I’m taking an audio class at my local college in Mendocino county California and just this last session my teacher, whose engineer in a lot of places starting in Nashville presented the sunset studio, which one of the studio spaces has a couch in front of the control board in front of the control room. If you watched any of the Rolling Stone videos, there’s always a section where the stones are all hustles around a mixing control room listening. It’s probably the most important thing a band can do because often when you’re playing, you’re not hearing all the music, as it goes out into the audience, or in this case, onto a disk. Thanks for sharing this. I really appreciate your commentary and I’m subscribing.
Thanks Greg! You brought up some great examples. Listening back in the control room is the first moment music stops being ephemeral. It’s the moment between confession and consumption.
I’m taking an audio class at my local college in Mendocino county California and just this last session my teacher, whose engineer in a lot of places starting in Nashville presented the sunset studio, which one of the studio spaces has a couch in front of the control board in front of the control room. If you watched any of the Rolling Stone videos, there’s always a section where the stones are all hustles around a mixing control room listening. It’s probably the most important thing a band can do because often when you’re playing, you’re not hearing all the music, as it goes out into the audience, or in this case, onto a disk. Thanks for sharing this. I really appreciate your commentary and I’m subscribing.
Thanks Greg! You brought up some great examples. Listening back in the control room is the first moment music stops being ephemeral. It’s the moment between confession and consumption.
Thanks mustard. I’m a big fan.