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The Earthquaking, Subwoofing Magic of Sensurround
Marke B. chronicles the history of the Cerwin-Vega soundsystem specially
constructed for the 1974 film Earthquake |
Read more at in70mm.com The 70mm Newsletter
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Written by: Marke Bieschke on July 30, 2019.
Re-published with permission |
Date:
03.06.2020 |
"Earthquake"
in Hollywood, USA.
Photo taken approx. Nov. 6, 1974.
Picture credit: Paul Rayton, Hollywood, USA
Two generations of partiers have felt that clothing-rippling rumble at the rave,
the undulating walls of the underground, a festival’s phalanx of whomp. Beyond
what you hear from the stacks of speakers, the air seems to vibrate around you.
This contemporary bass effect traces itself, beyond any psychotropic symptoms
and sound engineering prowess, back to a surprisingly meek source: A teenager
huddled under his bedroom desk in early 1970s Los Angeles.
• Go to
Introduction to Sensurround
• Go to
About Sensurround
• Go to
Sensurround Horror Stories
That teenager was Rocky Lang, son of famed movie producer Jennings Lang, whose
1974 blockbuster "Earthquake" gave birth to the “SENSURROUND” sound system – and
sparked the development of the first widely-used subwoofer design. Sensurround
popularized the idea of using sub-audio bass frequencies in theaters and, later,
on dancefloors. The Sensurround system’s unique folded-horn speaker design,
invented by Gene Czerwinski of Cerwin-Vega, became a staple of the disco craze
and has influenced nightclub, concert hall and home theater soundsystems ever
since. So how did a star-studded ’70s disaster flick starring
Charlton Heston
and Ava Gardner lead to today’s floor-melting heaters?
Why not an earthquake movie, thought Lang, but one that operated like an
amusement park ride, with a reverberating soundsystem that could shake the
cinema itself?
A former executive of MCA/Universal Television who helped pioneer the prime-time
made-for-TV movie, Jennings Lang saw the extent to which television and
impending recording technologies like the VCR were direct competition to movies.
His notion was to turn movies from passive audience entertainments into
“events,” drawing people to the theater.
“He was always looking for ways to expand the experience of film,”
Rocky says of
his father. “The term ‘event,’ which is now used for everything in the world,
was first used for "Earthquake", because his idea was that the movie industry
needed to change and try new things. He was ahead of the game, in that he was
well aware of what was happening with television, and he knew people needed more
of a reason to get them out of the house.”
“The genesis of the whole idea of the
"Earthquake" film came from me,” says Rocky, a Hollywood
historian, author and filmmaker. “There was a large tremor in Los
Angeles, and my father came running into my bedroom. He found me hiding
under my desk, because that’s what we were taught in school – to duck
and cover.”
Seeing Rocky curled up on the floor was a eureka moment for his father.
Earthquakes, and disasters in general, were in the air. The recent Sylmar quake
of 1971 that hit San Fernando Valley rocked Los Angeles and killed 64 people.
And Hollywood was heading into the golden age of disaster movies, lavishly
budgeted spectacles that packed in big celebrities – many whose careers were on
the wane – and even bigger special effects. The 1970 movie "Airport", about a
suicidal bomber who attempts to blow-up a Boeing 707 laden with Hollywood
royalty, unexpectedly scored more than $100 million at the box office and ten
Oscar nominations. The race was on to see what major motion picture catastrophe
could next haul in the cash and cachet.
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More in 70mm reading:
in70mm.com's
SENSURROUND Page - FEEL THE SHAKES
Introduction to Sensurround
About Sensurround
Sensurround Horror Stories
Internet link:
daily.redbullmusicacademy.com
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Why not an earthquake movie, thought Lang, but one that operated like an
amusement park ride, with a reverberating sound system that could shake the
cinema itself? Theatrical gimmicks were hardly unheard of, from perfume-pumping
1960s special effects like Smell-O-Vision and
AromaRama to schlockmeister
William Castle’s “Percepto!” device, hardwired into theater seats to give
viewers an electrifying jolt during horror flick "The Tingler". Lang’s scheme
would require more technical finesse, however. Most film audio tracks and
theater speakers couldn’t generate frequency signals low enough to give the
quaking effect. Beyond the rumble, too, Lang wanted to devise a system that
enveloped the moviegoer in sound, with speakers placed around the room and cues
on the soundtrack that would transmit certain sounds to certain locations. He
approached the Universal City Studios Sound Department about making Sensurround
a reality.
“Motion pictures at that time had such a limited range of fidelity,” says Ben Burtt, sound designer for
"Star Wars", "Star Trek" and "E.T.", on the new Blu-Ray
edition of "Earthquake" from Shout Factory. “You couldn’t reproduce what the whole
range of the human ear would experience. It had been that way for decades,
because the physical soundtrack, the little white squiggly line on the film, was
of limited quality, like something filtered through a radio. Universal came
along and realized that the sound in a music studio at the time was so much
better than a theater. They came up with the idea to work with Cerwin-Vega to
develop the process called Sensurround.”
Cerwin-Vega was founded in 1954 by aerospace engineer Eugene J. “Gene”
Czerwinski, who had an irrepressible drive to expand the qualities of amplified
sound. By the early ’70s, his company was already well-known for producing
cutting-edge speakers and amplifiers with extraordinary fidelity, and
Cerwin-Vega was working with acts like the Rolling Stones and David Bowie on
specially designed concert and recording setups.
“Gene was essentially an iconoclast to the core, having embraced the folk-rock
and protest culture of the late ’60s,” wrote his close friend and former
employee, audio engineer Drew Daniels, in a remembrance after Czerwinski’s death
in 2010. “Gene was an engineer’s engineer. His mastery of solid state, AC, DC, electromagnetics and thermodynamics was top flight. It was routine for Gene to
draw an amplifier schematic on one side of an A-size quadrille page using only a
slide rule and some reference books and charts. He would simply hand me the
sheet of paper and say, ‘Go build this.’”
Perhaps realizing the commercial potential of Sensurround, Czerwinski was the
driving force behind its development, working with Universal’s W.O. Watson,
Richard J. Stumpf and Robert J. Leonard to solve the riddle: how to generate a
sound in the theater so low that no existing speaker could play it? The
specialists experimented on the Universal Studios lot, building huge speaker
cabinets and bringing in test audiences for each attempt to make sure they were
getting the right effect. Watson told American Cinematographer in 1974, “When I
saw the "Earthquake" script I realized that we would be able to come up with a
form of audience participation – something that would make the viewers feel that
they were part of the action that was going on. Our first demonstration was made
using some very high-powered speakers and amplifiers.”
Viewers not only heard the earthquake, they felt it in their ribcages.
In the end, they came up with an ingenious solution. When it was time for the
theater to quake, the soundtrack played two inaudible “control tones.” These
tones would trigger a special Sensurround box, which would use what was called a
pseudorandom noise generator to create the low frequency rumble, sending it out
to the amplifiers in the specially constructed speakers. The speaker’s horns had
been folded inward – in “W,” “M,” and “C” formations –to allow their path-length
to be long enough to generate the power needed to amplify the rumble, while
still being able to fit inside the speaker cabinet.
When the amplifiers were fully engaged, they could produce sound between 100 and
120 decibels, at frequencies as low as 15 Hz – creating a wave that vibrated the
air in the theater, using the flooring and walls themselves as conduits. This
meant that viewers not only heard the earthquake, they felt it in their
ribcages. According to Watson,
“We generate both sub-audible and audible
frequencies that actually vibrate the torso and the diaphragm inside the body.
You feel something going on in your flesh and the auditory nerves are also
responding to the sensation. The viewer feels that the building is shaking. It
isn’t really, but it feels that way. If you touch a thin plaster wall in the theater, or if you touch a seat that has metal in it, you find that the seats
actually vibrating.”
The Sensurround speaker cabinets themselves were enormous and had to be
individually installed in each theater that would play the movie. Entire rows of
seats had to be removed at considerable expense to owners, who risked physical
damage to their buildings. Installation took up to three days and involved a
fleet of inspectors checking for correct electrical specifications and
structural integrity. For the movie’s debut at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in
Hollywood, every inch of the theater, from the basement pipes to overhead
chandelier, had to be inspected and secured. A giant fishnet was spread across
the ceiling to catch any falling plaster. |
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Nobody knew if
"Earthquake" would be worth it. It was coming out around the same
time as two other disaster films that helped anchor the golden age of genre,
"The
Towering Inferno" and "Airport 1975", and just in the wake of "The Poseidon
Adventure". The studio had spent seven million dollars making the movie, and the
often hammy dialogue and sometimes baffling editing makes it at times hard to
follow, or swallow. The film’s effects are very well-executed – who can resist a
giant tremblor and its aftershocks leveling downtown Los Angeles? – although the
film’s biggest special effect (beyond making us believe that lovely Genevieve
Bujold would fall for leathery Charlton Heston) might be how well Victoria
Principal’s perfectly coiffed two-foot afro survives multiple aftershocks. And
gorgeous set paintings by Albert Whitlock, some old-fashioned scenery-chewing by
Ava Gardner and a score by John Williams that knows to keep quiet during the
fun, quake-y part makes it all enjoyable.
Sensurround was ridiculed as a noisy, cheesy gimmick by some, but it was truly a
stroke of marketing genius.
-Dean Lamanna
Luckily for Universal, audiences flocked to the novelty experience despite
critics’ misgivings, and cinemas throughout the country rushed to install the
special soundsystem. Soon there were 800 systems worldwide, with 400 in the
United States. Cerwin-Vega and the Universal Studios team won an Oscar for
developing Sensurround, and Earthquake won one for Best Sound. “Sensurround was
ridiculed as a noisy, cheesy gimmick by some, but it was truly a stroke of
marketing genius – one that delivered sensation both in theater auditoriums and
at the box office,” says Dean Lamanna, an entertainment journalist and historian
who is working on a book about the disaster film genre.
“For general audiences, it suitably enhanced the ambitious, if sometimes uneven,
visual effects and multi-character drama. Most moviegoers left feeling like they
got plenty of shake, rattle and roll for their buck. Driven by the international
appeal of its subject matter and Sensurround, the film sold 41 million
admissions worldwide by the end of its run in 1976. It helped rouse Universal
Studios from a years-long financial malaise and made Jennings Lang, who was
already a respected and well-liked production executive, a true superstar on the
studio lot.”
Sensurround took Europe by storm, too. “I could feel the air move around my
trousers, it was simply staggering,” says Thomas Hauerslev, a former theater
projectionist in Copenhagen who is now an expert in the history of 70mm film. “I
have never experienced cinema sound, or anything like it, since, and that
includes all the fancy digital cinema sound systems with a gazillion loudspeakers
we have today. Sensurround was the ‘mother’ of low frequency in cinemas, and
proved that a real dynamic soundtrack could be added to motion pictures when
most films in those days were either mono, or some variation of four to
six-channel magnetic sound. Sensurround suddenly added an entire new medium to
motion pictures.”
"Earthquake" was followed up by the 1976 war movie
"Midway", full of buzzing planes
and explosions, and 1977’s "Rollercoaster", the tale of a fiendish amusement park
saboteur. But the novelty had dwindled by the time Sensurround-equipped theaters
were showing "Battlestar Galactica" features in 1978. Film audio track and speaker
system technology was catching up to Sensurround without the need for hulking
speakers. “Today it’s routine to have a special track devoted to low
frequencies,” said Ben Burtt. “The current technology accommodates that, it’s
normal. Sensurround was the beginning of that idea.” |
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As Sensurround speakers were being torn out of cinemas, versions of them were
filling nightclubs. "Earthquake" had set off a desire for national desire for more
bass, especially on dancefloors during the burgeoning disco craze, and
Cerwin-Vega was happy to fulfill it. Czerwinki’s early folded-horn speakers were
prototypes for the subwoofer, which could deliver more thump in the club.
Legendary club sound engineers Alex Rosner of the Loft and Richard “Dick” Long
of Paradise Garage had come up with their own specialty sub-bass soundsystem
adaptations (Long’s was called the Levan Horn after Larry Levan), to create a
haptic quality where the music could be felt as well as heard. But it was
Czerwinski’s system that was reproduced and marketed quickly.
Suddenly, nightclubs had to have “Earthquake bins,” and Cerwin-Vega developed
its series “E” subwoofers to fill this demand. “Disco people want to feel the
music,” the company’s technical director told Billboard magazine in 1975,
“and
that takes plenty of clean bass. More clubs are turning to Cerwin-Vega speakers
and we’re getting special requests for the identical speakers used for the
Sensurround effect used in Earthquake.” And dance music was adapting to these
new bass possibilities. 12" records, with wider grooves that prevented needles
from skipping as much, were becoming more common, and were being engineered to
include more bass volume and lower frequencies.
Czerwinski also knew that one way to corner the market during a craze is to
spread your ideas around so people can compare. “I think one of the most
long-lasting designs that my father came up with was a folded-horn bass,” Connie
Czerwinski, Gene’s daughter and former president of Cerwin-Vega, said. “He was
famous for it, and it’s one of the designs he gave away to Fender, Acoustic, Sun
and Vox. That was our meat and potatoes product for years and years. Where he
really shined, he had his own special flair for designing woofers. If you get a
JBL next to a Cerwin-Vega, they have a very different sound.”
According to the company, Cerwin-Vega’s speaker series “E” remains one of its
bestselling of all time. The company still sells folded-horn bass systems called
“Earthquake” and “Junior Earthquake,” although neither of them come with
Charlton Heston.
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