UK - Producer, recording engineer and mixing engineer, Freemonk, has enhanced his nearfield monitoring setup with the addition of a Chord Electronics Alto. Freemonk is using the headphone and nearfield monitor amp to drive the NS-10 monitors at Friary Studios.
When it comes to creating music, Freemonk prefers to work with an analogue workflow, and the historic equipment at Friary Studios is a testament to this. While choosing to work in the analogue domain provides its fair share of challenges, the results that he has achieved in everything from jazz to hip hop are testament to a producer at the top of his craft.
He discovered Chord Electronics after talking with fellow producer MsM. “Chord Electronics came into my life with a typical nerd chat with MsM, who is a fantastic mixing engineer based in London,” he recalled. “I'd noticed he was using Chord Electronics and I asked him what it was. He gave a very MsM answer of ‘just go try it’.”
Freemonk followed that advice and the Alto quickly became the latest addition to the workflow at The Friary, put to use driving the NS-10 nearfield monitors. “I rely on NS-10s quite heavily during tracking, production and mixing,” explained Freemonk. “I think they're horrible, but they do what they're supposed to, and your ears just get used to hearing certain things on them that are out of place or that need adding. The Alto was so small, and being very honest I was quite sceptical about how it could provide enough power for the NS-10s and have headphone amps. But I had a listen, and it took me down a rabbit hole of wanting Chord everywhere.”
The Alto offers 50 watts per channel for nearfield monitoring, plus enough drive for its four headphone outputs simultaneously, via one front-panel 3.5 mm, one 4.4 mm Pentaconn and two 6.35 mm outputs. It relies on Chord Electronics’ proprietary ULTIMA amplifier topology. This features advanced dual-feedforward error-correction technology, which monitors then immediately corrects signals before the output stage, for astonishing accuracy and transparency.
“It's opened the sound up of the NS-10s, it's not just about the frequency spectrum it also somehow gave them more depth,” he revealed. “I realised that the amp I was using before was just squashing the sound so that was a real eye-opener. Before I would always switch the NS-10s off when the artists were listening back, but now sometimes I leave them on.”
A further advantage that the producer has found has been with the portable nature of the Alto. “The fact it's portable as well with something like that is just is brilliant,” he stated.