15 May 2010 - 0 Comments
Stebbing Recording Centre is participating in the first national Recording Studios Open Day, Saturday May 29, midday to 4pm.
Saturday May 29 will see a fresh addition to the annual NZ Music Month calendar with the first national Recording Studios Open Day. Between midday and 4pm, professional studios around the country will be opening their front doors to anyone interested in taking a look around. Usually discretely located, and often locked out with a live recording project, studios can seem all a bit mysterious and forbidding when they really aren’t. Sure magic happens within those walls, but it’s all good musical magic.
Stebbing Recording Centre is one of the professional studios taking part and is planning an informative and fun afternoon. Staff and engineers will be on hand to answer any questions you might have about the studio itself and the recording, mixing and record mastering processes.
Sessions will take place on the hour starting at 12pm. Entry is free and pre-registration is compulsory. Please email [email protected] to confirm your place.
The national Recording Studios Open Day is a new initiative aimed at encouraging more musicians to take advantage of the wide range of recording studios and in-house recording professionals available around the country. As part of the initiative Stebbing Recording Centre is proud to showcase their iconic recording complex which has welcomed artists such as Th’ Dudes, Hello Sailor, The Violent Femmes and The White Stripes since its opening in 1970. This is a very rare and exciting opportunity for any musician or recording enthusiast interested in viewing one of New Zealand’s pre-eminent recording studios, home to some of the country’s most valuable vintage analogue and state-of-the art digital recording equipment.
Co-ordinated by New Zealand Musician magazine (www.nzmusician.co.nz), the afternoon provides musicians, artist managers, music students (and recording funders) with the chance to find out more about their local facilities, as well as the distinct improved quality benefits of recording in a professional studio environment.
Thanks to www.stebbing.co.nz for this story.
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