Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Joe Barresi
View on Wikipedia
Joe Barresi (nicknamed "Evil Joe") is an American record engineer and producer who has worked with Kyuss, The Melvins, Tool, Chevelle, Apocalyptica, Queens of the Stone Age,[1] Coheed and Cambria, Tomahawk, L7, The Jesus Lizard, Parkway Drive, New Model Army, Bad Religion, Pennywise, Judas Priest, Soundgarden, Stam1na, Weezer, Avenged Sevenfold, Nine Inch Nails, and Slipknot.[2][3]
Early life and education
[edit]Joe Barresi started playing guitar when he was seven, and played in local bands in and around his home in New York City and Florida. He studied classical guitar and music theory at the University of South Florida before graduating from the University of Miami, where he also studied piano and music engineering.[4] As a student, Barresi began recording and developing local bands in Miami.
Career
[edit]After graduating from college, Barresi moved to Los Angeles and began working his way up the ladder by working at numerous local studios—a move that helped him gain an understanding of the different consoles, rooms and clientele at the various studios.[5] His first big break came when he engineered a demo for producer GGGarth Richardson. He went on to work with a number of well-respected producers including David Kahne, Michael Beinhorn, Rob Cavallo and Sylvia Massy.
Barresi has mixed tracks for Monster Magnet, Fair to Midland, Hole, Veruca Salt, Weezer, Rancid, Bauhaus, Anthrax, Skunk Anansie, and Alpha Galates.[6]
Eventually Barresi gained enough experience and insight that he began producing records. He has produced or co-produced tracks for Clutch, Buckcherry, Fu Manchu, Loudmouth, The Melvins, L7 and others. He also produced the debut album by Queens of the Stone Age which, at the time, did not have a record deal.[7] That album was eventually released by indie label Loose Groove. The self-titled album garnered attention from press, and the band soon landed a deal with Interscope Records. Barresi then engineered and mixed the Tool album 10,000 Days,[8] a job he received after a recommendation from Buzz Osborne of The Melvins[9] In 2011, he worked with the band Stam1na in Finland. Barresi engineered and mixed Tool's 2019 album Fear Inoculum[10][11][12][13]
Today Joe Barresi has his own home studio JHOC (Joe's House of Compression) and is famous for developing certain recording techniques.[14]
Discography
[edit]As producer
[edit]As mixer
[edit]As engineer
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Recording Queens Of The Stone Age". www.soundonsound.com. Retrieved June 21, 2021.
- ^ "Joe Barresi". GRAMMY.com. November 23, 2020. Retrieved June 20, 2021.
- ^ "Joe Barresi | Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved June 20, 2021.
- ^ "Joe Barresi: Hear No Evil". headlinermagazine.net. Retrieved June 21, 2021.
- ^ "Barresi Kicks It Old School". ProSoundNetwork.com. May 21, 2014. Retrieved June 20, 2021.
- ^ "Tool Nearly Burned Down Their Studio While Recording Fear Inoculum". Kerrang!. October 25, 2019. Retrieved June 20, 2021.
- ^ "In The Studio With…Joe Barresi — The Mixing Mindset for QOTSA, Chevelle & Bad Religion". sonicscoop.com. June 16, 2013. Retrieved June 21, 2021.
- ^ "KERRANG! Inside Track: Tool: The Making of Fear Inoculum on Apple Podcasts". Apple Podcasts. Retrieved June 28, 2021.
- ^ "The Making of Tool's "10,000 Days"". July 2006.
- ^ "Adam Jones on Instagram: "~ Preproduction Gigahorse 📀💣 ~ Excited to be working again w the Immortan Evil Joe Barresi @eviljoebarresi *however our first choice was…"". Instagram. Archived from the original on December 24, 2021.
- ^ "Tool Reveal 'Fear Inoculum' Album Art, New Song Coming Wednesday". Loudwire. August 5, 2019.
- ^ "McDonough Management - Joe Barresi". www.mcdman.com.
- ^ Schaffner, Lauryn (October 25, 2019). "Tool Started a Fire in the Studio While Recording 'Fear Inoculum'". Loudwire. Retrieved June 20, 2021.
- ^ "Recording Queens Of The Stone Age". www.soundonsound.com. Retrieved June 28, 2021.
- ^ Childers, Chad (January 8, 2021). "Chevelle Drop Aggressive 'Self Destructor,' Announce New Album". Loudwire. Retrieved January 11, 2021.
- ^ "Stam1nan talvella ilmestyvä albumi tehdään yhteistyössä huipputuottaja Joe Barresin kanssa – Dome.fi". dome.fi. Archived from the original on July 12, 2012. Retrieved May 22, 2022.
- ^ "Chevelle Debuts 'Rivers' From 'Really Heavy' New Album 'The North Corridor': Exclusive". Billboard. Retrieved June 21, 2021.
External links
[edit]- Joe Barresi website
- McDonough Management
- Platinum Samples - Joe Barresi "Evil Drums"
- SF-EP-050 - Joe Barresi - Interview Special Features Podcast, March 18, 2015
Joe Barresi
View on GrokipediaEarly years
Childhood and musical beginnings
Joe Barresi was born in New York City.[6] He spent his early years in both New York City and Florida, where the local music scene began to shape his interests.[3] At the age of seven, Barresi began playing guitar, initially self-taught and drawn to the sounds of classic rock.[3] His early influences included guitarists like Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin, whose innovative techniques inspired Barresi's approach to the instrument.[7] He soon joined local bands in the areas around his homes, performing and honing his skills amid a supportive environment that fostered creativity.[8] Barresi's exposure to music started even earlier through his grandmother's AM radio on the mantlepiece, where he first encountered pop acts like The Partridge Family, sparking a lifelong passion for melody and sound.[9] Additional inspirations came from neoclassical guitarists such as Randy Rhoads and Uli Roth, whose blend of classical elements with rock appealed to his developing ear.[9] During his teenage years, Barresi continued to experiment with music, acquiring gear like an original Ibanez Tube Screamer pedal at age 17 to explore tonal possibilities.[7] This period of personal exploration laid the groundwork for his interest in recording, though he would later pursue formal studies in music.Education and initial recordings
Barresi began his formal musical education at the University of South Florida, where he studied classical guitar, music theory, and music engineering through the university's recording program focused on electronic music.[10][11] During this time, he gained initial hands-on experience by recording local bands using the school's free studio access, honing his technical skills in a controlled academic setting.[10] He later transferred to the University of Miami, pursuing advanced studies in piano, classical guitar, music theory, and audio engineering.[9][3] As a student there, Barresi continued building his expertise by booking extensive studio sessions, often bringing in friends and local musicians to maximize available time and experiment with recording techniques.[10] This period allowed him to produce demo tapes for unsigned acts in the Miami area, focusing on capturing raw performances and developing his approach to sound engineering.[12] Barresi graduated from the University of Miami with a foundation in music engineering and performance, having accumulated practical experience through numerous student-led projects in university studios.[9] These early endeavors emphasized skill-building in multitrack recording, mixing, and collaboration, setting the stage for his professional transition while still immersed in an educational environment.[10]Professional career
Early work in Los Angeles
After graduating from the University of Miami with a degree in music engineering in the late 1980s, Barresi relocated to Los Angeles to launch his professional career in the recording industry.[3] In the city, he took on assistant engineering roles at key studios, including freelancing at Sound City Studios in the early 1990s, A&M Studios, and Ocean Way Recording.[12][13][14] These entry-level positions exposed him to the fast-paced LA music scene, where he assisted on sessions across rock and alternative genres. Barresi gained valuable mentorship while engineering under producers like GGGarth Richardson at A&M Studios on projects such as L7's Hungry for Stink (1994) and the Melvins' Stoner Witch (1994), as well as David Kahne on various recordings.[13][3] His first notable credit came as assistant engineer on Tom Petty's Wildflowers (1994), primarily recorded at Sound City Studios under Rick Rubin and Jim Scott.[15] These early experiences allowed Barresi to develop his technical expertise through hands-on work in professional environments, contributing to alternative rock sessions and learning the intricacies of studio operations in Los Angeles.[15]Breakthrough with stoner rock and alternative bands
Barresi's involvement in the stoner rock genre began in earnest with his engineering and mixing duties on Kyuss's seminal album Blues for the Red Sun in 1992, recorded at Sound City Studios in Van Nuys, California. As a freelance assistant at the time, he stepped in when the original engineer became unavailable, capturing the band's raw, desert-infused heavy riffs and atmospheric grooves under producer Chris Goss. This project marked a pivotal moment, helping define the sludgy, psychedelic sound that would characterize stoner rock, with Barresi's precise handling of the album's dynamic range and low-end frequencies contributing to its enduring influence on the underground scene.[5] Building on this foundation, Barresi took on a more prominent role with Kyuss's follow-up Welcome to Sky Valley in 1994, where he mixed the tracks at NRG Studios in North Hollywood, enhancing the band's evolving sonic palette of fuzz-laden guitars and expansive jams. Produced by Kyuss and Chris Goss, the album's production emphasized live-room energy and tape saturation techniques that Barresi refined during mixing, solidifying his reputation for amplifying the genre's heavy, immersive aesthetics. These Kyuss collaborations, rooted in his early Los Angeles studio experience, positioned Barresi as a go-to engineer for bands seeking a visceral, unpolished rock sound.[16] Barresi extended his impact into the mid-1990s alternative and stoner scenes through mixing Stoner Witch for the Melvins in 1994 at A&M Studios, where he recorded and balanced the band's experimental sludge metal with pounding rhythms and distorted textures, co-engineering alongside Garth Richardson. He also contributed as recording engineer and mixer on several tracks of L7's Hungry for Stink that same year, aiding the all-female punk quartet in channeling their aggressive grunge-punk energy with sharp, high-fidelity aggression. Additionally, his mixing work on The Jesus Lizard's Shot in 1996 and select tracks from Blue in 1998 captured the noise rock outfit's chaotic intensity, emphasizing raw vocal ferocity and abrasive instrumentation. These projects, including his co-production and mixing on Queens of the Stone Age's self-titled debut in 1998—which infused stoner rock with a tighter, modern edge—earned Barresi acclaim in underground circles for his ability to preserve artistic authenticity while elevating sonic clarity.[10][17][18][16] Through these 1990s efforts, Barresi transitioned from assistant roles to creative collaborator, gaining recognition among stoner and alternative acts for his expertise in heavy rock production that prioritized groove and texture over polish, paving the way for his broader industry profile.[19]Major collaborations and recent projects
Barresi's collaboration with Tool marked a significant milestone in his career, beginning with the engineering and mixing of their 2006 album 10,000 Days. Recommended by Melvins guitarist Buzz Osborne, Barresi spent a month in rehearsals to grasp the band's intricate time signatures and accents, which initially overwhelmed him—particularly drummer Danny Carey's performances, which he mistook for multiple players due to the integration of live electronic and acoustic elements via Mandala pads.[20] The absence of a click track further complicated capturing the band's synchronized live energy, requiring detailed note-taking to refine arrangements during recording at Grandmaster Recorders and O'Henry Studios.[21] This work on 10,000 Days, which debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 and earned a Grammy for Best Recording Package, showcased Barresi's ability to navigate Tool's progressive complexity.[22] Barresi reunited with Tool for their 2019 album Fear Inoculum, handling production, engineering, and mixing amid the band's extended creative process. The arrangements demanded extensive overdubbing, including syncing multiple Boss DD-3 delay units to Carey's drums across sections without a click, while guitarist Adam Jones' tones involved layering up to five amps per take—such as Diezel VH4 for saturation and Marshall for clarity—along with a stereo-miked Leslie cabinet for added depth.[23] These challenges were compounded by experimental effects like reverbs and feedback captured live in front of amps, contributing to the album's immersive, 86-minute runtime that topped the Billboard 200 upon release.[24] In 2007, Barresi mixed Queens of the Stone Age's Era Vulgaris, working closely with Josh Homme in Finland before finalizing mixes at his California studio. The album's eclectic tracks, including the hit "Make It Wit Chu" which peaked at number one on Canada's rock radio chart, benefited from Barresi's handling of the band's genre-blending rock elements.[25][22] This partnership extended his reputation for elevating alternative rock productions following earlier stoner rock credits. Barresi's recent projects reflect ongoing ties with heavy rock acts. He produced Chevelle's 2016 album The North Corridor, recorded primarily in Los Angeles, where his spacious yet punchy sound—evident in its number one debut on Billboard's Top Rock Albums chart—amplified the band's heaviest material to date.[26][25] For Soundgarden's 2012 reunion album King Animal, Barresi provided additional production and mixing, enhancing tracks like "Been Away Too Long" to secure a number two spot on the Billboard 200 and praise as one of the year's top albums by Total Guitar.[25][22] He mixed Slipknot's 2019 release We Are Not Your Kind, co-produced by Greg Fidelman, delivering a brooding intensity that propelled it to number one on the Billboard 200 with over 118,000 first-week units.[27][28] Barresi also produced, engineered, and mixed Slipknot's 2022 album The End, So Far, which earned Grammy nominations for engineering and production.[29] Most recently, Barresi co-produced Avenged Sevenfold's 2023 album Life Is But a Dream... over four years in Los Angeles, blending philosophical themes with experimental metal arrangements mixed by Andy Wallace, resulting in a top-five Billboard 200 debut.[30][31]Recording philosophy and techniques
Studio ownership and setup
In 2008, Joe Barresi established his personal recording studio, Joe's House of Compression (JHOC), in Pasadena, California, transforming a space previously occupied by the late artist-songwriter Kevin Gilbert into a dedicated production facility.[32] By early 2008, Barresi had fully refurbished the interior, relocating his extensive collection of recording equipment to the site and installing a 72-channel SSL 4000E series console as the centerpiece of the control room.[33] This ownership marked a significant shift toward independence in his career, enabling him to maintain complete creative control over projects without the constraints of commercial studio schedules or shared resources.[34] JHOC is equipped for high-fidelity rock and metal recordings, featuring two complete Pro Tools HD systems for digital integration alongside racks of vintage and modern outboard gear, including compressors, preamps, and effects processors.[33] The studio includes multiple isolation rooms designed to capture live band performances with minimal bleed, complemented by Barresi's vast analog arsenal—such as over 75 guitar amplifiers, 45 guitars, and hundreds of pedals—that allows for experimental sound design tailored to each artist's needs.[34] This setup has been instrumental in producing and mixing notable albums, including portions of Tool's 2019 release Fear Inoculum, where the space facilitated intricate layering of guitars and bass through its hybrid capabilities.[35] Over time, JHOC has evolved through targeted renovations to support contemporary hybrid analog-digital workflows, blending the warmth of analog tape and console processing with digital precision for editing and automation. As of 2025, Barresi has announced plans to relocate the studio.[36] Barresi's ongoing investments in gear maintenance and upgrades have ensured the studio remains a versatile hub for his production philosophy, accommodating both full-band tracking sessions and detailed overdub work without compromising sonic integrity.[37]Signature production methods
Joe Barresi's production approach centers on capturing the raw energy of live band performances to maintain an organic feel, often recording entire tracks in the live room with minimal overdubs to preserve the musicians' interaction and spontaneity.[38] He emphasizes committing to takes early, avoiding excessive layering that could dilute the performance's authenticity, as seen in his work where bands play together to harness their collective dynamics.[24] This method is particularly effective in rock and metal genres, where the emphasis on live room acoustics—such as using reflective brick walls—helps replicate the intensity of a concert environment.[1] In tracking drums, Barresi employs close-miking techniques to achieve punchy, heavy tones that drive the rhythm section, adjusting placements by ear rather than measurements to ensure a natural, powerful response.[38] For guitars, especially in stoner and metal contexts, he favors ribbon microphones for their warm, smooth capture of distorted tones, often using a single ribbon mic with precise positioning to yield distinctive textures without overcomplication.[39] These choices contribute to the dense, immersive soundscapes characteristic of his productions, prioritizing tactile aggression over polished sterility.[40] Barresi's mixing philosophy blends analog warmth for musicality with digital precision for control, utilizing tools like SSL compressors on his SSL 4000 console to glue elements dynamically while editing in Pro Tools for fine adjustments.[24] This hybrid workflow allows him to retain the organic character of analog tape recordings, such as those on Studer A827 machines, while leveraging digital plugins for efficiency, ensuring mixes that feel alive yet tightly structured.[39] A hallmark of Barresi's innovative problem-solving is his adaptability to unconventional artist setups, as demonstrated in his collaboration with Tool, where he accommodated drummer Danny Carey's dual-kit configuration—using both Sonor and Ludwig drums—by close-miking and routing signals through a PA system for enhanced depth and phase coherence.[24] Similarly, for guitarist Adam Jones, he integrated unique pedal chains and mic choices like the U67 to capture experimental tones without imposing changes, fostering the band's creative vision.[38] These tailored solutions, often involving creative rerouting or minimal track counts, underscore his commitment to enhancing inherent sounds through practical ingenuity.[1]Discography
As producer
Joe Barresi has established himself as a prominent producer in rock and metal music, emphasizing artistic collaboration, sonic experimentation, and capturing the band's live energy during full-album productions. His approach often involves guiding creative decisions on arrangements, instrumentation, and overall album cohesion, drawing from his engineering background to integrate innovative techniques without overpowering the performers' vision. Beginning with alternative and hard rock acts in the 1990s, Barresi's productions evolved to encompass stoner rock pioneers, progressive metal icons, and modern heavy ensembles, showcasing a career arc from underground scenes to mainstream successes. The following table highlights key full-album productions in chronological order, focusing on his oversight of the album's artistic direction:| Year | Artist | Album | Label | Notes on Creative Input |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | Queens of the Stone Age | Queens of the Stone Age | Loosegroove | Co-produced with Josh Homme, focusing on analogue experimentation with over 250 pedals and live multi-tracking to create a desert rock foundation.[16] |
| 2013 | Bad Religion | True North | Epitaph | Oversaw the punk veterans' melodic refinements, balancing high-speed riffs with introspective themes for a revitalized sound. |
| 2014 | Chevelle | La Gárgola | Epic | Collaborated on the alternative metal's heavy grooves, integrating electronic elements and vocal harmonies to amplify emotional depth.[41] |
| 2018 | Monster Magnet | Mindfucker | Napalm | Guided the stoner rock veterans toward psychedelic fuzz and riff-driven narratives, enhancing their spacey, riff-heavy identity.[29] |
| 2023 | Avenged Sevenfold | Life Is But a Dream... | Warner Bros. | Co-produced the experimental metal journey, blending prog, jazz, and electronica to explore philosophical themes and sonic risks.[42] |
As mixer
Barresi's reputation as a mixer stems from his ability to refine raw recordings into cohesive, powerful soundscapes that highlight the intensity of rock and heavy music without sacrificing clarity or punch. Specializing in heavy genres, he prioritizes preserving dynamic range to capture the natural ebb and flow of performances, avoiding over-compression that could flatten the emotional impact—a technique evident in his work on Tool's 10,000 Days, where he delivered mixes that allowed the album's intricate layers to breathe while maintaining competitive loudness levels for mastering.[44] This approach, often involving analog processing and careful frequency balancing, creates a "wall of rock" that emphasizes sludgy, drop-tuned elements and massive drum and guitar tones, as described in his discussions on mixing distorted guitars and drums for bands like Queens of the Stone Age and Slipknot.[38][19] His mixing credits span landmark albums in alternative, stoner rock, and metal, where he finalizes the sonic polish by balancing elements like aggressive rhythms and atmospheric details. Below is a selection of key mixing projects, focusing on full albums and notable singles or EPs:| Artist | Album/Single/EP | Year | Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tool | 10,000 Days | 2006 | Volcano | Full album mix; Grammy-nominated for Best Engineered Album. |
| Slipknot | We Are Not Your Kind | 2019 | Roadrunner | Full album mix; emphasized chaotic energy with preserved dynamics. |
| Soundgarden | King Animal | 2012 | Republic | Full album mix with additional production; revived the band's grunge heft.[45] |
| Queens of the Stone Age | Era Vulgaris (select tracks, e.g., "Make It Wit Chu") | 2007 | Interscope | Track-specific mixes; contributed to the album's raw, desert-rock vibe. |
| Bad Religion | The Process of Belief | 2002 | Epitaph | Full album mix; enhanced punk speed with clear vocal presence. |
| Pennywise | Land of the Free? | 2018 | Epitaph | Full album mix; maintained high-energy punk dynamics.[46] |
| Queens of the Stone Age | "Fairweather Friends" (from ...Like Clockwork) | 2013 | Matador | Single mix; added atmospheric depth to the track.[29] |
| Volbeat | Seal the Deal | 2016 | Republic | Full album mix; blended metal and rockabilly with robust low-end. |
| Suicide Silence | Suicide Silence | 2017 | Nuclear Blast | Full album mix. |
| Alice in Chains | Rainier Fog | 2018 | BMG | Full album mix. |
