreverent, chaotic, bad-ass TV with a big sound track packing plenty of nods to the ’80s with gritty synths and spandex-clad guitar riffs.

Thanks to his work on ‘Cobra Kai’, Phil is up for an Emmy (Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Comedy or Drama Series And Animation). He’s got another iron in the fire with his mixing on the HBO doco ‘TINA’ (Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Nonfiction Or Reality Program). 

TURN UP: TV SOUND 

As home cinema systems become more sophisticated, so has the sound mixing for TV. Not so long ago, most TV sound was produced by a small piece of flapping cardboard in a CRT. Now soundbars and subs are mimicking full blown cinema sound, and providing an experience worthy of the 4K big-ass TV everyone now has.

Phil McGowan has ridden the wave of the golden age of television. He moved to LA in 2009 after graduating from Berklee College Music School, apprenticing himself to big-time composer, Trevor Morris.

After some years learning the ropes and witnessing the very best come through Trevor’s scoring stage, he went freelance. Now, from his Atmos mix studio in the backyard of his LA home, he’s become a go-to mixer for TV, film and video games.

BAD ASS COBRA CUES

To highlight the growing ambitions of TV soundtracks, ‘Cobra Kai’s music combines full orchestral cues with throwback rock elements and even choir parts. 

“Some of those fight scenes would have guitars, drums, full orchestra… everybody all at the same time just blasting away,” explains Phil. “It’s a big, big sound, which is really fun to mix. It’s a challenge to get it all to work but when you get all those elements sounding good it’s very satisfying.”

Phil McGowan has been nominated for an Emmy, Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Comedy or Drama Series (Half-Hour) And Animation, for Netflix’s Cobra Kai.
Sweet spot: An Avid S3 plus a Dock provide mix control. Phil runs a Mac Pro for playback and an older Mac Pro to print stems. An Intel-based Mac Mini runs the Dolby Atmos Renderer.

PHIL-HARMONIC

Although soundtracks have changed and developed over decades the syntax remains stubbornly the same: when it comes to providing impact and gravitas, bigger is always better.

That said, not every project has a Hans Zimmer budget. ‘Cobra Kai’ began life as a comparatively low budget YouTube production before migrating to Netflix.

“Everyone who’s after a big orchestral score wants the biggest sound possible. The trouble is, hiring a big orchestra in London and paying for a big scoring stage like Air or Abbey Rd is a huge outlay — might be 100 grand for the day!”

Instead, the bean counters will look at eastern European alternatives: “Bratislava and Prague are the two main ones.”

Nothing might beat the London Symphony in the Air Studios scoring stage but the eastern Europe alternative can be excellent. “The Bratislava orchestra uses the Vienna Synchron Stage, which is a beautiful recording stage.”

In the case of ‘Cobra Kai’, the producers employed the Prague Symphony Orchestra. The sessions would be recorded using standard scoring stage microphone techniques, employing a Decca Tree and outriggers, supplemented by spot microphones on instrument sections for greater balance control.

The sound supervisor and composer would Skype into the sessions to observe proceedings at some ungodly time of night.

Meanwhile, the live rock ’n’ roll elements are recorded by musicians in LA studios.

“I’ll get those elements and then Prague will send me download links for all the orchestra parts,” explains Phil. “When I embark on a new episode, I’ll usually spend an hour or two in the morning just putting everything in the right place before I even start doing any actual mixing.

“The elements are now familiar. The orchestral parts, the synths, the drums… I’ve got settings and plug-ins ready to roll. Having those ‘templates’, as it were, make it easier to get through the minutes required in the tight time frame.”

Scottish and Tennessee diffusers line the side wall.

GO HUGE

Phil McGowan is in demand because he knows how to make music scores sound huge. How? Predominantly it’s all about the best use of EQ and reverb.

“Just the right amount,” agrees Phil. “I’ll select a longer hall convolution reverb in Altiverb — something like the Todd AO scoring stage… may it rest in peace — to give the score more space.

“As far as EQ goes, I’ll clear up the mid-range. If one frequency is really howling then it makes thing sound smaller because your ear is focussing on a narrower band of frequencies. Once the mid-range is cleaned up  and you have a broadband balance, you find that you can turn the orchestra right up.

“Panning the room mics wide is important. I’ll rely a bit more on the room mics than the close mics, to improve the perception of size and space.

“If the powers that be still aren’t satisfied with the size and power of the mix I’ll usually blend in orchestral samples on top. Usually the samples have been recorded at Sony Studios in LA or Abbey Rd or Air in London. That sort of combination really lends itself to a large size.”

THROWBACK PUNCH

With his go-to effects, EQ and compression on tap, Phil reliably and speedily pulls great-sounding ‘Cobra Kai’ score mixes for the dub stage. But occasionally the sound supervisor throws him a curve ball.

“One episode in Season 2 was drawing more on the old ’80s movie footage for flashbacks,” recalls Phil. “So the idea was for the music to have a more authentic ’80s vibe, and sound more like the old Bill Conti ‘Karate Kid’ score.

“I actually found the Paramount sound stage as a convolution reverb in Altiverb — the studio where they recorded the original ‘Karate Kid’ score. I really laid it on thick and it was fun to mix with.

“To give it an ’80s sound I tried not to clean up the orchestra as much. I left it a little bit more midrange-y, a little more vintage-sounding as opposed to the modern smiley-face EQ curve.

“After that experiment the instructions came through: let’s go back to making it huge, clean, clear, and epic.”

let’s go back to making it huge, clean, clear, and epic

Some of Phil McGowan’s plug-in firepower he throws at a Cobra Kai orchestral mix (all in ‘bypass’ at the time of this screen grab). The Altiverb convolution reverb on the Paramount setting (where the original Karate Kid score was recorded), a Studer tape plug-in over the Strings master and a look at a typical Fab Filter EQ curve on Strings — cleaning up room modes and any other predominant mid range frequencies.

BUILDING AN ALL-VALLEY ATMOS MIX ROOM

Phil McGowan works out of his own space in the backyard of his rental in Culver City, LA.

At the time of the interview Phil was about to install a full PMC Wafer-based Dolby Atmos loudspeaker setup. 

“Should be fun,” enthuses Phil McGowan. “It’ll be 7.1.4 in here, which is described as the typical home theatre set up. I mean home theatre can go up to 9.1.6, but there’s barely anybody with 7.1.4 let alone 9.1.6.”

Finding the right house to run a busy score mixing business in suburban L.A. isn’t a doddle.

“It was a matter of finding a house we could afford with a separate space out the back for me to work in — a space big enough for me to fit my studio in. It’s not a huge room — only 16 by 14.5 feet (~5m x 4.5m) — and the ceiling is just high enough for Atmos height channels. It’s probably typical of many home theatre living rooms.

“It’s a mix room, so I don’t have to be so fastidious about isolation — which is just as well because it’s possible to hear police trucks go by and jets overhead.

“Acoustically, I’ve put a lot of bass absorbers in to help tame the low end. Then I hired an acoustics technician who assisted with mounting other absorption. There’s plenty of timber in the interior which sounds better than plasterboard. 

“Then I had Dolby come by and tune the room. That made a big difference, especially in the low end. They come in with Smaart Live and five microphones all summing together.

“I’ve been a PMC guy for a while. That’s what Trevor Morris had in his studio, and I grew accustomed to them. 

“When I built this room I managed to get a set that Trevor didn’t need any more — an LCR set of PMC IB2. They’re a full-range loudspeaker, which means I don’t need to bass manage those channels that appear behind the screen in the theatre. 

“The Atmos speaker setup includes PMC Wafer 1s with a PMC twotwo Sub2.” 

PRO TOOLS X 2

“I have two Pro Tools rigs. One’s on a new Mac Pro, while my stem recorder is an old Mac Pro, which copes just fine. 

“I could mostly run everything from my new Mac Pro but when I get a larger project with a lot of tracks, it’s beneficial to have them running on the new Mac Pro and record to the other.

“It’s also nice because I can print a session per reel or per episode as I go. And then I can hand that off to the dub stage or to a music editor, and they don’t have to timestamp all the cues together. A lot of projects don’t even have a music editor — I’m delivering directly to the dub — so the more organised I can be, the better it is for them because they have already so much going on with the dialogue and sound effects. 

“I recently bought an Intel-based Mac Mini, which is my Atmos renderer unit. So all that’s connected through an Avid MTRX. I have 128 channels from each Pro Tools rig going into the MTRX with DigiLink cards. And then I bought a Dante card for the MTRX that is going to a Focusrite PCIe RedNet card in the renderer — so that’s 128 channels into the Atmos renderer. 

RECALL

Apart from two Lexicon PCM96 surround reverbs I’m all in the box. I don’t really use a lot of outboard gear because it would be too difficult to recall. I may well work on three different projects in a single day, sometimes bouncing back and forth. And it’s as simple as opening and closing Pro Tools sessions, then recalling my settings on the Lexicon verbs.

“I have an Avid S3 with the companion Dock for control. For monitoring control I used the JBL Intonado but once I bought the MTRX, I put the SPQ card in there, and that’s my monitor controller as well. So that’s all Eucon control. All of my monitor tuning and fold downs all happen via the MTRX.

“The MTRX has been a great upgrade. Previously I had the two rigs patched to each other with MADI interfaces. So I sold my HD MADI boxes and invested that money towards the Matrix upgrade and I haven’t looked back. It’s amazing how much audio you can route through it. And mine’s not even full. I mean, I’ve seen people with all eight slots full of different IO cards — it’s pretty incredible how much it handle.”

About Phil McGowan, Mixing & Recording Engineer

Emmy-nominated score mixer and recording engineer/producer Phil McGowan specialises in recording and mixing music for films, television shows and video games. Over the years, McGowan has collaborated with numerous composers including Danny Bensi & Saunder Jurriaans, Trevor Morris, Jack Wall, Leo Birenberg, Zach Robinson, Anthony Willis, Atli Örvarsson, Nathan Whitehead, Bobby Tahouri, John Paesano, and more.

McGowan is the score mixer on Netflix’s Golden Globe and Emmy Award-nominated series ‘Ozark’, for which he received an Emmy nomination in 2020 for Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series, and the martial arts comedy-drama series ‘Cobra Kai’. Upcoming projects include Netflix & GHD’s horror/thriller ‘Ghost Lab’; Focus Features’ drama feature ‘Blue Bayou’, and documentary film ‘Cousteau’; and Disney+’s documentary film ‘Wolfgang’.

RESPONSES

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  1. Ron Dunbar says:
    30 July 2021 at 12:29 am

    A HUGE congratulations to my brother and friend Phil!!. I’m almost in tears. I’m very proud to have been involved with his career from the get go. He can tell you about learning the basics years ago. The is certainly a case of the student going far beyond the teacher!. God bless Phil and continued great work in the future!

    Reply
    1. alchemedia says:
      30 July 2021 at 9:42 am

      Nice tribute Ron. Thanks for your input, especially from someone with your credentials.

      Reply

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