User Manual
Table Of Contents
- UAD Powered Plug-Ins
- Introduction
- UAD Installation
- Overview
- QuickStart DVD
- System Requirements
- Supported Hosts
- Latest Information & Software Updates
- UAD Software Installation
- Install Software First
- UAD Hardware Installation
- Authorization
- Authorize Plug-Ins Procedure
- Load Authorization File
- Offline Authorization
- Using Unlicensed Plug-Ins
- Verifying Installation
- Learn More
- Software Removal
- UAD System Overview
- My.uaudio.com
- Using Multiple UAD Cards
- UAD Meter & Control Panel
- Overview
- Launching the UAD Meter & Control Panel Application
- Using the UAD Meter
- UAD Meter Elements
- UAD Control Panel
- System Information Panel
- Plug-Ins Panel
- Configuration Panel
- Help & Support Panel
- Using UAD Powered Plug-Ins
- Tempo Sync
- UAD Delay Compensation
- UAD-Xpander & UAD-Xtenda
- LA-2A and 1176LN
- LA-3A Compressor
- Fairchild 670
- Precision Multiband
- Precision Limiter
- Precision Buss Compressor
- Neve 33609 Compressor
- VCA VU
- Neve 88RS Channel Strip
- CS-1 Channel Strip
- Precision Equalizer
- Cambridge EQ
- Pultec and Pultec-Pro
- Neve 1073 Equalizer
- Neve 1081 Equalizer
- Helios Type 69 Equalizer
- Roland CE-1
- Roland Dimension D
- Roland RE-201
- RealVerb Pro
- DreamVerb
- Plate 140
- Precision Maximizer
- Precision De-Esser
- Precision Enhancer kHz
- SPL Transient Designer
- Nigel
- Introducing Nigel
- Preflex Plug-in
- Preflex Modules
- Gate/Comp Module
- Amp Module
- Amp Controls
- Cabinet Module
- Phasor Module
- Mod Filter Module
- TremModEcho plug-in
- Trem/Fade Module
- Mod Delay Module
- Echo Module
- Moog Multimode Filter
- History
- Index

UAD Powered Plug-Ins Manual - 358 - Chapter 39: History
he started recording everything with feeds to two con-
trol rooms, one for a stereo mix, one for a mono mix.
In late '58, '59 and '60 everything Bill did was re-
corded in both stereo and mono.
"When stereo hit big around '61, none of the record
companies had any catalog. But Bill did — he had
two and one half years worth. It was a lot of material
— understand at that period of time he was doing
about $200,000 a month in the United Western
Complex — which is like a million dollars a month
now.
"So the record companies came to Bill and said,
'We'll pay you for the tape.' And he said, 'No, you
can't pay for the tape, but if you repay me all the stu-
dio time that was used in the last two and a half years
you have a deal.' And they did. They wrote him a check for the whole thing."
It’s recollections like these that bring home Putnam's visionary and entrepreneurial style. An un-
disputed leader in music recording and in recording technology, with innumerable accolades
to his credit, it's his son, Bill Putnam, who perhaps sums it up best, in a way Bill Sr. himself might
like. Bill Jr. says, simply, "He was a guy who built equipment to solve problems in the studio."
"There's a whole school of what I'd call Bill Putnam engineers out there," concludes Murray
Allen. "People like Allen Sides and Bruce Swedien who worked with him and who really un-
derstood what recording sound should be about. They've carried on his tradition, and I think
we all agree that it's very important for people to know what he contributed."
Classic Compressors
The LA-2A and 1176 compressor/limiters long ago achieved classic status. They're a given in
almost any studio in the world — relied upon daily by engineers whose styles range from rock
to rap, classical to country and everything in between. With so many newer products on the
market to choose from, it's worth looking at the reasons why these classics remain a necessary
part of any professional studio's outboard equipment collection.