The "Wall of Sound"
The "Wall of Sound" was developed by Phil Spector. Spector is now in prison for murder.
The post production Sound Editor of a movie could have several "bosses." His/her immediate boss would be either the post production sound supervisor, or managing editor, or sound producer. The Sound Editor's ultimate boss would be the director of the movie and/or the executive producer, depending on what their final say is in the production of the movie.
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A roadie. A music producer, musician. Sound techinican, sound engineer, tour manager. Anything in the music industry.
It's just whatever sound effect the producer thinks is cool that day.
A beatsmith is a composer, producer or sound engineer who creates audio works by combining samples in a sequencer.
A music producer is ultimately responsible for the sound of the finished product (or perhaps more correctly, their earsare). They manage and direct the project while the audio engineers do the "hands-on" work, making changes to the mix that the producer calls for.
Really, a record producer can hold alot of different roles depending on what the band or label wants from them. Mostly, the "Produced by" credit goes to the person or persons (or band) who's job it was to achieve the overall sound and feel of the recording. A producer will be in the studio listening to the music as it is being recorded and will guide the studio engineer (in some cases the producer acts as the engineer as well) and musicians towards achieving the sound that he/she wants to hear for the given music. All the Led Zeppelin albums were produced by Jimmy Page as he is the one who guided the studio engineers and techs to achieve the sound he wanted to hear on the album. The Beatles were famously produced by George Martin who also engineered the sessions. Because of the role of the producer, a producer who also has technical knowledge of the studio is preferable and will be easier to work with and/or for.
The "Wall of Sound" production technique was developed by music producer Phil Spector in the 1960s. It involved layering multiple instruments and vocals to create a dense, full sound that became characteristic of his production style.
A producer
No, it does not say "be nice to satin" What it does say is "Dync3 has signed on" Dynic3 is the producer of the song faded. Every producer has there own audio sound tag. and if you listen to it, it clearly says Dync3 has signed on.