Kris Crummett
Kris Crummett is an American record producer, audio engineer, multi-instrumentalist, and studio owner based in Portland, Oregon, renowned for his work in post-hardcore, progressive rock, and related genres.[1][2][3] He founded Interlace Audio in 2002, a professional recording studio where he collaborates with engineer Stephan Hawkes on recording, mixing, and mastering projects.[1] Over two decades, Crummett has established himself as a versatile producer known for delivering mixes characterized by exceptional clarity, depth, and dynamics, influencing the sound of modern rock and post-hardcore music.[2][3] Crummett's notable credits include producing and engineering albums for prominent bands such as Dance Gavin Dance, Sleeping with Sirens, Issues, Emarosa, A Lot Like Birds, Crown the Empire, Alesana, In Fear and Faith, Slaves, and solo artist Jonny Craig.[2][3] His early career as a musician in groups like Clarity Process and The Crash Engine informed his production approach, blending technical precision with creative insight.[1] In addition to studio work, Crummett has contributed to educational platforms like Nail the Mix, mentoring emerging engineers, and developed signature audio tools, such as the Kris Crummett Producer Kemper Bundle with STL Tones, featuring profiles from vintage and modern amplifiers.[2][3]Early career
Musical beginnings
Kris Crummett, an American multi-instrumentalist and recording engineer based in Portland, Oregon, began his career immersed in music during the early 2000s.[1] As a multi-instrumentalist, he played in bands such as Clarity Process and The Crash Engine, focusing on personal music projects and developing skills in both performance and basic recording techniques through hands-on experience.[1] His entry into the industry was driven by the vibrant post-hardcore and emo scenes, which emphasized emotional intensity and innovative instrumentation, influencing his foundational approach to music creation.[4] Details on Crummett's formal education remain limited, with no verified records of specific training programs in available sources. He is recognized as self-taught in engineering fundamentals, building expertise through practical involvement in the indie rock and post-hardcore communities around 2000.[2] This period marked his shift from amateur endeavors to professional aspirations, honing a versatile skill set that bridged musicianship and technical production.[4] By 2002, Crummett had transitioned from personal projects to engineering work at Interlace Audio.[1]Initial productions
Kris Crummett began his professional recording career in 2002 in Portland, Oregon, where he initially served as an engineer alongside his father, Bob Crummett, at Interlace Audio, charging modest rates of $25 per hour and equipped with basic digital and analog tracking capabilities including ProTools HD1, ADATs, and DAT. This early involvement allowed him to gain hands-on experience in a supportive, family-run environment focused on regional rock acts.[5] As a freelancer, Crummett produced demos and EPs for emerging bands in the local emo and post-hardcore scenes, leveraging Portland's vibrant underground music community to build his portfolio. One of his first notable projects was co-producing the debut full-length album Evanesce for Anatomy of a Ghost, a post-hardcore outfit, which was released on October 21, 2003, via Fearless Records in partnership with Rise Records. The album's raw energy and intricate arrangements exemplified the genre's sound at the time, helping establish Crummett's reputation for capturing authentic band performances.[6] During 2002–2006, Crummett's output grew substantially, with numerous full-length albums, EPs, and demos completed annually amid the demands of the burgeoning scene. These grassroots efforts often involved working in limited home-based or small studio setups, presenting challenges such as constrained tracking options and tight budgets, which necessitated resourceful engineering to achieve professional results. Connections forged through local performances and labels like Rise Records paved the way for expanded opportunities around 2006, as bands sought his expertise for more polished recordings.[1]Interlace Audio
Founding and evolution
Interlace Audio was founded by Kris Crummett in 2002 in Portland, Oregon, initially operating as a home-based recording studio where he handled early productions for local bands.[1] By the mid-2000s, it had evolved into a dedicated professional facility, serving as Crummett's primary base for producing and engineering albums in the burgeoning post-hardcore and metalcore scenes.[4] Stephan Hawkes joined as a collaborator and later became co-owner, contributing to engineering duties and the studio's operations as a shared recording and mastering venue.[7] The facility has since grown into a key hub for post-hardcore, metalcore, and experimental rock artists, with Crummett and Hawkes collectively overseeing more than 200 projects, including numerous releases through labels such as Rise Records and Epitaph.[7][2] Construction and upgrades have been ongoing for over a decade, beginning around 2013 with the development of specialized spaces; around 2015, a new 1,200-square-foot concrete block structure was largely completed on Crummett's residential property, featuring a live room with 12-degree angled walls for optimal acoustics and a control room with splayed walls and a 20-degree angled ceiling to minimize reflections.[4] Refinements continue, including wood treatments, slat diffusers, and sealed concrete flooring, enhancing its role as a versatile environment for hybrid analog-digital workflows.[4] This evolution from freelance origins to a robust professional operation underscores Interlace Audio's expansion alongside Crummett's career trajectory.Studio operations
Interlace Audio operates as a professional recording studio in Portland, Oregon, located on a residential property roughly 100 feet from Crummett's home, providing a secluded yet accessible environment for artists. The facility covers 1,200 square feet with 16-foot ceilings supported by scissor trusses, including a dedicated live room featuring an angled ceiling and one wall offset by 12 degrees to enhance acoustics for drums and guitars, a trapezoidal control room with splayed sidewalls at 12 degrees and a front ceiling angled approximately 20 degrees for precise monitoring, and isolation booths for vocal and instrumental tracking.[4] The studio's technical setup centers on a Pro Tools-based digital workstation, augmented by analog outboard gear to impart organic tones, especially on drums and bass. Highlights include API preamps for clean signal capture, 1176 and Distressor compressors for dynamic control—such as parallel compression on drum buses—and bass processing via Sadowsky preamps paired with Ampeg SVT-2 amplification, alongside tape saturation from an Ampex ATR-102 machine for mix cohesion. This hybrid configuration enables techniques like parallel drum busing through hardware inserts directly into Pro Tools sessions.[4][8][9] Sessions at Interlace Audio typically involve comprehensive production workflows, from initial tracking in the live room to final mastering, with the studio maintaining a limited schedule to prioritize quality and allow time for remote mastering projects since 2020. Clients initiate bookings via email at kriscrummett@gmail.com, where customized rates for engineering, mixing, or mastering services are discussed and provided based on project scope.[10] In response to industry shifts post-2020, Interlace Audio has incorporated remote collaboration tools, enabling file sharing and virtual oversight for mixing and mastering while maintaining in-person tracking options. The studio remains in a phase of continuous construction and upgrades, a tradition ongoing since its initial build over a decade prior, to refine acoustics and expand capabilities without disrupting operations.[11]Production approach
Recording techniques
Kris Crummett's vocal recording process prioritizes capturing dynamic performances suited to post-hardcore and emo genres, utilizing high-end large-diaphragm condenser microphones such as the Telefunken ELA M 251E to achieve clarity and warmth. He positions these microphones with pop filters placed at a fist's length from the singer's mouth to reduce plosives and ensure clean takes, while selecting room acoustics that enhance natural reverb without excessive harshness. Multiple takes—typically three to four—are recorded to provide options for the most expressive deliveries, allowing for the intense vocal shifts common in metalcore dynamics, with a focus on real-time writing and harmony stacking during sessions to build layered textures organically.[12][13][14] In tracking drums and bass, Crummett emphasizes live room bleed to foster an organic, energetic feel, employing multiple room microphones—including overheads and natural room captures—to document the full spatial impact of performances. Drum kits are meticulously tuned by ear, with microphone placements such as Shure SM57s on snares and Sennheiser MD 421s on toms to balance punch and detail, while bass is often recorded with direct inputs alongside cabinet mics for low-end definition during capture. Outboard preamps and light gain staging are applied in real time to shape low-end punch without heavy processing, ensuring the foundational elements retain their raw power for genres like post-hardcore.[15][14] Crummett promotes full-band live takes whenever feasible to preserve the collective energy vital to metalcore and emo recordings, often tracking rhythm sections together in the live room before isolating overdubs like guitars via double or quad tracking methods. Pre-production planning is integral, involving detailed discussions with artists on song arrangements, instrument tuning, and experimental setups prior to miking, which helps refine structures and anticipate challenges for efficient sessions. This hands-on engineering approach transitions to editing with restraint, where he avoids over-quantization to safeguard the natural groove and human timing of the performances.[2][14]Mixing and mastering style
Kris Crummett's mixing workflow emphasizes analog processing to enhance energy and dynamics, particularly through parallel buses on drums. He routes drum tracks to hardware inserts in Pro Tools, employing Empirical Labs Distressors for aggressive parallel compression with a 20:1 ratio, attack and release settings at 5, and approximately 12 dB of gain reduction to add snap and aggression without relying on digital plugins. This blended parallel signal is then combined with the dry drums to inject excitement while preserving natural transients. For punchy toms and guitars, Crummett applies targeted EQ, such as cutting 5 dB at 3.5 kHz on high toms to reduce harshness, boosting at 6 kHz for presence and 150 Hz for body, alongside panning rack toms to 80% left/right for a stereo image that mirrors the drummer's perspective; saturation via the Vertigo VSM-3 at 50% THD mix further enhances perceived loudness and punch.[8][16] His signature sound achieves "modern polish with old-school soul," blending contemporary clarity with organic warmth, particularly in post-hardcore and experimental rock where balanced low-end supports dynamic arrangements without muddiness. This is evident in multi-layered bass tones using DI and amp tracks, alongside minimal processing to retain raw energy, such as natural tom sustain that breathes with the performance rather than over-sampling for artificial punch. In these genres, Crummett preserves the genre's inherent intensity, ensuring guitars and drums cut through dense mixes while maintaining an authentic, live-like feel.[17] For mastering, Crummett optimizes final loudness using outboard gear like analog tape machines placed early in the master bus chain, before primary compression, to impart subtle saturation and cohesion tailored for streaming platforms. This approach ensures competitive volume levels while avoiding distortion, drawing on hardware limiters and emulations to glue elements together for broad playback compatibility. Genre adaptations influence his techniques, with heavier compression applied during metalcore breakdowns via bus processing to control peaks and heighten impact, contrasted by subtler reverb on emo vocals—such as long-decay, low-level sends with Valhalla VintageVerb—to add atmospheric depth without overwhelming intimacy.[9][18] By the 2020s, Crummett's practice evolved to focus primarily on mastering and select productions, leveraging over two decades of experience to refine post-production for high-impact releases in rock and post-hardcore. This shift allows deeper specialization in loudness and tonal balance, informed by his foundational work on projects like Anatomy of a Ghost, where early mixing techniques laid the groundwork for his enduring analog-digital hybrid style.[2]Notable productions
Breakthrough albums
Kris Crummett's production work on Sleeping With Sirens' second album, Let's Cheers to This (2011), marked a significant milestone in his career, as he handled full production, engineering, mixing, and mastering at Interlace Audio. Released through Rise Records, the album featured the band's evolving post-hardcore sound with emo and metal influences, and Crummett's involvement helped propel the lead single "If You Can't Hang" to commercial success, earning RIAA Platinum certification in 2022 for 1,000,000 units sold in the United States.[19] This project showcased Crummett's ability to balance raw energy with polished clarity, particularly through techniques like parallel busing on drums to enhance power and dynamics without sacrificing aggression. In 2014, Crummett produced Issues' self-titled debut album, collaborating with co-producers Matt Malpass and the band's Tyler "Scout" Acord, which debuted at number 9 on the Billboard 200 chart after selling over 20,000 copies in its first week. The record blended metalcore with R&B and electronic elements, highlighting Crummett's skill in fusing genres while maintaining a cohesive, radio-friendly edge for the Rise Records roster. This breakthrough solidified his reputation for elevating emerging acts within the post-hardcore scene. That same year, Crummett mixed Crown The Empire's sophomore album The Resistance: Rise of the Runaways, produced primarily by Dan Korneff, which peaked at number 7 on the Billboard 200. The album emphasized epic breakdowns and orchestral flourishes in its metalcore framework, with Crummett's mixing contributing to its expansive, cinematic production that resonated with fans of the genre. These 2014 releases exemplified Crummett's growing collaborations with labels like Epitaph and Sony Japan, as he amassed over 200 production credits by the mid-2010s, helping define a polished post-hardcore aesthetic characterized by tight instrumentation and emotive vocal deliveries.Key collaborations
Kris Crummett's longest-standing partnership is with the post-hardcore band Dance Gavin Dance, whom he has produced or co-produced for every studio album since their 2007 debut Downtown Battle Mountain. This ongoing collaboration has yielded releases such as Mothership (2016) and Jackpot Juicer (2022), with the latter reaching No. 8 on the Billboard 200.[20][1] Among his repeat clients, Crummett has worked extensively with Alesana on albums including The Emptiness (2010) and A Place Where the Sun Is Silent (2011), contributing to their evolution within the emo and metalcore scenes.[21] His collaborations extend to other acts like Sleeping With Sirens and A Lot Like Birds, spanning emo to experimental rock and enabling diverse sonic explorations.[2] Crummett's ties to major labels underscore his industry footprint, with primary work for Rise Records on projects like Emarosa's Relativity (2008) and Sleeping With Sirens' early releases, as well as Epitaph Records for Alesana's later output.[1] He has also produced for international acts affiliated with Sony Japan, such as Survive Said The Prophet's Inside Your Head (2020).[1] Central to Crummett's philosophy is a deeply collaborative process, where he builds trust through pre-production refinement, offering creative direction and emotional insight to support iterative projects and artistic risks like genre blending.[2] This approach is amplified by his frequent co-engineering with Stephan Hawkes at Interlace Audio, fostering a supportive environment for bands to experiment.[1] Over two decades, Crummett has amassed an extensive discography of productions in rock and alternative music.[2]Commercial achievements
Chart performance
Kris Crummett's production contributions have propelled numerous albums to prominent positions on the Billboard 200 and genre-specific charts, underscoring his impact within post-hardcore and metalcore scenes. His work often results in strong debuts, driven by robust sales and streaming performance that secure placements on rock-oriented rankings. Representative examples of chart success include Crown The Empire's The Resistance: Rise of the Runaways (2014), which debuted at No. 7 on the Billboard 200, marking a career high for the band.[22] Similarly, Dance Gavin Dance's Jackpot Juicer (2022) entered at No. 8, while their earlier release Mothership (2016) peaked at No. 13.[20] Sleeping With Sirens' Feel (2013) achieved an even higher debut at No. 3.[23] These albums also demonstrated dominance on subgenre charts, such as the Alternative Albums and Hard Rock Albums tallies. For instance, Issues' self-titled debut (2014) launched at No. 2 on the Alternative Albums chart and No. 1 on Hard Rock Albums.[24]| Artist | Album | Year | Billboard 200 Peak | Other Notable Peaks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crown The Empire | The Resistance: Rise of the Runaways | 2014 | 7 | No. 1 Top Rock Albums[25] |
| Issues | Issues | 2014 | 9 | No. 2 Alternative Albums, No. 1 Hard Rock Albums[24] |
| Sleeping With Sirens | Feel | 2013 | 3 | No. 2 Independent Albums[23] |
| Dance Gavin Dance | Mothership | 2016 | 13 | No. 1 Independent Albums[20] |
| Dance Gavin Dance | Jackpot Juicer | 2022 | 8 | No. 1 Top Rock Albums, No. 1 Alternative Albums[20] |