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    <title>Giacomo Pasquali — Blog</title>
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    <description>Stories from the studio — session work, mixing, gear and tone.</description>
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      <title>A week at Sunset Sound</title>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 12 May 2026 09:56:17 +0000</pubDate>
      <description>March 2025, Studio 1, Justin Derrico on guitar, a custom console older than I am, and a Cortex that decided to die on day one.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Manhattan Beach, end of February, jet lag still in my legs. The week ahead: Sunset Sound, Studio 1, Justin Derrico, a truck of amps, and a Boutique Tones capture session that had been on my calendar for the better part of a year.</p>
<p>You can read all the gear blogs you want. Walking into that control room the first morning is still its own thing.</p>
<h2>The room</h2>
<p>Studio 1 doesn&apos;t need an introduction, but here&apos;s what hits you anyway: the walls. <em>Toto IV</em>. <em>Van Halen II</em>. <em>Led Zeppelin IV</em>. <em>Exile on Main St.</em> The Doors. Earth, Wind and Fire. Rage Against the Machine. You pass <em>Purple Rain</em> on your way to the coffee machine.</p>
<p>The console is the custom Sunset desk. Not a reissue, not a clone — the one. Every fader on it has carried records I grew up on. The first time I put my hands on it I sat there for a second before touching anything, which is not something I usually do.</p>
<blockquote><p>The pressure in a room like that isn&apos;t the gear. It&apos;s the expectation that you&apos;ll be worthy of the pavement you&apos;re walking on.</p></blockquote>
<p>That&apos;s the deal you sign when you book a week at Sunset. Nobody says it. Everybody knows it.</p>
<h2>What we were there to do</h2>
<p>The brief was a new capture pack for Boutique Tones, built around Justin&apos;s rig. Real amps, real cabs, the whole analog routing of that console, plus a wall of outboard. No shortcuts, no in-the-box compromises. The point of going to Sunset wasn&apos;t romance — it was the signal path.</p>
<p>Day one was sounds. Nothing else. Eight hours of moving a 121 and an SM57 by millimeters, picking the cab that sang in <em>that</em> room, listening through <em>that</em> console. Zac, our assistant, knew exactly when to disappear and when to flip a patch. Good assistants are the reason historic studios stay historic.</p>
<p>Day two my personal Cortex killed its own Wi-Fi module overnight. The spare was in the flight case, exactly where the rule says it should be. <strong>Always travel with the spare. Always.</strong> Ten minutes of swap, profiles back on track, nobody on the floor noticed. That&apos;s the only acceptable version of a hardware failure on a session like this.</p>
<h2>What I took home</h2>
<p>Three things, in order of how much they&apos;ll stay with me:</p>
<ol><li><strong>The room shapes the capture.</strong> A Mezzabarba into a 4x12 in <em>that</em> live room is not the same Mezzabarba I record in Italy. The capture carries the room whether you want it to or not. Some of those profiles have Studio 1 baked into them, and I&apos;m fine with that.</li><li><strong>Justin plays like the take is the only one.</strong> Every pass. No safety net in his right hand. It changes what comes out of the speakers in a way no mic placement can fix.</li><li><strong>The console is a tool, not an altar.</strong> Once you&apos;re past the first hour, it&apos;s faders and knobs and a job to do. The reverence has to give way, or you don&apos;t work.</li></ol>
<h2>What I&apos;d do differently</h2>
<p>Honestly, less video, more notes. I tried to vlog the week and ended up with half-finished clips, because when the red light is on you work — you don&apos;t film. Next time I bring someone whose only job is to shoot, or I don&apos;t pretend.</p>
<p>Sunset will still be there. The records on those walls aren&apos;t going anywhere.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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