2 – You’ve developed a signature series of plugins with Boz Digital Labs that emulated several of your hardware pieces that aren’t widely emulated. With so many companies making analog emulations, what was it about Boz Digital Labs that attracted you for this collaboration?

David: Boz has great technical expertise in regards to writing code and hearing sound. He was an obvious pick to reproduce what I heard in my head sonically. I knew what the originals sounded like and Boz emulated them to a tee.

3 – You’ve said that you hear drums differently than other people, and try to bring out the power and presence that you hear in your head with your productions. Have you been able to achieve the sound in your head, or are you still chasing it?

David: I chase sound every day, especially drums. I spent my formative years playing with and admiring Billy Cobham and Lenny White, who happen to be in the top tier in the world. I recognized drums at a very early age. The key for me is to not have the same sounding kit. I feel that my records have variation in sound, I am not sure everyone hears that in my records. I always try to give an artist an individual sound. All of this depends on the players, the technique, and the way the instruments speak. It’s so hard to find a full band of great players these days. It really is a shame because that is really my world, live playing with real instruments played right. Chasing sound is always elusive, chasing great songs is even more difficult.

In an interview with Sonic Scoop, you mentioned that you want to know what the song is about, and that you try to pay close attention to the lyrics. One would assume by this that you try to convey the emotion of the lyrics into your mixes. With that in mind, has there ever been a set of lyrics that inspired you to go against your initial instinct and made you change your course on what you felt the mix needed?

David: I have to know lyrics. Whether mixing, writing, or producing, I have to know sentiment and implication. I have had many disagreements with bands that try to bury their singer in a mire of guitars and keys, to try and wash melodies away, to lose notions of greatness lyrically. I do not subscribe to the kitchen sink approach, it just shows musical insecurity and lack of arrangement. I change course all the time on what I am given and what I end up doing. It works most of the time once the egos leave the song, including mine, and we can build it back up once we serve the melody and the lyric sentiment.

5 – What is the most valuable lesson you had to learn the hard way?

David: The most valuable lesson I have learned is patience with myself and with the artist and the song. I try to separate them all at first, slow down the process, think it through. I also am at a point where I now have more time to experiment. I do not make 10 records a year, I make 5 or 6. I have also learned to respect what other people do and learn from every person and every experience. While I am so proud of the records I have done I know there is so much more for me to learn. I would say the most valuable lesson I have learned is patience with artists and their music, and their playing ability.