Today Dudzic is an A-list producer and sound designer whose work graces movie trailers for Inferno, Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol, Suicide Squad, Terminator: Genesis, and countless others. You hear his sounds on virtually every TV network and major cable channel. He also creates sample libraries used by composers, producers, and DJs worldwide-including the PON Sound Set for TASCAM’s MiNiSTUDIO audio interface.
To work at this stratospheric level, Dudzic became a grandmaster of field recording, and he chooses his tools with care. Among his most important tools are TASCAM’s DR-22WL, DR-44WL, DR-100mkIII, and DR-680mkII field recorders. “I used to record with the original DR-680 8-track field recorder, and now my main recorder is the DR-680mkII but I also use the DR-44WL a lot,” he begins. “I use the DR-680mkII in the studio, as well. I often need to record quickly, and with the DR-680mkII, I can plug six microphones into the back, and my whole setup takes ten minutes.”
Sound designers like Dudzic constantly seek interesting sounds. “I’ll record sounds at a junkyard with the DR-44WL,” he relates. “I like to go out to garage sales and find crazy weird stuff for almost nothing, bring it home and, record it with the DR-680mkII. I might buy an old phone for five bucks, and a couple of months later the ring of that phone is on a movie trailer. TASCAM recorders are phenomenal! They sound really good, and they’re built like a tank.”
Portability is essential for a field recorder. “The DR-44WL and DR-100mkIII are very small, and the DR-680mkII is compact, too,” reports Dudzic. “When I travel, a TASCAM recorder is always with me because you never know when you’ll want to record. The WR-44WL is handheld, and it records at 96 kHz and 24 bits. I can use the built-in microphones and plug two more mics into the back. I often carry the DR-680mkII with me in a small bag when I travel so I can record six inputs at up to 192 kHz.”
Dudzic often uses the four-channel DR-44WL to record in multitrack, as well. “At a construction site, I set the DR-44WL in the front seat of the car and plugged in a shotgun microphone,” he recalls. “I pointed the shotgun mic directly at a machine that was breaking glass, so I have the direct sound of breaking glass, plus the ambient sounds from the recorder’s stereo mics. In my editor, I could individually control the levels of the direct and ambient sounds. The recording has a very nice presence, and the recording quality from the DR-44WL is spectacular.”
Another Dudzic technique involves contact mics. “We know how a door sounds when you move the knob, close it, and pull your key,”
he notes. “But I put a contact microphone on the lock and attached a second contact mic to the wood of the door, capturing the little sounds you don’t normally hear.
The DR-44WL stereo microphones record the snap when you’re locking the door. I bring these sounds together, and people can experience details they’ve never heard before.”
In the studio, Dudzic relies on the DR-680mkII. “I keep it on the left side of my design table,” he explains, “and I record with, say, a condenser mic, a stereo pair of studio mics, a shotgun mic, and a contact mic. The recorder controls are next to my left hand, which is more convenient than recording to the computer. When I’m done, I pop out the SD card, put it in my card reader, and bring the tracks into my editor, and I have all tracks labeled, lined up, and ready to go.”
Price is another reason Dudzic appreciates the TASCAM field recorders. “They’re inexpensive, so I feel comfortable when I go into the field,” he confirms. “Accidents happen in field recording; it’s part of the business. But the TASCAM recorders are affordable, so when something happens, you can get another one. I’m a huge fan.”
After rhapsodizing about the DR-680mkII and DR-44WR, Dudzic pauses and changes the subject. “Have you heard the new TASCAM TH-MX2 headphones?” he inquires. “You’re going to be blown away! The frequency response is 15 to 22 kHz-phenomenal. I’m using them for my field recording, and they’re really cool. You have to try them!”