2011 Senior Recital of Trevor Gomes at Biola
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen.
© 2010 Brian Petersen
Andrew Scheps on the Waves Masters Tour at the Village Studios on March 13, 2011.
Visit Andrew’s site at http://www.scheps.com/
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen
After graduating from the University of Miami’s music school, Andrew Scheps worked for Synclavier. Following that he toured with both Stevie Wonder as a keyboard tech and Michael Jackson as a mixing engineer. Eventually Andrew began concentrating on recording, and he found himself engineering for some of the most successful producers in rock: Don Was, Rob Cavallo, and Rick Rubin.
Andrew has recorded such diverse artists as Audioslave, Green Day, Johnny Cash, Jewel, Neil Diamond, Limp Bizkit, Alanis Morissette, The Rolling Stones, and Linkin Park. Artists such as U2, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Justin Timberlake, Jay-Z, and Camp Freddy featuring Scott Weiland have taken advantage of Andrew’s talents as a mixing engineer.
Read more: http://www.waves.com/content.aspx?id=3545#ixzz1ItJYDgGL
Andrew Schep’s Discography
|
Project
|
Role
|
|
The Duke Spirit
|
Production, Engineering, Mixing
|
|
Favez
|
Production, Engineering, Mixing
|
|
Audrye Sessions
|
Production, Engineering, Mixing
|
|
U2
|
Mixing, Engineering
|
|
Red Hot Chili Peppers
|
Mixing, Engineering
|
|
Metallica
|
Mixing
|
|
International Noise Conspiracy
|
Mixing
|
|
Weezer
|
Engineering
|
|
My Brightest Diamond
|
Mixing
|
|
Gogol Bordello
|
Engineering, Mixing
|
|
Our Lady Peace
|
Mixing
|
|
The Rolling Stones
|
Engineering
|
|
Street Sweeper Social Club
|
Mixing
|
|
Manu Chau
|
Mixing
|
|
Justin Timberlake
|
Mixing
|
|
Johnny Cash
|
Mixing, Engineering
|
|
Cass McCombs
|
Mixing
|
|
Blood Red Shoes
|
Mixing
|
|
Jay Z
|
Mixing, Programming
|
|
Linkin Park
|
Engineering
|
|
Neil Diamond
|
Mixing, Engineering
|
|
Audioslave
|
Engineering
|
|
Howard Tate
|
Engineering, Mixing
|
|
Iggy Pop
|
Mixing, Programming
|
|
The Mars Volta
|
Engineering
|
|
Toots Hibbert w/No Doubt
|
Mixing
|
|
Slayer
|
Engineering
|
|
Alanis Morissette
|
Engineering
|
|
Sub-bionic
|
Production, Engineering, Mixing
|
|
Robbie Robertson
|
Mixing, Engineering, Programming
|
|
Tom Morello/Wu Tang Clan
|
Engineering, Programming
|
|
Sum 41
|
Remix
|
|
System Of A Down
|
Engineering
|
|
Andrew WK
|
Engineering
|
|
Michael Jackson
|
Mixing, Engineering, Programming, Touring
|
|
Nil Lara
|
Production, Mixing, Engineering
|
|
The Ben Taylor Band
|
Mixing
|
|
Mike Ness/Social Distortion
|
Engineering
|
|
Ringo Starr
|
Engineering
|
|
Limp Bizkit
|
Engineering
|
|
Bjork
|
Remix
|
|
Rickie Lee Jones
|
Pro Tools
|
|
Alien Ant Farm
|
Engineering, Trumpet
|
|
Green Day
|
Remix programming
|
|
P.O.D.
|
Engineering
|
|
Pedestrian
|
Production, Engineering, Mixing
|
|
Wendy & Lisa
|
Mixing, Engineering, Programming
|
|
Doyle Bramhall
|
Mixing, Engineering, Programming
|
|
Ekova
|
Trumpet
|
|
Ziggy Marley
|
Engineering, Programming
|
|
Stevie Wonder
|
Remix, Programming, Touring
|
|
Nightwatchman
|
Engineering, Mixing, Trumpet
|
|
Barry Manilow
|
Mixing, Engineering, Programming
|
|
Sheila Nicholls
|
Mixing, Engineering
|
|
Beth Nielson Chapman
|
Mixing, Engineering
|
|
Automatic 7
|
Production, Engineering, Mixing
|
|
Garth Brooks
|
Programming
|
|
Douglas Fir
|
Additional Production, Mixing
|
|
The Picture
|
Engineering, Mixing
|
|
Plane Of Mine
|
Mixing
|
|
Randy Coleman
|
Additional Production, Engineering, Mixing
|
2011 America World Adoption Seminar at Grace EV Free
Enjoy photos and video from the 2011 America World Adoption Seminar held at Grace EV Free.
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen
Trevor Gomes recording sessions. Engineered by Brian Petersen.
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen
Waves Grammy Congratulations NAMM 2011 from Brian Petersen on Vimeo.
Video by Brian Petersen for Waves
http://brianapetersen.com/
http://www.waves.com/
Chris Lord-Alge
Jack Joseph Puig
Manny Marroquin
Ross Hograth
Andrew Scheps
Dave Aron
Val Garay
Stevie Black
Scott Martin Gershin
Rob Arbittier
John Mills
Nic tenBroek
Michael Pearson Adams
Jordan Rudess
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen
Photo from the 2011 Pasadena Rose Parade
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen
www.flickr.com/photos/bpbp/5315055722/
Jack Joseph Puig is among the most sought-after producers and mixing engineers in the music industry.
Jack Joseph Puig is world-renowned as a producer, mixer, and engineer, blending the sounds of the past three decades to create a unique contemporary aural tapestry. As one of the industry’s most in-demand engineers, Puig has manned the controls for a veritable who’s who of major artists.
Recently, Jack Joseph Puig collaborated with Waves on The JJP Analog Legends, which features four precision-modeled plugins based on rare gear from his own studio. Here are some photos of a recent session with Jack as he explains the front and back end of the plugins.
Check out his plugins
http://www.waves.com/Content.aspx?id=7306
Read more: http://www.waves.com/content.aspx?id=2327#ixzz17TnrjKyH
JJP Analog Legends is the result of an ongoing Waves research and development project that has lasted over 3 years.
Fairchild compressors are among the very rarest pieces of recording gear; it’s rumored that less than 50 were originally manufactured. One of the first things we discovered when testing Fairchilds is that each model sounds different. In fact, even within the same stereo module, each channel can sound and behave differently! Only a few fortunate studios in the world have multiple units, with the opportunity to compare the subtle differences between them. And so, our quest for the best sounding Fairchild led us to producer/mixing engineer Jack Joseph Puig, well-known in audio circles for his enviable collection of hard-to-find gear.
Jack loaned us his very best sounding unit, and we painstakingly analyzed and modeled its every attribute, replicating its sound and behavior to the point where the software was virtually indistinguishable from hardware. Jack was an indispensable part of the development process, greatly assisting the Waves team by testing and fine tuning the software models of his hardware, as well as contributing an extensive library of his personal presets.
So when you fire up the PuigChild, it’s almost as if you were working together with Jack Joseph Puig in Ocean Way studios. Better yet, it’s as if he loaned you a Fairchild. And not just any Fairchild; his BEST Fairchild.
Read more: http://www.waves.com/content.aspx?id=7665#ixzz17TpKxhKD
Among his clients:
The Rolling Stones, U2, Black Eyed Peas, Green Day, Fergie, John Mayer, Sheryl Crow, Klaxons, Panic At The Disco, Weezer, Counting Crows, Pussycat Dolls, Goo Goo Dolls, The Black Crowes, Switchfoot, No Doubt, Mary J. Blige, and more.
Puig has produced hits for the Verve Pipe (“Freshmen”) and The Black Crows (“Good Friday”), among others. Calling Ocean Way his home, Puig has spent time both as an engineer and as a producer and sees the duality as a plus when dealing with today’s Top 40 rock acts, many of whom ask him to mix their albums as well. He has also mixed albums for Hole, Collective Soul, Green Day, Mick Jagger, Lisa Loeb, and others.
The vintage hardware modeled in the JJP Analog Legends are among the rarest, most coveted pieces in the audio world. The PuigChild 660, PuigChild 670, PuigTec EQP-1A, and PuigTec MEQ-5 are based on these acclaimed units.
About Fairchild: Among gear aficionados, the stereo Fairchild 670 is considered the most coveted of all compressors, not only because of its pristine sound, but also its rarity and price: 670s routinely go for tens of thousands of dollars on the vintage market. (They originally cost less than $1000.) With 20 vacuum tubes and 4 hand-wired transformers in a hefty 6 rack-space chassis, these hard-to-find units weigh in at a robust 65 lbs.
Designed by Estonian-born Rein Narma in the early 1950s, both the stereo 670 and its mono counterpart the Fairchild 660 use single push-pull amplification stages with extremely high control voltages. Both variable-mu limiters are unique in that they use tubes for gain reduction as well as amplification. Compression takes place directly in the audio path, rather than being routed to a separate circuit.
Prior to the 660 and 670, Narma’s Gotham Audio Developments had built consoles and components for such luminaries as Rudy Van Gelder and Les Paul. Shortly after Paul asked Narma to build a limiter, Sherman Fairchild caught wind of the project, licensed the design, and hired Narma to come onboard as the company’s chief engineer. After his stint at Fairchild, Narma relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area and became vice president of Ampex, pioneers of multitrack recording equipment.
About Pultec
Custom-engineered and built by hand, the original Pultecs have long been a top choice of leading recording and mastering engineers. Pultecs are renowned for their ability to accentuate individual frequency ranges without significantly altering other frequencies.
In 1951, Gene Shenk and Ollie Summerland of Pulse Techniques Inc. introduced the first passive program equalizer, the EQP-1. Using equalization circuit designs licensed from Western Electric, the initial Pultecs suffered the gain insertion losses typical of passive filters. So, they added a gain makeup stage, using a push-pull design with multiple vacuum tubes. The result is the classic we’ve come to know as the EQP-1A.
Conceived and created for broadband equalization, the EQP-1A features four low boost/cut frequencies, three high-cut frequencies and seven HF boost points, along with a bandwidth control for shaping the high boost curve. The EQP-1A and the MEQ-5 together comprise one of the best known equalization chains in audio history.
Jack Joseph Puig is a Grammy Award-winning music engineer and producer with a long track record of successful productions, beginning with the mid 1990′s production of Tonic. Following this breakout success, Puig went on to work with Hole, Jellyfish, The Black Crowes,[1] John Mayer, Weezer, Fiona Apple, Green Day, The Counting Crows, No Doubt, Klaxons, Panic at the Disco, Stone Temple Pilots, U2, and many others. Puig has shared Grammy Awards with The Goo Goo Dolls, Sheryl Crow, Vanessa Carlton, John Mayer, Fergie (Black Eyed Peas), U2, and No Doubt. In 2006 Jack Joseph Puig became a E.V.P. atInterscope-Geffen-A&M Records. He has signed Klaxons and Charlotte Sometimes. As a A&R man he works with Shirley Manson, Ashlee Simpson, Klaxons, Charlotte Sometimes, The Counting Crows, Puddle of Mudd, and The Like.
Prior to his mainstream music production successes Puig rose to prominence as an engineer in the Contemporary Christian music scene of the mid-eighties. He worked mainly on Myrrh Record releases. He engineered for Christian acts sych as Amy Grant and Russ Taff. Some of the records he engineered were Grammy-award winning works such as Grant’s landmark 1985 LP Unguarded.
I had a joy editing this video for Grace EV Free in La Mirada for our 2010 Thanksgiving service. Enjoy.
From a harp recording session by Brian Petersen with a piece written by Trevor Gomes on November 20, 2010.
Miced with a Neumann TLM 49 cardioid directional large-diaphragm studio microphone running to a UA LA 610 into Pro Tools LE8 running Waves Mercury Bundle.
People may ask, “How do I record a harp?” A couple rules always apply for any recording. I use a nice large room with high ceilings, a good player, good charts, and a good producer and engineer. I used two mics in with one pointing at the soundboard and the Neumann is bit higher aimed at the strings. I loved the result and will use this in the future.
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen
declaring the glory of God
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses or to purchase this image.

Photo taken during the 2010 Thriving Musicians Summit at Bayside Church.
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen
Photo from the Whitney Portal above Lone Pine.
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
The sky opened up on a beautiful Wednesday afternoon to reveal rays of light from the sun.
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen
I love being part of a team where I get to see people live out their adoption in Christ and defend the rights of the orphan and widow.
Project Hope at Grace EV Free celebrated its third Orphan Sunday by hosting Sunday services called, “Defending the Fatherless.” November 7 is internationally recognized as Orphan Sunday and the event was tailored for the church body with preaching, sung worship, testimonies, prayer, and exhibits with tables from local ministries to help Christians defend the fatherless. I’ve included the sermon video below with some photos of the fun event. Enjoy and God bless you!
You can download the sermon audio or listen online by visiting the Grace EV Free website here.
You can also check out the original post from Project Hope here.
Click on these photos to view them large. Photos by Brian Petersen and Erik Bergen.
Click on these photos to view them large. Photos by Brian Petersen and Erik Bergen.
A sweet moment from a child dedication at Grace EV Free on November 7, 2010.
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image.
© 2010 Brian Petersen
From a photo session for Waves by Brian Petersen with Tony Maserati in Studio D at the Village Recorder in West L.A.
The man behind the sound of the Black Eyed Peas, Jay-Z, Mariah Carey, Puff Daddy, Beyoncé, Usher, John Legend, Alicia Keys, Jason Mraz, Macy Grey, Mary J, Blige, Rob Thomas, Sting, David Bowie, Tupac Shakur, Ricky Martin, Notorious B.I.G.
Read more: http://www.waves.com/Content.aspx?id=8873#ixzz13PWelf3l
Visit Tony’s site at http://tonymaserati.com/
Photography by Brian Petersen at www.brianapetersen.com
Email Brian Petersen for licenses regarding this image. © 2010 Brian Petersen
Widely regarded as the principal architect of the legendary New York Sound, Tony Maserati is one of the world’s most respected mixing engineers. In a dazzling career with countless hit records for superstars ranging from Sting and David Bowie to Macy Gray and Alicia Keys, Tony has done more than simply make the songs sound great. He has played a major role in redefining the aesthetics of R&B, hip-hop, and pop.
After completing his studies at Berklee’s program for production and engineering, Maserati got his start at the legendary Sigma Sound Studios in New York during the mid-’80s, hooking up with early rap legends like Heavy D and Brand Nubian. Working closely with Bad Boy Entertainment’s roster of heavyweight talent—including Mary J Blige, Faith Evans, Notorius B.I.G. and Lil Kim—he helped create what became known as the sound of New York hip hop. It wasn’t long before he was leaving his mark on smash pop hits including Ricky Martin’s “She Bangs”, Marc Anthony’s “I Need to Know”, and R. Kelly’s “I Wish”.
Today, as an active producer / mixing engineer as well as instructor at Tisch School of the Arts / New York University, Tony mentors up-and-coming engineers and artists. He’s won two Grammy® awards, one for Beyonce’s “Crazy In Love” and one for Sergio Mendes’s Timeless, and is the recipient of a 2006 TEC Award. He is an active member of The Recording Academy, and this year received his seventh Grammy nomination, for Jason Mraz’s We Sing. We Dance. We Steal Things.
Maserati says “I’ve been using Waves from the beginning. From dynamics and EQs to special effects, most of the tracks I’ve mixed have Waves on them. Waves did an amazing job turning my personal processing chains into custom plug-ins.”
[video type="vimeo" clip_id="16131482"]
This was a fun video to be a part of and I enjoyed working with Ronan Relosa, Kenny Clark, and Walt Harrah. I recorded and edited audio along with editing the video. I hope you enjoy.
Produced by Walt Harrah
Drawings by Ronan Relosa
Voiceover by Kenny Clark
Audio and video edited by Brian Petersen
