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SoundGirls Join Women’s March on Washington – Los Angeles

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Women’s March on Washington – Los Angeles

Several of our members will be taking part in the historic march. Let’s march as a group.

SoundGirls – Executive Director Karrie Keyes and Co-Director Tiffany Hendren will meet members that want to march at The Last BookStore at 8 am. At 8:30 we will walk to Pershing Square to join the march.  The March starts at 10 am and will end at City Hall.

Please note: allow yourself enough time to find parking – there will be road closures due to the march. Comfy shoes and water. The march is one mile.

For more info on the Women’s March on Washington Los Angeles

SoundGirls Members Meet at

The Last Bookstore

453 S Spring St – Ground Floor

Los Angeles, CA 90013

8:00 am

If you miss us – text us at 805 797 0761

WHEN

Saturday, January 21, 2017

9:00 AM – 4:00 PM PST

WHERE

Downtown L.A.

Pershing Square to City Hall

WHO

The march is open to everyone who stands for human rights, civil liberties, tolerance of diversity, and compassion for our shared humanity.

 

Drama School, Darling

Knock, knock.

(Who’s there?)

The sound designer because the practical doorbell doesn’t work.

(and that is the most wholesome joke that I could come up with – don’t let anyone tell you that people who work in Sound aren’t funny)

So anyway…

My name is Candice Weaver and I am student at RADA studying towards a postgraduate degree in Sound Design for Theatre.

Prior to my current degree, I also completed an Undergraduate Bachelors in Commercial Music at the University of Westminster, where I really discovered sound design and started working in theatre. Since then I have been fortunate enough to work with the English National Opera, Secret Cinema, and casual at the Royal Opera House among others (Sleep? Never heard of it).

Having realised that I definitely didn’t possess the skills to really get into theatre yet, naturally I thought ‘Well hey! Drama school sounds good!’, but little did I know that it was this exhausting, this time-consuming, and often just a little bit ridiculous.

It is also, however, ridiculously rewarding and without a doubt the best thing I have ever done.

At RADA (or, the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art as we are sometimes known), we really run as a mini-rep production house and we have three theatres:

– the Jerwood Vanbrugh Theatre

– the George Bernard Shaw Theatre (The GBS for short)

– and, the John Gielgud Theatre

They each vary in size and can have stagings in any variation. For instance the Vanbrugh Theatre is traditionally a proscenium arch, however we have a musical opening this February which will be staged in-the-round.

Every six weeks we turn around three new shows in each of our theatres (excepting twice a year when we do a Film/Radio production block), and we can easily get through hundreds of shows/productions and events/film screenings/galas throughout the academic year. Every student coming into RADA has the opportunity to work on these shows, which are all staffed by students in every role – from third year actors to sound/LX designers, scenic artists, construction, flymen/women, technical management and stage management). They’re also directed by external directors, and for the majority are Designed (costume/set) by external professionals, too. What’s better is that the public can actively come and see our productions (which each run for a couple of weeks after opening, after which we tear them down and start all over again).

 

I’ve now worked in all three of our theatres as both Production Sound Engineer and Sound Designer, and the next project is the musical A Little Night Music staged in-the-round, in our Vanbrugh Theatre. I will be the Associate Sound Designer for this production – for a musical, which we only stage once a year, we tend to get in industry Sound/Lighting Designers simply because the musical is usually quite a momentous task; this naturally still means that I’ll be dealing with the rig plans, budget, organising system diagrams, attending rehearsals, and passing on any relevant information to my PSE’s and Sound No. 1/Sound No. 2’s/Operators.

The show roles are generally given out based on what our next step of learning might be, as well as what our personal goals are – for instance in my first year of RADA, I only did a couple of sound designs because I needed to focus on my Production Sound and practical skills.

 

I’ve also just finished a Film block where I was the Sound Assistant/Boom Operator – we filmed three films across a few weeks, all on locations found by my fellow students. In my first year I completed a Radio block which also involved studio recordings of three plays in RADA’s main studio in the Sound Department, editing them together, adding sound design, and eventually taking them to be mastered in a professional studio.

I’ve certainly had plenty to keep me busy since starting RADA in September 2015, from production roles to projects, and I really am looking forward to getting our next shows up and running. It’s incredibly rewarding to be able to have something for audiences to come and see, and be able to understand where sound design sits in the larger scale of productions.

I’ll also look forward to sharing some of the things that I’ve been up to with you, and my experiences as I complete my final year of drama school (darling).

(I’ll definitely be bringing more jokes with me)

*Photo credits for 1/2/3/4/5/6/7 belong to Linda Carter for RADA

 

She Rocks Awards Tickets Available to Members

sra17-logoThe Women’s International Music Network, She Rocks Awards and Laura Whitmore have graciously donated silver tickets to SoundGirls.Org.  These tickets are available to SoundGirls.Org members and available on a first come first serve basis. We ask that members who are able to purchase tickets do so, it is a great event and organization.

Please request your ticket by emailing us at soundgirls@soundgirls.org.

Check out all the Women being honored at the She Rocks Awards 2017

You can read interviews with the Honorees on Front and Center, every week leading up to the event.

She Rocks Awards  – at the NAMM Show

FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 2017

7:00 P.M. – 9:00 P.M.

Anaheim Hilton Hotel, Anaheim, CA

777 W Convention Way, Anaheim, CA 92802

SoundGirls Presents – Sennheiser Wireless Workshop

Join us for a two day Wireless Workshop with Gussie Miller and Brian Walker of Sennheiser.  Gussie and Brian will lead a two day workshop on wireless and will cover topics from RF Best Practices, to the shrinking of the RF spectrum. Get hands on experience with the newest Sennheiser wireless technology, and gain an understanding of the differences between Sennheiser wireless systems.

This two day workshop will be held at Schubert Systems in North Hollywood.

Jan. 24 – 9:00 am to 5:00 pm – with an hour lunch break

This day will include Lectures and Power Points on Understanding RF and RF Coordination. There will be hands on training with the equipment.

Jan. 25 – 9:00 am to 5:00 pm – with an hour lunch break

This day will focus on lecture in the morning, after lunch we will set up and work with a live band.

This is an all-star band featuring

Herman Matthews: Tower of Power, Kenny Loggins, Tom Jones and more

Jay Gore: Lauryn Hill, The Pointer Sisters, Keb’ Mo and more

Ewin Livingston: Justin Timberlake, Will.I.Am, Aretha Franklin and more

Noriko Olling: Chaka Khan, P!nk, Gladys Knight and more

This promises to be a amazing Hands on Learning Experience. Please RSVP to soundgirls@soundgirls.org to secure your spot. This event is free for members of SoundGirls. A big thanks to Sennheiser and Schubert Systems for their support of SoundGirls.Org.

Brian Walker is a Sennheiser RF expert and has many years of RF experience as a broadcast engineer. He has an extensive background in wireless system, RF troublshooting and frequency coordination.

Gussie Miller is a Sennheiser Customer Development and Applications Engineer. Gussie Miller has run the gamut of audio experiences,having engineered worldwide broadcasts for NASA TV, and having been the technical supervisor for ABC TV’s “The Glass House”. Mr. Miller was also one of the music mix engineers for KCET’s “Artbound” and UFC broadcasts. Miller has also been on the rental staff of Location Sound and ATK/Audiotek and has years of experience as a Camera Technician and Indie Film Producer.

sennheiser-title-cover-logo-gamoha-1

 

 

Riding the Roller Coaster of Live Sound – Rena Kozak

Rena Kozak is a FOH engineer and tour manager based out of Calgary, Canada. She has always had an interest in arts and has played in numerous Calgary bands as well as studied painting and drawing at University before becoming a sound engineer.  

A talented dancer, Rena was studying ballet at the University of Calgary in 2002 when she injured her foot. Unsure if she would be able to dance again, she considered alternate career paths. A friend of hers, Josh Gwilliam (current chief engineer at OCL Studios in Alberta) suggested she look into the audio recording course at the Academy of Production and Recording Arts in Calgary. By a stroke of luck, Rena’s father had just given her $5,000, a bonus from his job as assistant coach of the Canadian women’s hockey team after they won the 2002 Olympic gold. The audio engineering program cost exactly that amount, and Rena enrolled. After graduating, she began working at a recording studio but found the work of recording commercials to be monotonous.

Instead of pursuing more studio work, Rena interned with an electrical engineer and learned to fix analog equipment.  In 2005, this electrical engineer recommended her as FOH for the musical Guys and Dolls. She recounts: “it was an insane opportunity in retrospect, a 24 person cast with a full orchestra… people work for decades to break into that kind of work. It was a crazy stroke of luck. I never thought I would like live sound, it seemed so intimidating, but it was exhilarating to take my knowledge and apply it in the moment to tell a story to an audience.”

After the musical had ended, Rena got a job with a local production company Sound Art, working on shows and maintaining gear in their shop. In 2007, she did a national tour as a monitor engineer for a dance show that featured a live band. Rena felt the road wasn’t for her and found that touring took away her ability to create music or art. She took a house gig in 2008, as house engineer for Mac Ewan Hall.  child_actress

In 2012, her boyfriend passed away suddenly. After grieving, Rena found that she was in a different place mentally: “I wanted fewer physical attachments. I didn’t know where I wanted to live, I didn’t want possessions, I didn’t want to attempt to have a lifestyle that resembled anything permanent for a while so I approached the boys in Preoccupations  – who were called Viet Cong at the time and are long time friends – about using me as their touring FOH.”

Preoccupations agreed to hire her, and Rena found herself thriving as a touring FOH. She has worked as FOH for Operators (Montreal), did a run of festival dates with Holy Ghost! (Brooklyn) and even had the chance to fill in on monitors for Beirut for a couple of shows, which she describes as a career highlight.

Operators

Operators

Although she enjoys being on stage, she has realized she likes touring as an engineer more than as a musician. She thrives on mixing the same show every day and enjoys the challenge of having to work in different rooms.  Rena notes that touring can be a psychological roller coaster: it is hard to get to know new people and sharing tight spaces like a van or bus can be taxing. To offset the stress, she tries to eat well and do as much hotel room yoga as possible.

Her favourite piece of gear is her old TAC Scorpion recording console, which she is slowly re-soldering and fixing. In a live setting, Rena likes using guitar pedals as live mix effects – on the fall Preoccupations tour, she was running a couple of FX chains for vocals and drums, in the hopes of recreating the album’s sound. She hopes to get other gigs that allow her to be as creative with equipment.

Regarding must-have skills, Rena believes a willingness to do whatever it takes to get the show done is crucial.  “This job is mostly problem-solving – whether it’s solving the actual technical problems with the sounds themselves or repairing broken equipment or figuring out how to safely get the gear through a mud puddle into the venue. There is no problem that cannot be solved; you just haven’t found the solution yet.”

It’s also important to have a solid technical understanding. Knowing how the physics of sound works, knowing how your gear functions and why, understanding the equipment and systems in detail – these things are so important to achieving a good product. The more you know about your tools the better you will be at manipulating them. It can be easy to get by without knowing details – a lot of people work for a long time with very little knowledge, but reading up and building a foundation of knowledge is what will set you apart.”

rena_bass-with-shematomas

Rena’s long-term goals are to keep touring as a FOH, and to work on her own artistic projects. She has recently finished recording and mixing her first solo record (under the name Child Actress) and is looking forward to writing more music.  You can find her on the road with Preoccupations in 2017.

Rena shares some words of advice on the barriers she has faced as a woman in the audio industry, and how to overcome them.

“I’ve been tremendously lucky to have had an exceptional amount of support from so many people I’ve worked with. Of course I’ve faced the obvious challenge of being a girl. While it’s never prevented me from landing good jobs or enjoying my work, more often than not it has absolutely been a factor.

Fortunately, I had a lot of very real support. A lot of dudes who were well respected in the business saw my passion for it and believed I knew what I was doing gave me work and helped me learn and progress. I don’t think most people are as lucky to have as much support as I received.

That being said, it’s been a constant issue. It feels funny answering this question right now because of how I’ve continued to struggle with being female at work even in these last two months. From the guy who wants to carry my case for me (fine, you want to help but it’s my case, it isn’t even heavy, I don’t need you to look after me we are peers here) to the old house sound guy who tries to tell me how to EQ my wedges until I demonstrate to him how my EQ curve was actually cleaner than his, to the TM who makes side comments about not liking “having to listen to a woman”. It isn’t gone. I’ve been at this for nearly 15 years and it’s still there. But, it’s better. There are more of us, and things are changing.

I have always been great at handling the old-school sound guy personality type. I’m great with a quick joke and talking to them like I am their equal. I’m rarely intimidated, and I’m quick to win most of them over with my personality.

I’ve also recently found I’ve needed to deal with my own internalization of systemic sexism. Trying to remain calm and remind myself why I love this work and that I deserve to be here doing it, and trying my best not to react with anger as much as possible. I am very actively working on this right now, trying to be Zen and maintain confidence at all times. I find the best way of thinking about it is to remind myself that I have to COMMAND respect and not DEMAND respect. Don’t get angry, just be confident and execute your work as perfectly as you know-how and this will generate respect from your peers.

Do you have advice for women and other young people who wish to enter the field?

“Do not be intimidated by anyone. You have as much or more right to be there as anyone else.

And for those who are just beginning and feeling intimidated by the equipment or the technical side of it, shake that off and remember that you are capable of comprehending anything technical – and remind yourself of some of the sound guys you’ve met along the way.They aren’t all geniuses, are they? If they can do it even just a little, you can do it epically well. 

And call me up! I love to teach; I’m happy to take on any ladies who want to apprentice or just ask questions.”

You can contact Rena and find out more about her upcoming projects through her website

Career Development – Resources for Resumes and Social Media

A polished resume (and LinkedIn profile!) can be almost as valuable to you now as they are when you’re in the middle of a job search. Keep your resume updated—always. We have compiled a list of articles to get you started.

 

 

Tips on Writing your Resume

The Importance of the Cover Letter

The Best First Impression

Five Ways to Make your Freelance Applications Work for You

Professional Social Media

Fake it Until You Make it – Or Not

Five Lessons from a Career in Sound (so far)

Notes on Your Resume

Resume Builder

ResumeBaking

Cover Letter Mistakes

Six Good Reasons to Always Keep Your Resume Updated 

A Top Recruiter on What Anyone Can See After 30 Seconds with Your Resume

Uptowork’s Online Resume Builder – Choose professional, elegant, creative, or modern resume templates. Uptowork’s resume maker offers 20 templates in 400 colors. You can easily adapt the designs to any resume format you choose: functional, reverse-chronological, or combination. SoundGirls Members receive access to their free platform using code SoundG53% at checkout

Cover Letter Examples

Women’s March on Washington Seeks FOH and ME

download-45The Women’s March on Washington will take place in D.C. on January 21st. Hundreds of thousands of women will arrive in D.C., all standing together in solidarity around the idea that Women’s Rights are Human Rights. The Women’s March on Washington stands for all issues that affect all marginalized people: immigrants of all statuses, Muslims and those of diverse religious faiths, people who identify as LGBTQIA, Native people, Black and Brown people, people with disabilities, and survivors of sexual assault. Please see the website for a more comprehensive explanation of the mission: 

The Women’s March on Washington currently expects 300,000 to 500,000 people, with numbers rising every day.

Ginny Suss is heading up the production team for the event. Ginny was a tour manager for many years and was routinely the only woman on the crew or anywhere backstage. Ginny hopes one story we can build from this amazing march and movement is of a primarily women-led production crew. She is currently seeking two women to join the production crew, one to mix FOH sound and one for monitors.

Applicants ideally would be available for rehearsals in NYC  the week of the 16th and  then travel down to DC on the 20th for the rally on the 21st. The Women’s March on Washington  can help with travel and accommodations. Your services would be pro-bono — as the entire effort from the national organizers to our legal team to our PR to tech and web development is entirely volunteer based.

If interested in taking part in this historical event please send cover letter and resume asap to soundgirls@soundgirls.org. Please only apply if you have experience mixing large-scale events.

Some recent press:

Protest like your basic rights depend on it – because power is taken, never given

 

Why Thousands of Women are Marching in Washington on Jan. 21st

 

 

 

 

SoundGirls in 2016 Newsletter

Dear Members,

We wish all our members a wonderful holiday season, wherever you are and however you celebrate.

We hope you will take time to read our end of year newsletter here.

Wishing you all the best in 2017

Karrie

 

Australia SoundGirls – First Meet Up

sound-girls-2k16-v-2We are excited to welcome Toni Venditti as SoundGirls Chapter Head for Sydney Australia. We know Australia is a large country and hope to expand to other regions.

SoundGirls.Org’s vision is to inspire and empower young women and girls to enter the world of professional audio and music production while expanding opportunities for girls and women in these fields, and to share resources and knowledge through cooperation, collaboration, and diversity. SoundGirls supports women working in professional audio and music production by highlighting their success and providing a place for them to connect, network, and share advice. SoundGirls.Org provides support, career development, and tools to help those working in the field advance in their career.

We invite you to join Toni for the first meet up in Australia in Jan.16th. Members will get to meet each other and determine the direction and needs of the chapter. Please RSVP to soundgirls@soundgirls.org.

SoundGirls meet ups welcome all members regardless of age, gender, race, etc. to attend.

 

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