Jump to content

Jim Anderson (sound engineer): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Ludasaphire (talk | contribs)
Added info box; trying to find a public domain picture
Ludasaphire (talk | contribs)
Added few associated acts into info box that I found in April, 2001, article in AURAL ROBERT by Robert Baird (the article was on Jim Anderson's web site)
Line 16: Line 16:
|Years_active =
|Years_active =
|Label =
|Label =
|Associated_acts = [[Eubie Blake]], [[Sonny Rollins]], [[Ella Fitzgerald]], and [[Charles Mingus]]
|Associated_acts =
}}
}}



Revision as of 05:31, 29 July 2010

Jim Anderson


Jim Anderson is an internationally recognized recording engineer and producer for acoustic music in the recording, radio, television, and film industries.[1][2] He is the recipient of numerous awards and nominations in the recording industry, including nine Grammy-awarded recordings and 25 Grammy-nominated recordings, as well as two George Foster Peabody Awards for radio programs and two Emmy nominations for television programs. He has been a frequent lecturer and master-class guest faculty member at leading international institutes, including the Berklee School of Music; McGill University; Banff Centre of the Arts; Berlin University of the Arts; University of Luleå in Luleå, Sweden; the New School; Penn State University; University of Massachusetts/Lowell and others. Jim has chaired conventions for the Audio Engineering Society (AES) in New York, received the AES Fellowship Award, and is a Past-President of the AES.[3] Still active in recording, Jim is also a Professor at NYU's Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music and the department's former chair.[4]

References

  1. ^ Thomas Conrad. "Jazz Times". Retrieved 2010-07-28. If audiophiles ran the world, would not all jazz recordings get made...by great engineers like...Jim Anderson...?
  2. ^ Doug Ramsey. "All About Jazz". Retrieved 2010-07-28. superior sound by first-rate engineers like Jim Anderson
  3. ^ Clive Young. "Pro Sound News". Retrieved 2010-07-28.
  4. ^ Audio Engineering Society. "AudioXPress". Retrieved 2010-07-28.