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June 25, 2008
New Exclaim Article ks to Brock for coming out to talk to us and to Michelle for capturing the gorgeous face of our baby grand! (I guess those other faces aren't too bad either!) You can find the original article here or in the next issue of Exclaim! Summer is busy, but fall is always busier so book now before the end of year rush! ![]() The Hive By Brock Thiessen With a term like "musical institution" comes a lot of weight - authority, importance and even a bit of egotism. In the case of the Hive, it’s a label that's more than warranted. And in many ways, the Vancouver studio's client list says it all. Black Mountain, Destroyer, Ladyhawk, Frog Eyes, Hot Hot Heat and P:ano, along with virtually every other significant West coast indie act, have all put down sound at the Hive during the studio's 12 years, with the last five of those being spent in a 3,000-square-foot facility in the remote industrial wilds of Burnaby, BC. Behind studio doors, a cavernous gear-littered control room serves as the Hive's central command. Inside stands an impressive 30-year-old analog console; half of it was once owned by the Village People, the other by Jethro Tull. It's now connected to a mass of digital hardware, ProTools-sporting monitors, Space Echoes, plate reverbs and god knows what else. Beyond two-foot-thick walls and thousands of dollars worth of glass at the room's front is Studio A, the Hive's principal recording space. It's also the biggest room by far, so large in fact that if a band wants to record an alcohol-fuelled, 75-person gang vocal, like Vancouver metalheads Bison recently did, the Hive can easily accommodate them. The smaller Studio B (or Bee) is set off to the side for more reserved sessions, with instrument-lined hallways connecting the two and leading out to a kitchen/foosball arena, as well as a lobby with one killer selection of old-school NES games. All together, the Hive has the facilities and gear to turn out some serious-sounding stuff. Surprisingly, though, it feels more like big, comfy rumpus room than some stiff, overly hygienic pro studio. "I want people to feel comfortable when they go into Hive," says its head engineer and co-founder Colin Stewart. "I brought an old friend in recently and he was like, 'Colin, this feels like your bedroom in junior high.' And I was like, that is awesome. That is how I want it to feel." This down-to-earth atmosphere at the Hive of today stems from its yesterday, when for seven years it set up various home studios in Vancouver's east side before relocating to its current Burnaby location in 2003. And needless to say, the move was a successful one; the studio and its collective - engineers Stewart, Jesse Gander and Stuart McKillop, as well as Stewart's wife and business partner Terry - have been booked solid for five years. "Bands don’t want to go into a studio and feel like they've just gone to the hospital or that they are about to get their teeth pulled. And a lot of studios in town are like that,” says 33-year-old Stewart. "There are some amazing studios here, but they can be kind of daunting to a little band that has never recorded before and just wants to make a cool, little indie rock record." While the Hive undoubtedly caters to the indie persuasion, the studio's aesthetic is by no means locked in the hissy realms of lo-fi. "When we opened up this place, we were all out to make more authentic-sounding rock albums," says Gander. "There are a lot of basement studios out there just making simulations of rock albums or where they are just laying things down in pieces. The type of band that comes here wants to make records the old-fashioned way, by doing stuff live off the floor. I mean, we still do production like crazy, but at least at first we try to capture the band as they are." With this also comes a desire to take chances with recordings, and as Steward puts it, “to not follow the general watered-down, homogenous aesthetic.” This means a lot of experimenting happens at the Hive, sonically and otherwise. “Some studios only have good equipment, but we have shitty equipment too,” says Gander proudly. “And utilizing the shitty equipment is where the experimentation comes in. We are all people who like trippy-sounding recordings and we will stop at no ends to make them.” And Gander isn’t kidding: several albums have been recorded entirely on mushrooms at the Hive, including Ladyhawk's now-infamous Mushroom Sessions. The studio also once recorded experimental Vancouver outfit Beans for 48 hours straight, a feat that certainly required some sort of substance assistance. This desire to push things forward also means the Hive rarely repeats itself, and big name clients or not, it’s a constant work in progress. “I feel like I never know what I’m doing,” Stewart says. “Every time I make a record I’m like, ‘Oh, that’s what I’ve been doing wrong for so long. I get it now.’ There is always something new to learn. It’s so important never to get complacent or arrogant or to think you always know what you are doing because you never do.” And while the Hive’s facility itself has played a critical role in the collective's success, as Stewart points out, it's not really so much the space that’s important but who's inside it. “It's really the person that makes the recording, not the place or the equipment even. And the Hive is all about the people. Bands come here to work with us, not because they think the studio space is good.” May 04, 2008 We've added some new things to the studio as of late. New couch, new paint job aaaaaaand........ new BABY! Yes, we're the proud adoptive parents of a beautiful baby grand!! We've been waiting for the opportunity to take a picture of the new addition, but our A Room is pretty busy. Soon, soon. Thank you so much to Eli and Aimee for so generously letting the piano live with us for awhile - she will be well loved! Things are busy, busy, busy. Bee room and graveyard shifts are your best bets these days, but A room time is possible here and there. Please get don't hesitate to get in touch if you have questions about booking! February 24, 2008 Sorry to anyone who tried to stop by and found our page missing! We've since updated our name servers...whatever that means. ![]() Check out the love The Hive received during an interview with our pals Black Mountain in the Guardian UK. The band talk about growing up together and their new incredible album, "In The Future". **** If you're not seeing our player, make sure to type www before hivestudios.net *** In the Player: Ladyhawk - Advice Recorded by Colin Stewart A Ghost To Kill Again - Ghost Ships Recorded by Jesse Gander Rose Melberg - Cast Away The Clouds Recorded by Colin Stewart Get The Most - Material Desires Recorded by Stuart McKillop Tranzmittors - Alone With You Recorded by Jesse Gander Gigi - 'Neath The Streetlights Recorded live by Colin Stewart Corbin Murdoch and The Nautical Miles - Crow O'Clock Recorded by Jesse Gander Vincat - Werewolves Recorded by Colin Stewart The Doers - New Kind of Neighborhood Recorded by Jesse Gander Library - Pale of Classics Recorded by Stuart Mckillop The Secret Three Recorded by Colin Stewart January 05, 2008 ![]() Welcome 2008! The Hive turns 12 this year! We can't believe we've been in our current space for 5 years already! We're all looking forward to another exciting year of recording! A big thank you to all the wonderful bands we were lucky enough to work with in '07. One of the best things about working at the Hive is growing alongside the bands we love. So come on baby bands - don't be shy! Get in touch! We're not jaded yet... maybe by 20.... In other news, Allmusic guide had some nice things to say about the band Gigi and The Hive... "Masterminded by producer Colin Stewart (who runs the seemingly utopian studio The Hive) and made up of members of Vancouver bands Great Aunt Ida and P:ano among others, Gigi comes about as close to recapturing the innocent, emotionally charged sound of the girl groups and 60’s dream pop balladry as anyone has in the past 30 years. These songs need to be made into a record immediately!" – Tim Sendra We're working on it Tim! Listen to Gigi in our player and at www.myspace.com/gigitheband |


