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In Dallas, Beck built his first recording studio on Main Street, [3] recording public service announcements for the Army. [2] He worked as a DJ for Dallas radio station KRLD, working on the Big D Jamboree and occasional host for the Louisiana Hayride live country music programs as he began to establish himself as a recording engineer.
Dallas L. Austin (born December 29, 1970) is an American songwriter, record producer, ... Austin owned a personal recording studio named D.A.R.P., an acronym for ...
"Phat Planet" is a song by the English electronic group Leftfield, taken from their album Rhythm and Stealth, released in 1999. It is built on an insistent, two-note bassline , and the heavily distorted vocal of "Phat Planet", spoken by Neil Barnes.
The Record Plant was a recording studio established in New York City in 1968 and last operating in Los Angeles, California.Known for innovations in the recording artists' workspace, it produced highly influential albums, including the New York Dolls' New York Dolls, Bruce Springsteen's Born To Run, Blondie's Parallel Lines, Metallica's Load and Reload, the Eagles' Hotel California, Fleetwood ...
The album featured the song "Phat Planet" which featured on Guinness' 1999 advert, Surfer, [7] and "6/8 War" featured on the Volkswagen Lupo Advert 'Demon Baby'. The track "Double Flash" featured in the PlayStation software game Music 2000. Leftfield split in 2002, with both Barnes and Daley planning to work on separate solo projects.
Russell Whitaker, the founder and President of MediaTech Institute, is a 25-year veteran of the media industry. [2] [5] Whitaker has worked with artists such as Destiny’s Child, The Imperials, Paula Abdul, ZZ Top, Phil Collins, Toby Keith, Cheap Trick and Stevie Ray Vaughan as well as on films and televisions shows such as “Titanic”, “Tarzan and the Lost City”, and “Robocop.” [2 ...
Jon also worked briefly at TM Productions (now TM Studios) and did freelance work for several other studios. JAM is the only production house of its type which has been continuously owned and operated by its founders for over 40 years. It produces jingles for clients ranging from local DJs to the most influential radio stations in the world.
The facility was purchased in 1962 by Columbia Records, who replaced the former residence and Studio A with a newer, larger recording studio, mastering and editing studios, and administrative offices, while keeping Studio B (the Quonset hut studio) intact. Columbia continued to host sessions for various record labels until 1965, when they began ...