Nova Studios: A Surprising Destination Studio Fills a Void for New York City
ELTINGVILLE, STATEN ISLAND: For recording artists, a stay at a destination studio has long stood as the ultimate arrival.
Designed to support creativity not just with gear and a tuned room, but via an immersive atmosphere where working, living and rejuvenation all converge in one location, destination studios are something to aspire to: Before you can hone your craft at one, you need to earn the privilege.
There are plenty of artists in the New York City area – and worldwide for that matter — who have very much won the right to get away for a few days and focus purely on the act of music creation. But circumstances keep on conspiring to keep them sweating it out in the heat of the city: already a relative scarcity, the ranks of destination studios have, not surprisingly, been thinned.
In the Northeast, Woodstock’s Bearsville is long gone. The stunning Allaire Studios, in Shokan, NY, left us all too soon with its closure in 2008. And while numerous other recording lodges beckon throughout the region — dotting the banks of the Hudson River, the shores of New York lakes, Long Island Sound, and Catskill mountaintops — they can take significant time and effort to reach.
What if there were a destination studio available to the region that magically erased the compromises – one that offered an isolated environment, great natural beauty, distinctive acoustic spaces, sharp engineering talent, affordability, and was somehow within a stone’s throw of midtown?
In fact, all of the above attributes describe Nova Studios in Eltingville, a quiet hamlet on Staten Island’s South Shore. Formerly a composing and audio post facility for the private use of an accomplished filmmaking family, Nova has transitioned to a commercial recording and mixing studio. For everyone in search of headroom and fresh space to create, this development seems to be a very good thing.
A Different Design
Situated within one of two spacious homes on the property, all it takes is one step inside Nova Studios to dispel any preconceived notions you may have about Staten Island. The view outside the expansive glass wall of windows in the living room – which has been transformed into the studio’s main live room – provides a breathtaking panorama of Raritan Bay. Step onto the huge, private back lawn, and a unique angle on northern Monmouth County, NJ, awaits across the wide waters.
If you’re staying overnight, or for a week or a month, your bags will head upstairs to one of several well-appointed rooms in the house. A live-in cook is available to prepare meals in the large kitchen, or band members are welcome to decompress there with some culinary prep time themselves (and many do).
Owned and operated by filmmaker and music enthusiast Frankie Nasso, helming a recording studio is nothing short of a dream come true – he’s created an environment where passions for both the visual and acoustic arts can flourish. On the all-important engineering side, the skills of Ryan Kelly or The Jerry Farley will be at your disposal (freelance engineers are welcome as well, and an assistant is provided) overseen by studio manager Stephen Hennig.
For Kelly, who began helping with Nova Studios’ transformation into a commercial facility in 2010, the facility now represents a rare one-stop shop for musicians and producers.
“I think it’s one of the few destination places where you can do it all,” he says. “You can come here, do the production, mixing, and Jerry’s even done mastering. It can be nice to do a record at a studio in the city – you walk outside and you’re in the middle of Times Square – but if you want to focus 100% on a record and still actually be in NYC, that’s one of the unique things about working here.”
A Seattle native, Kelly graduated from Full Sail, then moved to NYC six years ago and kicked off a globe-hopping engineering career (Beyoncé, Matisyahu, Nico Muhly, Opeth, Slash, Valgeir Sigurðsson, Tom Morello) that exposed him to best studio practices, worldwide. When Nova Studios’ owners reached out to Kelly to help out with the redesign, he was ready with ideas that would simultaneously emphasize flexibility, reliability, and 21st Century workflow.
“I think we get too caught up on trying to recreate great gear designs of the past,” Kelly says, “I love the Beatles as much as the next person, but I think they would have appreciated having Pro Tools and the capabilities we have now available to them. We should be trying to push forward to create new sounds, and trying to make records that people want to recreate in the next generation.”
A Uniquely Inspiring Live Room
While Nova Studios offers a number of fully networked spaces for tracking, the epicenter of the facility’s groundbreaking aspirations is undoubtedly the aforementioned living room. Not only does it sport highly inspirational views, but it also has a variety of reverberant surfaces and sectors within its 1,000 square feet — a combination that distinguishes it as one of the region’s standout recording spaces.
Whole bands, and up to a 10-piece orchestral recording ensemble, can comfortably track together in the living room, and clients including Harry Belafonte, Katherine McPhee, Winds of Plague, Ryann, The OCC Band (featuring Paul Teutul Sr. of the Discovery Channel’s “American Chopper”), Ashanti (voiceover work); Victor Ortiz with Bobby Cruz y Richie Ray, Gravesend, HUNG, IKILLYA, Up for Nothing, The Last Stand, and Brazilian singer/songwriter Julia Mallmann have done just that.
But its standout strength may be for capturing drums: By moving the kit or the microphones, anything from a Bonham-sized earthquake to airtight close-miked sounds are available.
“There are so many sweet spots,” Farley notes. “We can put a mic next to the stone fireplace, or next to the bar with its dark redwood and stained glass window. The open kitchen is adjacent to the living room, and that’s got tile and marble that’s reflective in such a good way with drums.
“And I’ve never had a complaint about the view. Watching storms roll in on the water is beautiful. If it’s early you can see the sky turn orange with the sunrise, or later on you can literally catch the moon coming up over the water. To feel inspired by that kind of view is an incredible experience for any musician.”
Modern Gear, Modern Sounds
Follow the living room’s microphone tie lines and they lead you to the small but acoustically accurate control room downstairs, where the honed workflow enables Kelly and Farley to work quickly and transparently as their clients create. A Digidesign C24 control surface runs Pro Tools 10, complemented by Adam S3A stereo monitors or a Genelec 5.1 8130 monitor system for composers, TV and film work.
Inside the box, an extremely comprehensive array of plugins and virtual instruments are onboard the Apple 8-core MacPro. Meanwhile, a solid mic locker – including a Bock Audio 251, a pair of Royer 122V’s, two DPA 4011’s, plus Neumann KM184’s and U87’s – are on hand to capture what happens on the outside. The owner’s personal collection of classic electric guitars is on hand for the six-stringers, and a Tama Birch-Bubinga drumkit are part of the available instrument selection.
Following the thinking at Manhattan facilities like Germano Studios and Quad Studios’ Q1, the outboard gear puts a heavy emphasis on modern boxes. Kelly specified pieces such as the Presonus Anthony DeMaria Labs 600, Vintech Audio 473, Milennia HV3D, Dangerous 2-Bus LT, and Chandler Limited Germanium Compressors, and a Focusrite Liquid Channel as input and sound-shaping options. The Manley Massive Passive, Manley Stereo Pultec EQ, and A Designs Hammer EQ are all in the producer’s rack as well.
“I hate it when studios skimp on EQ’s – you may find a Pultec, but outside of that you rarely find a cool equalizer,” he states. “The Liquid Channel is interesting, because with that piece – and plugins in general – you can get too caught up in the way something is supposed to sound. Forget what the knobs say or what it’s allegedly emulating. Instead, take the time to pull up a good sound – my favorite thing is using equipment for what people wouldn’t usually think to use it for.”
On top of the producer’s desk sits a tightly-clustered treasure trove of amp heads for guitarists and bassists, including an Ampeg SVT VR, VOX AC30H2, Randall RM100, Peavey 5150 II, Peavey Classic 50, and Sovtek Mig-50. All are quickly selectable via a custom amp patch bay that Kelly made, for quick switching between the Marshall 4×12 Guitar Cabinets, Madison Custom 4×12 Guitar Cabinet, and Ampeg 4×10 Bass Cabinet that are in the adjacent isolated recording space, upstairs in the live room, or anywhere else in the house that sounds good.
“Everything here is wired so that you can go from getting an idea to recording it as soon as possible,” says Farley. “We’ve got a Radial Engineering splitter, so we can run up to seven amps and four cabinets simultaneously – that’s big for my guitar sounds. This way we can make changes quickly while we’re in front of the monitors: your mix is in phase, the compression is set, and you can hear the changes in real time.”
So Near, and Yet so Near
If you’re curious about checking Nova Studios out, access is a snap. For those who are blissfully free of a car, pickup from the Staten Island Ferry (about a 25-minute drive) or the nearby Staten Island Railway can be arranged. Additionally, the Manhattan-originating X1 Express Bus stops two blocks from the house. And for those who want to travel like a VIP, Nova can also provide transportation in their Mercedes Sprinter “JET VAN,” a custom-outfitted BatMobile of sorts, equipped with Direct TV Satellite, Blue Ray DVD Player; Wi-Fi, and a mini-fridge packed with whatever their guests request.
All it takes to get out here is an open mind – enacting a mild sense of adventure will lead artists and producers to a place that they’ll almost surely consider for their next intensive project. Daily and weekly studio rates are approximately half of the standard ticket in Manhattan and Brooklyn, and the optional living accommodations are equally cost-effective.
“I hadn’t been out to Staten Island, myself, before I started working here, and it does feel like a mystery destination,” Kelly says. “In LA, no one thinks twice about sitting in traffic 45 minutes to get down the block, but here in NYC people can think a 30-minute trip is like going to a different planet. So the challenge we face is really just getting people out here to see the studio,”
A Brooklyn native who attended high school in Staten Island, Jerry Farley understands the stigma that often accompanies New York City’s southernmost borough, but emphasizes the advantages to be had for those who make the short trip down to SI. “It feels like you’re not in NYC, yet you are,” he adds. “I have plenty of studios available to me where I can be part of the hustle and bustle if I want. This studio has bird’s nests and a bay outside, instead of a Broadway Theater. But I didn’t have to travel upstate – we’re in NYC.”
Ensconced in a little pocket of paradise, Nova Studios gives artists an enticing new escape hatch. The result is the kind of contradiction everyone can welcome – a creative place that feels like it’s a world away, without ever having to leave town. “We’re not struggling to make the rent here, so everyone can relax,” Farley says. “The time is spent on the music.”
— David Weiss
Visit Nova Studios on the web, or email them at info@novaent.net
Jason Lekberg
June 18, 2012 at 7:49 pm (12 years ago)This studio is a dream come true. IKILLYA were honored to record our debut here and we’re already making plans to come back and record the follow up.
SPACEBEARD
June 19, 2012 at 12:20 am (12 years ago)SPACEBEARD recorded the majority of its second album “Listening” with The Jerry Farley from Dec 2010 through June 2011 (all Drums, all lead and backup vox and some Acoustic Guitars) and it was easily the best recording experience any one of us as musicians have ever had. We’ll be recording album #3 there for sure. If this article wasn’t convincing enough to look into Nova read it again a few more times and get convinced. You won’t regret it.
Still not convinced?? Then just “Listen”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbmBS07C6L8