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Wednesday, October 9
 

10:00am EDT

Fania Records at 60
Wednesday October 9, 2024 10:00am - 11:00am EDT
Fania Records is often called the Motown of Latin music. With a who's who amongst salsa royalty, they hold a catalog of some of the greatest talent in Latin Music. From their humble beginnings selling cds out of cars, to Yankee Stadium and then Live in Zaire for the Rumble in the Jungle, Fania reached the top. Now at 60, Fania records is re-mastering much of their catalog. Join Grammy Winning Engineer JC "Mr. Sonic" Losada as he moderates a discussing with one of the re-mastering engineers Kevin Gray to hear more about the tech behind handling the Fania catalog.
Wednesday October 9, 2024 10:00am - 11:00am EDT
Stage

1:00pm EDT

Book Signing: Women in Audio by Leslie Gaston-Bird
Wednesday October 9, 2024 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Join us at the AES membership booth for an exclusive book signing event with AES President, Dr Leslie Gaston-Bird, the author of Women in Audio. This book features almost 100 profiles and stories of audio engineers who are women and have achieved success throughout the history of the trade. Beginning with a historical view, the book covers the achievements of women in various audio professions and then focuses on organizations that support and train women and girls in the industry. What follows are eight chapters divided by discipline, highlighting accomplished women in various audio fields: radio; sound for film and television; music recording and electronic music; hardware and software design; acoustics; live sound and sound for theater; education; audio for games, virtual reality, augmented reality, and mixed reality, as well as immersive sound.

Women in Audio - 1st Edition - Leslie Gaston-Bird - Routledge Book
Speakers
avatar for Leslie Gaston-Bird

Leslie Gaston-Bird

Owner, Mix Messiah Productions
Leslie Gaston-Bird (AMPS, MPSE) is author of the book "Women in Audio", part of the AES Presents series and published by Focal Press (Routledge). She is a voting member of the Recording Academy (The Grammys®) and its P&E (Producers and Engineers) Wing. Currently, she is a freelance... Read More →
Wednesday October 9, 2024 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
AES Membership Booth

2:00pm EDT

The Technical Legacy of Dr. Robert Moog
Wednesday October 9, 2024 2:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
This year marks the 60th anniversary of Dr. Robert Moog's AES paper, "Voltage-Controlled Electronic Music Modules" (paper number 346), as well as the debut of the Moog modular synthesizer. This along with a subsequent paper, "A Voltage-Controlled Low-Pass High-Pass Filter for Audio Signal Processing" (paper number 413) presented in 1965, form the basis for generations of electronic instruments that followed. Throughout his career, Bob Moog worked closely with artists to solve technical challenges that led to musically satisfying instruments. In this session we'll reflect on the development of these designs as well as the impact they have had on the industry from some of those who worked with Moog as well as designers who have built on this technical foundation.

This panel will be followed by a book signing at the AES Booth.

A Brief Testimonial on the Occasion of the 60thAnniversary of Bob Moog’s Historic AES Presentation on his Prototype Voltage-Controlled Modular System
By Albert Glinsky, author of Switched On: Bob Moog and the Synthesizer Revolution, Oxford University Press, 2022

Sixty years ago this week, Robert Arthur Moog, a shy, unassuming young man of 30, not generally known to anyone outside the world of theremin kits, sat at his little AES display at the Barbizon-Plaza Hotel in Manhattan, his table draped with his wife’s Indian print bedspread. Sitting atop it was his self-described “Abominatron”—four handmade modules with sheet metal panels hastily spray-painted, with jacks and knobs identified only by paper labels stuck on with rubber cement. He was surrounded on all sides by the titans of the audio electronics industry: Ampex, Scully, 3M. It was intimidating to a fault; he sat, hoping a few passersby would care to don a pair of earphones to sample the aural cherry pies or pumpkins of his State Fair-like presentation—a pleasant curiosity at best, he figured. Then something unexpected happened. As he famously recalled, a prominent visitor approached and uttered the words, “I’d like a couple of these and a couple of these.” He was in business, and he hadn’t planned on anything like that. History was made right then and there.


During this same 16th Annual AES convention week, on Wednesday, October 14th, at 9:30 in the morning, a session titled, MUSIC AND ELECTRONICS was chaired by the venerable Harald Bode. The second presenter of the morning, a certain Robert A. Moog of the R. A. Moog Company of Trumansburg NY, strode to the podium and read a 9-page typed manuscript titled, “Voltage-Controlled Electronic Music Modules.” Footnotes at the bottom of his last page credited a few predecessors on whose giants’ shoulders he felt he was standing—figures like Myron Schaeffer, Hugh LeCaine, and Bode himself. And the crowd was formidable: Le Caine was there, Bode, of course, and Harry F. Olson and Herbert Belar, inventors of the already classic RCA Mark I and Mark II synthesizers.


After the convention, Bob began selling custom variations on his prototype modules, and the rest, of course became history. But what some may not realize—something that really struck me as Bob’s biographer—is the influence, not just of the instruments themselves, but of Bob’s generosity in sharing the “recipe,” as I like to call it, for this groundbreaking system that would revolutionize music and sound art. Less than a year after his AES presentation, Bob published a detailed 7-page article in the July 1965 issue of the Journal of the Audio Engineering Society, replete with generous block diagrams, schematics, and photos. In the proprietary world of our current technology, this selfless, open-source act is astounding. Not that others hadn’t done this sort of thing before, and Bob had certainly come of age in the world of hobbyist magazines, DIY projects, and the brotherhood of tinkerers. But with the commercial potential of Bob’s system, it fairly gave the whole game away. Bob had inadvertently presented his own giant’s shoulders to the world, upon which so many others would stand—some eventually acknowledging the pedestal on which they held their own inventions, some not. But then, Bob’s passion was sheer invention, and often, as we know, to the detriment of profit and the big picture. But that was Bob: generosity of spirit, and the delight of scattering his seeds widely, even if some of it occasionally took root in competitors’ pastures. It’s not a stretch to say, and I say it with full confidence and conviction based on the facts: Buchla, ARP, EMS, and numerous others that followed—none of them would have been possible without Bob’s published recipe. The timeline bears it out, and some have openly admitted it.


The seminal genius of Bob’s work (and there are so many aspects to it), might be summed up by two statements he made in his AES talk that October morning in 1964. After citing several early historical attempts at producing music electronically, he explained, “The failure of any of these instruments to attain widespread success can be attributed at least partially, to the limitation on the degree of control which the performer is able to exercise over the instrument’s sounds.” He concluded his paper by saying, “In particular, the setting up of prototype experimental musical instruments, and the remote-control processing of conventional audio signals are ideal applications for the voltage-controlled modules.” Ideal indeed!! Amen Bob. And what a legacy you’ve left us. Thank you, and congratulations on such a rich 60-year legacy!!
Speakers
avatar for Michael Bierylo

Michael Bierylo

Chair Emeritus, Electronic Production and Design, Berklee College of Music
Chair Emeritus, Electronic Production and Design
MM

Michelle Moog-Koussa

Executive Director, Bob Moog Foundation
Wednesday October 9, 2024 2:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Stage

4:15pm EDT

Immediate Family Film at AES NY 2024
Wednesday October 9, 2024 4:15pm - 5:15pm EDT
The Immediate Family (the modern iteration of a legendary studio ensemble known as “The Section”) is a unique group of iconic musicians composed of four of the most recorded, respected, and sought-after players in modern music: Danny Kortchmar (guitar and vocals), Waddy Wachtel (guitar and vocals), Leland Sklar (bass), Russ Kunkel (drums) and the addition of prominent touring, session guitarist and songwriter Steve Postell (guitar and vocals). Frequent collaborators both in the studio and on stage, their work can be heard on albums from Jackson Browne, James Taylor, Linda Ronstadt, Stevie Nicks, Keith Richards, Warren Zevon, Graham Nash, Neil Young, David Crosby, and many, many more. Kortchmar, Sklar, and Kunkel have worked together since the early ‘70s and made up three-quarters of The Section, best known for both their studio and live work in support of some of the top-selling singer/songwriters and solo singers in the history of music, as well as their acclaimed instrumental albums. (By the mid-70s, they were later joined by Wachtel). The film reveals the machinery behind the booming era of the singer-songwriter, when the talents of these four musicians were in furious demand. Collectively, these musicians helped define the sound of a generation. The band is managed by Industry veterans, Fred Croshal of Croshal Entertainment Group and David Helfant of Arpeggio Entertainment, who also served as Executive Producers of the band’s Documentary. Join band members Danny Kortchmar and Waddy Wachtel, and record producers Russ Titelman and Niko Bolas, and acclaimed filmmaker Denny Tedesco to discuss this award- winning documentary.
Speakers
avatar for Danny Kortchmar

Danny Kortchmar

Danny Kortchmar is a guitarist, songwriter, and producer, renowned for his work with some of the biggest names in rock and pop music. Kortchmar became a prominent figure in the 1970s as part of the West Coast music scene. He has collaborated extensively with artists like James Taylor... Read More →
avatar for Denny Tedesco

Denny Tedesco

Acclaimed filmmaker Denny Tedesco (director of The Wrecking Crew and now the full-length documentary Immediate Family), grew up in Los Angeles. In 1996, Denny set out to tell the story of his terminally ill father, legendary session guitarist Tommy Tedesco.  “The Wrecking Crew... Read More →
avatar for Niko Bolas

Niko Bolas

Niko Bolas is an award-winning music producer and recording engineer with credits that include work with such artists as LeAnn Rimes, The Mavericks, Prince, Neil Young, Tyler Bank, Boz Scaggs, Sheryl Crow, Toto, Los Lobos, Jewel, OneRepublic, Johnny Cash, and Keith Urban.He is also... Read More →
avatar for Russ Titelman

Russ Titelman

Russ Titelman is an acclaimed American record producer, known for his versatile work across rock, pop, and jazz genres. Titelman began his career working with Phil Spector as a guitarist and singer in the early 60’s. Then, after being signed to Don Kirchner's publishing company... Read More →

Wednesday October 9, 2024 4:15pm - 5:15pm EDT
Stage

6:00pm EDT

Richard Heyser Memorial Lecture: Doohickii Digitali Redux
Wednesday October 9, 2024 6:00pm - 7:30pm EDT
Anthony Agnello and Richard Factor have over 100 combined years as members of the AES. They have been fortunate to witness and, in some cases, perpetrate the evolution of audio engineering from electro-mechanical to digital. In May of 1979, they published an article in db Magazine, “Doohickii Digitali”, that concluded:

"… we have summarized some of the possibilities of digital signal processing (and completely ignored digital recording, a probably more important subject).  While we don’t have the “all digital” studio yet, it can be reasonably foreseen that before too long, all the components will be available to make one, so that the only analog elements remaining will be the microphone and speaker.  Since these are the primary limitations of the recording process at present, we anxiously await the development of a standard digital I/O bus for the human element."


In this lecture, they will pick up not only where they left off, but also before they began.
Speakers
avatar for Anthony Agnello

Anthony Agnello

Managing Director, Eventide
Tony Agnello was born in Brooklyn, graduated from Brooklyn Technical High School in 1966, received the BSEE from City College of NY in 1971, the MSEE from the City University of NY in 1974 followed by post graduate studies in Digital Signal Processing at Brooklyn’s Polytechnical... Read More →
avatar for Richard Factor

Richard Factor

Chairman / Prime Fossil, Eventide
Richard Factor was born in 1945 and missed being a baby boomer by only weeks.  He lived and was schooled in Manhattan and the Bronx, NYC, until he moved to New Jersey at age 40 and then to Sedona, Arizona in his 60s.  He obtained a degree in Economics but preferred to pursue broadcasting... Read More →
Wednesday October 9, 2024 6:00pm - 7:30pm EDT
1E08
 
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