IN THE WINGS
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Jennifer K Mahal
A grin lights Nick Fainbarg’s face as he fades out all but the vocal
track on the soundboard. Fainbarg, owner of Costa Mesa Studios, plays
with the channels, adding just the drum beat.
The look on his face is more than bliss. It’s a little bit of triumph
too. This is a man who has made it to the edge of his dream.
The tricked-up board and digital recording technology he uses now is a
far cry from the Mackie 1202 mixer and his grandmother’s tape cassette
recorder.
It all started when Fainbarg was 12. He wanted to be a deejay.
“I went to a local music store and told them I wanted to be a deejay,
and they sold me a mixer -- not a deejay mixer, an audio mixer,” he said.
The Mackie 1202 he bought was a 12-channel mixer with input capability
for four microphones. It wasn’t what he wanted at the time.
But a friend of a friend was throwing a big party and needed a deejay.
They asked him. The party was also going to have a live band.
“My friend knew that I played drums and asked me to bring my drum set
because the band wasn’t able to bring theirs,” Fainbarg said. “Then the
drummer didn’t show.”
The Newport Beach native ended up playing with the band, Broken. The
band, “just a high school nothing band,” liked him enough to ask him to
join.
Soon Fainbarg, who went to both Corona del Mar and Foothill Ranch high
schools, was itching to record their jam sessions.
Borrowing his grandmother’s cassette recorder, he created a four-song
EP.
“My grandmother was very supportive of me,” Fainbarg said, adding that
now that he has a studio, his grandmother comes in almost daily.
The band started to sell the cassettes at concerts, and people began
asking Fainbarg how much it would cost them to make a recording at his
studio.
“I didn’t have a studio, but people thought I did because of the
record,” he said.
Having a studio became his dream. Fainbarg began collecting equipment
and subscribing to Mix Magazine.
“By the time I was 17, I was having bands in [my grandmother’s house]
every other week,” he said.
He worked two other jobs -- as a waiter at the Curtain Call dinner
theater and at his father’s equipment liquidating business.
One day, Fainbarg received a call from someone who had a recording
studio -- Encore Entertainment. He was invited to come and bring all his
gear, so he did.
Though he said the situation “went crooked” after a while, Fainbarg
learned a bit of the business before he cut his losses and left.
He took a job at Mars Music in Santa Ana.
“I had this idea that I wanted to open up a big, bad studio of my own
someday,” Fainbarg said.
His connections at Mars gave him the idea to go straight to the
manufacturers for the equipment to get it at a lower price. He had the
studio design in mind and placed his orders when a friend, Hank Quinn,
passed away.
Quinn owned a small video/recording studio in Costa Mesa. The space
was just what Fainbarg was looking for. He bought the studio.
“The first day I got in here after escrow, I looked around and sank to
the floor,” Fainbarg said.
He opened the studio in mid-July to a slow start. Now, Fainbarg said
clients are booking it three weeks to a month in advance.
Costa Mesa Studio’s clients include teenage jazz artist Denise
Gonzales (whose album was artistically directed by jazz legend Herb
Jeffries), session drummer George Shepherd, and local band Redline 5
(which will open for Wild Child today at the Coach House) .
Mixing audio is an art in its own right. The balance and shaping of
tones can influence, and sometimes even create, a sound.
“A lot of people don’t understand how all of the technology works,”
Fainbarg said.
He works with musicians to put together the sound they want.
Sometimes, to get a particular sound, he uses tricks. Like the time he
made Mika Greiner of Redline 5 do wind sprints in the parking lot at 2 or
3 in the morning.
“He wasn’t tracking the vocals for ‘Train Wreck’ or ‘Array,”’ Fainbarg
said. “I had him come in and do a line at a time.”
He also has been known to put the playback in a musician’s headset
while they’re playing, allowing the musician to hear mistakes.
Fainbarg has plans to open his own label -- CMS Records -- and hopes
to someday expand his studio to be four times the size it is now.
“If someone’s willing to pay me a hundred million a year not to do
what I’m doing, I wouldn’t take it,” Fainbarg said. “I absolutely love
what I do.”
* * *
Do you know a local artist, writer, painter, singer, filmmaker, etc.,
who deserves to get noticed? Send your nominee to In The Wings, Daily
Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627, by fax to (949) 646-4170 or
by e-mail to o7 [email protected]
* JENNIFER K MAHAL is features editor of the Daily Pilot.
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