A masterclass in tone, feel, and the art of capturing a truly great band
Walking into Sunset Sound Studio 3 with Darrell Thorp is like stepping into a private masterclass. There is no ego and no fuss. Just intention, sensitivity, and years of experience that never overpower the music. Darrell has recorded Beck, Radiohead, Foo Fighters and so many others, and the thing that always stands out is his ability to read the room. He shapes the sound around the people, not the other way round.
Anyone who has seen Darrell teach inside the Darrell Thorp Everything Bundle, 2025 Edition at Pro Mix Academy will recognise this instantly. The same calm focus, the same musical judgement, and the same clarity of purpose run through everything he does. Watching him record Robert Jon and The Wreck brings all of those ideas to life in the most natural way.
Robert Jon and The Wreck are exactly the kind of band Darrell thrives with. Five serious musicians who bring soul and character and energy. A band that sings live and plays live and wants that togetherness captured. Darrell welcomes that. He knows how to make bleed work for him and how to build a session around real interaction rather than isolation.
This session shows exactly why Darrell’s recordings feel alive. It is not just the microphones or the gear. It is the way he listens, reacts, and commits. Many of the same ideas he teaches in the Everything Bundle show up right here on the floor at Sunset Sound.
Here is the full story.
Starting With the Drums: Dry, Punchy, Alive
Studio 3 has a large iso room and Darrell immediately chooses it for the drums. He prefers dry controlled drums unless it is a big rock band. With The Wreck he wants tight focused tone that lets the song breathe.
Snare top and bottom are both 57s. Straightforward choices that work for almost anything. The hi hat gets a KM84 although he sometimes swaps to a KM86 or a U87 depending on the drummer.
The toms say a lot about his taste. Darrell loves loud toms with definition and body. Years ago Allan Sides introduced him to C12A tube condensers on toms. That sound became a benchmark for him. It is a detail he talks about beautifully inside the Everything Bundle, explaining how condenser tom mics can transform the presence of a kit.
He adapts when needed. If the drummer is heavy handed he will not risk a vintage tube mic. Recently he has been reaching for the Lauten 208 and 308 noise rejection condensers. They keep cymbal bleed down and sound huge. He travels with a pair because almost no studio has them yet.
The poke mic is a 441 placed out front capturing attack from both kick and snare. It is a simple idea that adds punch without heavy EQ.
Overheads are C12As left and right but the true overhead is the mono Coles. Kick snare and mono overhead make up the core of his drum sound. This exact concept appears again and again in the Everything Bundle, where Darrell breaks down why a single mono picture often captures the musicality of the kit better than spaced stereo.
Inside the kick is a 47 FET, pushed as far back toward the front head as it will go. Darrell often prefers a headless kick with blankets and a sandbag but for this band he lets the natural rumble remain.
Committing on the Way In
Darrell EQs boldly. He wants a sound that inspires the band immediately. Kick gets boosts at 100 Hz and 3 kHz with a little 10 kHz polish. Snare top gets some Pultec sweetness. Snare bottom gets a flip of polarity and a clean-up around the lows.
The mono overhead goes through an 1176 into a Pultec which gives him sustain and thickness. Tom mics get very little processing except a high pass.
He rarely compresses heavily while tracking. He prefers the transient integrity of the drummer’s natural touch.
You see this concept repeated throughout the Darrell Thorp Everything Bundle, where Darrell stresses the importance of positivity in the headphone mix, committing to decisions early, and building confidence through sound.
Keeping the Band Close: Live Vocals Done ProperlyThis band sings live. Four singers out of five. Darrell knows exactly what to do.
Keep them tight together.
Spread them across a room and you get uncontrolled guitar bleed into the wrong vocal mic. Bring them into a semicircle and the bleed becomes musical and predictable. Darrell learned this on From The Basement and it shaped his approach. These are the kinds of priceless real world stories he gives away inside the Everything Bundle, explaining why bleed is not the enemy. It is glue.
The amps are in the room. The bass and B3 are isolated. The drums are isolated. The vocals stay in the room with the amps so the band can feel each other.
Backing vocalists get U67s. Robert gets a 47. If the bleed becomes messy he will tighten patterns or move to dynamics.
The Four Mic Vocal Trick
One of Darrell’s favourite stories involves a singer who kept four microphones up during a session, switching between them for tone. It sounded clinical on paper but the result was magic. Darrell kept this idea alive. Use one mic for leads and another for BVs. The tonal difference helps them sit naturally in the mix.
It is the sort of clever yet simple technique he dives into inside the Everything Bundle, showing exactly when this trick helps and when it does not.
Guitars: Tone, Presence, and Control
Lead guitars use two amps, a Blackstar and a Music Man. Each amp gets a 421 and a Royer ribbon. Sometimes he uses the ribbon alone, sometimes the dynamic. The blend depends on the part.
Through the console he shapes the blend, EQs the pair and lightly compresses before committing. Again this reflects the philosophy he teaches in the Everything Bundle, encouraging engineers to commit early so the tone stays inspiring.
Rhythm guitar uses a 122 active ribbon and a 421. Two mics one sound.
In the mix guitars go to a bus with a UA 175 and a Lang EQ. Darrell prefers movement through automation over heavy compression.
Bass: Simplicity With Purpose
Bass gets a U87 on the cabinet. Sometimes a 47 FET or a 421. Large diaphragm condensers give him the right weight. The DI is used only to support the lows or extend the tone.
In the mix he aligns the DI and amp with Auto Align and occasionally adds a VOG for sub energy.
B3 and Piano: Texture Without Harshness
Darrell’s Leslie trick is worth the entire price of admission. He mics the wood of the cabinet with two U67s. It smooths the midrange and lets him push the organ hard without harshness.
The piano gets two U67s close to the strings with enough edge to cut through loud guitars. The piano bus then gets a Smart C2 in crush mode for extra bite.
Vocals: Shape, Space, and Emotion
Lead vocals get the 47. Backing vocals get the 67. The chain is a UAD 1073 into an 1176 with some gentle shaping and a touch of Sooth for control.
Reverb stays subtle. Delay sits low. Automation brings emotion to the front.
Darrell sometimes adds Overstayer distortion to the lead to push words forward. It gives the performance that little lift without sounding artificial.
Darrell’s Mixing Mindset
Darrell mixes with a strong preference for movement. He uses buses for groups, VCAs for control and parallel chains for energy. Drums get parallel Distressor and Decapitator blends. Guitars get soft compression and EQ. Bass stays supportive. Keys and piano each get their own space.
He listens loud to feel intensity then listens quiet to shape detail. He trims plug ins early so faders sit around zero which keeps automation smooth.
His mastering chain remains gentle. A touch of Pultec sheen a little compression and careful level matching.
Many of these workflows appear exactly as you see them inside the Darrell Thorp Everything Bundle where he demonstrates how he builds a mix from the very first fader move through to the final master. Watching him do it step by step makes everything in this Sunset Sound session click into place.
The Real Magic
The magic of this session is not technical. It is human. Darrell brings the band close together. He commits to tones early. He builds confidence through sound. He encourages energy rather than isolation. He responds to feel not formulas.
It is the same Darrell you see teaching inside the Everything Bundle. Clear humble generous and deeply musical.
That is why Robert Jon and The Wreck sound like Robert Jon and The Wreck.
And that is why Darrell Thorp remains one of the most trusted engineers working today.
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