Empowering the Next Generation of Women in Audio

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Missed this Week’s Top Stories? Read our Quick Round-up!

It’s easy to miss the SoundGirls news and blogs, so we have put together a round-up of the blogs, articles, and news from the past week. You can keep up to date and read more at SoundGirls.org

July Feature Profile

https://soundgirls.org/maya-finlay-feet-in-two-worlds/


The Blogs

Interview with Veronica Simonetti

 

Teaching Kids about Sound

Internet Round-Up



POC Women in Audio Directory

The directory features over 500 people of color who work in audio around the world. You’ll find editors, hosts, writers, producers, sound designers, engineers, project managers, musicians, reporters, and content strategists with varied experience from within the industry and in related fields.

While recruiting diverse candidates is a great first step, it’s not going to be enough if we want the industry to look and sound meaningfully different in the future. Let us be clear: this isn’t about numbers alone. This is about getting the respect that people of color—and people of different faiths, abilities, ages, socioeconomic statuses, educational backgrounds, gender identities, and sexual orientation—deserve.

Craft Profile: Jeri Palumbo


SoundGirls News


Mixing Music Live – Discounts Available to SoundGirls Members

Sound Particles Licenses Available

Meyer Sound Supports SoundGirls

The Ethel Gabriel Scholarship

https://soundgirls.org/scholarships-19/


SoundGirls Events

https://soundgirls.org/event/bay-area-chapter-meeting/?instance_id=1567

 

In Conversation with Daniela Seggewiss

 


SoundGirls Opportunities


SoundGirls and SoundGym


Shadowing/Mentoring/Internship Opportunities


Shadow Gil Eva Craig – NZ & Australia


SoundGirls Resources


Spotify and SoundGirls Team Up – EQL Directory

SoundGirls – Gaston-Bird Travel Fund

Letter for Trades and Manufacturers


Women-Owned Businesses

SoundGirls Scholarships 2021 Now Open

Events

Sexual Harassment

https://soundgirls.org/about-us/soundgirls-chapters/

Jobs and Internships

Women in the Professional Audio

Member Benefits

Missed this Week’s Top Stories? Read our Quick Round-up!

It’s easy to miss the SoundGirls news and blogs, so we have put together a round-up of the blogs, articles, and news from the past week. You can keep up to date and read more at SoundGirls.org

July Feature Profile

https://soundgirls.org/maya-finlay-feet-in-two-worlds/


The Blogs

Engineering Ourselves and Rewiring the Brain

Creating Monster Vocals with Voxpat

https://soundgirls.org/creating-effective-transitions/

Internet Round-Up


Sisters of Sound Podcast – Interviews Broadcast Tech Caroline Sanchez. Freelance musician, audio technician, and technology consultant who’s landed some pretty exciting gigs throughout her career.

She talks about how she got the audio ball got rolling with a Bachelor of Music in Sound Engineering Arts from William Paterson University. She then jumped at the opportunity to intern at Bonnaroo, which lead to more high profile jobs like working for SNL, Good Morning America and even the Grammy’s.


Whitney Leigh, Mary Broadbent, Erika Duffee

A Big Shout Out to Tegan and Sara for supporting and hiring women to work on their albums and on their road crew! You can too by finding professional women working in all aspects of audio and live event production on The EQL Directory – makeiteql.com

Their new album was produced by Alex Hope, Engineered by Rachael Findlen, Mixed by Beatriz Artola, Mastered by Emily Lazar, and Assistant Engineering by Annie Kennedy.

On their last tour, their road crew was Female-Dominated! It looks like their 2019 road crew will be diverse as well! Whitney Leigh, Erika Duffee, and Mary Broadbent worked the LoveLoud festival with Tegan & Sara!


 

The Turn It Up Hall of Fame: Honoring pioneers of gender and music. Women will be heard! Turn It Up was founded to raise awareness of women’s vital contributions to music past, present, and future. These contributions are too often overlooked. As of 2019, only 7.7 percent of the inductees into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame were female, according to a Longreads article by Evelyn McDonnell. Turn It Up is creating their own hall of fame, one whose emphasis on inclusion is rooted in a broad and generous understanding of genre and gender. Send them your nominations! TurnItUpTeam@gmail.com.


SoundGirls News


Mixing Music Live – Discounts Available to SoundGirls Members

Sound Particles Licenses Available

Meyer Sound Supports SoundGirls

The Ethel Gabriel Scholarship

https://soundgirls.org/scholarships-19/


SoundGirls Events

https://soundgirls.org/event/melbourne-chapter-social/?instance_id=1566

https://soundgirls.org/event/bay-area-chapter-meeting/?instance_id=1567

In Conversation with Daniela Seggewiss

 


SoundGirls Opportunities


SoundGirls and SoundGym


Shadowing/Mentoring/Internship Opportunities


Shadow Gil Eva Craig – NZ & Australia


SoundGirls Resources


Spotify and SoundGirls Team Up – EQL Directory

SoundGirls – Gaston-Bird Travel Fund

Letter for Trades and Manufacturers


Women-Owned Businesses

SoundGirls Scholarships 2021 Now Open

Events

Sexual Harassment

https://soundgirls.org/about-us/soundgirls-chapters/

Jobs and Internships

Women in the Professional Audio

Member Benefits

Missed this Week’s Top Stories? Read our Quick Round-up!

It’s easy to miss the SoundGirls news and blogs, so we have put together a round-up of the blogs, articles, and news from the past week. You can keep up to date and read more at SoundGirls.org

July Feature Profile

https://soundgirls.org/maya-finlay-feet-in-two-worlds/


The Blogs

Freelancing – Scheduling Your Gigs

Interview with Rosa Lin, Acoustician

The Art of Networking

Working For Free

Should You Work a Gig for Free for Exposure?

Internet Round-Up


Ep 9 – Samantha Potter Talking Church Sound Signal To Noise Podcast

 


The Turn It Up Hall of Fame: Honoring pioneers of gender and music. Women will be heard! Turn It Up was founded to raise awareness of women’s vital contributions to music past, present, and future. These contributions are too often overlooked. As of 2019, only 7.7 percent of the inductees into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame were female, according to a Longreads article by Evelyn McDonnell. Turn It Up is creating their own hall of fame, one whose emphasis on inclusion is rooted in a broad and generous understanding of genre and gender. Send them your nominations! TurnItUpTeam@gmail.com.


SoundGirls News


Mixing Music Live – Discounts Available to SoundGirls Members

Sound Particles Licenses Available

Meyer Sound Supports SoundGirls

The Ethel Gabriel Scholarship

https://soundgirls.org/scholarships-19/


SoundGirls Events

https://soundgirls.org/event/los-angeles-soundgirls-social-4/?instance_id=1564

SoundGirls Orlando Expo 2019


SoundGirls Opportunities


Apply to Work The Ladybug Music Festival

SoundGirls and SoundGym


Shadowing/Mentoring/Internship Opportunities


Shadow Gil Eva Craig – NZ & Australia

Shadowing Opportunity w/ FOH Engineer Kevin Madigan


SoundGirls Resources


Spotify and SoundGirls Team Up – EQL Directory

SoundGirls – Gaston-Bird Travel Fund

Letter for Trades and Manufacturers


Women-Owned Businesses

SoundGirls Scholarships 2021 Now Open

Events

Sexual Harassment

https://soundgirls.org/about-us/soundgirls-chapters/

Jobs and Internships

Women in the Professional Audio

Member Benefits

Sound Particles Licenses Available

APPLICATIONS Open

Sound Particles has generously provided 50 licenses for their 3D Audio Software. Sound Particles is software for sound design, capable of generating thousands (even millions) of sounds in a virtual 3D audio world. This immersive audio application will enable you to create highly complex sounds on the fly, which will ultimately enable you to design sound better and faster than ever.

You will receive a perpetual license to Sound Particles The Ultimate 3D Audio Software

Value: $399

WHO IS ELIGIBLE?

Any member of SoundGirls that is working in sound design, game audio, post-production, and immersive audio.

HOW TO APPLY

Tell us why this will benefit you!

Apply Here

DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION

Until the licenses have been awarded

SELECTION PROCESS & NOTIFICATION

The SoundGirls Board will review applications and will notify the winners via email.

QUESTIONS?

Any questions can be directed to soundgirls@soundgirls.org.

 

 

 

Missed this Week’s Top Stories? Read our Quick Round-up!

It’s easy to miss the SoundGirls news and blogs, so we have put together a round-up of the blogs, articles, and news from the past week. You can keep up to date and read more at SoundGirls.org

June Feature Profile

https://soundgirls.org/petra-randewijk-live-sound-recording-engineer/


The Blogs

The Power of an All Women Team

Freelancing – Scheduling Your Gigs

Allies and Aggression

Internet Round-Up


50/50 gender balance pledge extended to more of the music industry

 


Digital masters: how new initiatives equalise women in sound

 


 

‘You lift with your mind, not with your muscles’: female sound engineers on working in audio


SoundGirls News


Mixing Music Live – Discounts Available to SoundGirls Members

Meyer Sound Supports SoundGirls

Master Class – Del IN al OUT – Scholarships Available

The Ethel Gabriel Scholarship

https://soundgirls.org/scholarships-19/


SoundGirls Events

https://soundgirls.org/event/los-angeles-soundgirls-social-4/?instance_id=1564

SoundGirls Orlando Expo 2019


SoundGirls Opportunities


Apply to Work The Ladybug Music Festival

SoundGirls and SoundGym


Shadowing/Mentoring/Internship Opportunities


Shadow Gil Eva Craig – NZ & Australia

Shadowing Opportunity w/ FOH Engineer Kevin Madigan


SoundGirls Resources


Spotify and SoundGirls Team Up – EQL Directory

SoundGirls – Gaston-Bird Travel Fund

Letter for Trades and Manufacturers


Women-Owned Businesses

A More Inclusive Industry

Events

Sexual Harassment

https://soundgirls.org/about-us/soundgirls-chapters/

Jobs and Internships

Women in the Professional Audio

Member Benefits

Missed this Week’s Top Stories? Read our Quick Round-up!

It’s easy to miss the SoundGirls news and blogs, so we have put together a round-up of the blogs, articles, and news from the past week. You can keep up to date and read more at SoundGirls.org

June Feature Profile

https://soundgirls.org/petra-randewijk-live-sound-recording-engineer/


The Blogs

Re-Amping a Guitar Signal

SoundGirls México on sound: check Xpo 2019

SoundGirls México en sound:check Xpo 2019

Internet Round-Up


Industry Insights: Linda Perry, Sylvia Massy & TRAKGIRL On Making Great Recordings

The Recording Academy Atlanta Chapter and the Producers & Engineers Wing hosted a special panel discussion, moderated by mastering engineer Michelle Mancini, delving into career paths, recording styles and the challenges of making great recordings.

 


SoundGirls News


Mixing Music Live – Discounts Available to SoundGirls Members

Master Class – Del IN al OUT – Scholarships Available

The Ethel Gabriel Scholarship

https://soundgirls.org/scholarships-19/


SoundGirls Events

 

SoundGirls Orlando Expo 2019


SoundGirls Opportunities


Apply to Work The Ladybug Music Festival

SoundGirls and SoundGym


Shadowing/Mentoring/Internship Opportunities


Shadow Gil Eva Craig – NZ & Australia

Shadowing Opportunity w/ FOH Engineer Kevin Madigan


SoundGirls Resources


Spotify and SoundGirls Team Up – EQL Directory

SoundGirls – Gaston-Bird Travel Fund

Letter for Trades and Manufacturers


Women-Owned Businesses

A More Inclusive Industry

Events

Sexual Harassment

https://soundgirls.org/about-us/soundgirls-chapters/

Jobs and Internships

Women in the Professional Audio

Member Benefits

Missed this Week’s Top Stories? Read our Quick Round-up!

It’s easy to miss the SoundGirls news and blogs, so we have put together a round-up of the blogs, articles, and news from the past week. You can keep up to date and read more at SoundGirls.org

June Feature Profile

https://soundgirls.org/petra-randewijk-live-sound-recording-engineer/


The Blogs

Consoles, Consoles, Consoles

Troubleshooting (and Avoiding!) Common Problems in ProTools

Dealing with Burnout as a Musician

BBC New Creatives

SoundGirls Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon

Internet Round-Up


Spotify’s Sound Up program is looking for the next generation of women of color podcasters. Apply by June 21 at 11:59PM EST for a chance to spend one week in NYC learning every aspect of podcast creation.

 

 

Jessica Paz’s Unlikely Journey From Scuba Store Employee To Landmark Tony Nominee and Winner!

HADESTOWN’s Nevin Steinberg and Jessica Paz Win 2019 Tony Award for Best Sound Design of a Musical


SoundGirls News


The Ethel Gabriel Scholarship

https://soundgirls.org/scholarships-19/


SoundGirls Events

 

Ableton Live for Anybody

Analog/Tape Recording Workshop w/Lenise Bent Part 2

SoundGirls Orlando Expo 2019


SoundGirls Opportunities


Apply to Work The Ladybug Music Festival

SoundGirls and SoundGym


Shadowing/Mentoring/Internship Opportunities


Shadow Gil Eva Craig – NZ & Australia


SoundGirls Resources


Spotify and SoundGirls Team Up – EQL Directory

SoundGirls – Gaston-Bird Travel Fund

Letter for Trades and Manufacturers


Women-Owned Businesses

SoundGirls Scholarships 2021 Now Open

Events

Sexual Harassment

https://soundgirls.org/about-us/soundgirls-chapters/

Jobs and Internships

Women in the Professional Audio

Member Benefits

Missed this Week’s Top Stories? Read our Quick Round-up!

It’s easy to miss the SoundGirls news and blogs, so we have put together a round-up of the blogs, articles, and news from the past week. You can keep up to date and read more at SoundGirls.org

June Feature Profile

https://soundgirls.org/petra-randewijk-live-sound-recording-engineer/


The Blogs

How to Learn Any Digital Console Quickly

Invoicing 101

Choose a Different Route

Interview Tips for the Theatre Technician

Internet Round-Up


Storyophonic – LYNNE EARLS
A producer-engineer-mixer-composer and player: Irish-born, Liverpool-educated Los Angeles transplant Lynne Earls’ credits include recording K.D. Lang, Calexico, Rumer, Lizz Wright, Wayne Shorter and many others. In this conversation, she compares recording to photography, instinct and intuition guide her as she captures the authentic soul of a sound in the optimal instant.

This episode features “Is Cuma” produced by Lynne, featuring legendary Celtic recording artist – Moya Brennan with Cormac DeBarra from the album “Timeless” on Beo Records.
http://storyophonic.libsyn.com/lynne-earls

For more info about Lynne Earls, visit:
www.lynneearls.com


SoundGirls News


The Ethel Gabriel Scholarship

https://soundgirls.org/scholarships-19/


SoundGirls Events

 

Ableton Live for Anybody

https://soundgirls.org/event/nashville-fireside-chat-w-systems-tech-rachael-moser/?instance_id=1557

Analog/Tape Recording Workshop w/Lenise Bent Part 2


SoundGirls Opportunities


Apply to Work The Ladybug Music Festival

SoundGirls and SoundGym


Shadowing/Mentoring/Internship Opportunities


Shadow Gil Eva Craig – NZ & Australia


SoundGirls Resources


Spotify and SoundGirls Team Up – EQL Directory

SoundGirls – Gaston-Bird Travel Fund

Letter for Trades and Manufacturers


Women-Owned Businesses

SoundGirls Scholarships 2021 Now Open

Events

Sexual Harassment

https://soundgirls.org/about-us/soundgirls-chapters/

Jobs and Internships

Women in the Professional Audio

Member Benefits

Petra Randewijk – Live Sound & Recording Engineer

Petra Randewijk is an independent sound engineer based in The Netherlands. Petra has been working in audio for 21 years, and she is currently on tour with Imogen Heap as the FOH Engineer. The world tour is heading to the U.S. & Canada in May and June.

Petra originally got interested in studio sound, while recording a demo with a band she played in when she was fifteen. “I wasn’t the best musician and didn’t enjoy a lot of what being a musician is about, like standing on a stage with people staring at me, but being in the studio sparked something. 
I wanted to study music technology to get a job in a studio, but didn’t get in at first try, so to gain some experience I decided to try and do some live work, or at least try and have people explain to me how all the sound equipment works.”

She would go on to study music technology and graduated as a composer for theatre and dance. She would learn live sound by just doing it, and while she wanted to go into the recording side, she would find the excitement of live sound addictive.

“I got my start at with a local PA company who provided sound for the local venues where I went to see bands and also played as a musician. They had an anarchistic way to organise themselves and a focus on equipment, to build it, repair it and take it apart in general for educational purposes or just the fun of it. What I learned there was that there is not one way of doing things, and whatever you do, it’s never good enough.”

Petra has in the past worked with international touring band Jungle by Night, a nine-piece Dutch instrumental band.
 She also works with other Dutch groups and occasionally will take on the role of TM/FOH.  When she is not on the road, she works at Doornroosje in Nijmegen and with local sound companies, where she will take on the roles of FOH, Monitors, Patch whatever needs to be done.

She also owns a small studio “where I record a mixture of bands in different styles. Doing this also helps me for live shows because, in the studio, there is way more time to talk with and understand musicians and how they feel about their sound. In live sound, it’s tough to do that, as musicians can never hear the end result of what you are doing during a show. So the conversation is always about hearsay or at the best you discuss in vague terms what we are doing. And I do believe this can help to better amplify and put across artist creativity and emotion, which is in the end what I think doing sound is all about.”

On the current Imogen Heap Tour, which is a mix of live shows, talks, workshops, and exhibition for Creative Passport, this is a different way to tour and Petra shares with us what life is like.

Yes, it’s indeed a bit of a weird one, compared to what people might be used to for touring. But for me, it keeps it interesting, and it is never dull. A week (sometimes shorter) differs in every city. It is done this way, because the tour is also set up to showcase the Creative Passport, and on the road talk to music makers all over the world on their point of view and needs on this. Creative Passport is the digital container to hold verified profile information, IDs, acknowledgments, works, business partners and payment mechanisms, to help get music makers and their works, linked and open (data) for business.

We also have Mi.Mu glove presentations, tech talk ones. For this, we use part of the same setup as in the shows. These talks are informative because Imogen explains how the things she does with the gloves actually work. This is a good talk which was recorded, and it also discusses Creative Passport.

My main focus as a sound engineer are the live shows, which are with Imogen, Guy Sigsworth, and four other excellent musicians on stage playing guitar, drums, cello, and keytar. The setlist contains Imogen Heap songs and Frou Frou songs.

The basis of the setup for the live shows is an A&H Dlive mix rack, which has a Madi card to communicate with Imogen’s computer through optical Madi and an RME madiface. It sends audio to Imogen which she can process, such as vocal, but also other instruments. It receives 20 input channels, as well. The full input list is 32 channels, and ambient mics, and all channels are split into FOH and Monitor channels. All musicians are on in-ears, and they take care of their own monitor setup with the help of an iPad app. This took a bit of getting used too, but we used the setup at all the pre-production rehearsals.

Whenever possible, we are sponsored by d&b to use Soundscape. For this, I added a Dante card in the Mixrack to send all channels. Soundscape is d&b’n new immersive sound system and amazing to work with. It can make everything sound very natural like its directly coming from where the musicians are standing. But there is also a whole new world to be discovered, the possibilities to use it for effects and electronic sounds. That makes it so much fun. And because it receives OSC to control the sound objects, Imogen can directly move sounds in the room with her Mi.Mu gloves.

There are intimate evenings with Imogen Heap, which are only for the people who helped start up this tour from day one as an enabler. There she talks about her songs and then plays using just a grand piano and vocal. The audience can ask for their favorite songs to be played, which makes the shows different every time.

Heap’s live shows feature both solo performances by the artist, as well as an electronic duo with Frou Frou collaborator Guy Sigsworth. The tour is also the first to showcase Heap’s innovative Mi.Mu gloves.

Can you explain the Gloves?

The Mi.Mu gloves are controllers. They come with excellent software that registers hand postures, movement, and relative location. With them, and the software, you can control everything you could want. It can output MIDI and OSC, and you can connect it to anything compatible. Imogen controls all the music that comes from her computer, running Ableton. They can do starts and stops, make drum loops, scroll through samples, as well as control effects as loops, harmonizers, delays, and reverb. Anything, is possible, although, it is the same as with other instruments, it does get complicated to keep track of all the movements you need to do. It’s always awe-inspiring to watch Imogen do all that.

You are touring with d-Live and Soundscape.  Are you touring with other production?

We are traveling with a Dlive rack, but still, need to get the surface locally supplied. We get great touring support on this from A&H and d&b is sponsoring Soundscape, whenever possible. Other than that, I am carrying a set of mixed microphones and DI’s. Nothing big, just my personal favorites.

Working with an artist like Imogen, who is at the forefront of new technology for music and musicians, both in helping to develop it and/or using it, makes it possible and maybe even needed to keep looking for new ways to make things easier and/or better. So I am now working to check if we can integrate KLANG’s 3D monitoring system in the setup, and using it to follow the glove movements.

This keeps me challenged to keep learning and trying out new things all the time, which for me makes this tour amazing.

How large is the crew for the show?

As for the crew, we are traveling with Imogen’s PA, a Nanny, the Mycelia head of operations, who also helps with the show setup, me, and a backline tech/general tech/driver. We all have a bit of a mixed-function description, as Imogen’s PA and the Mycelia head of operation also shares TM duties. My function besides sound is also PM. And one of the musicians also helps out with production and does the stage design. In general, we all make sure that everything that needs to be done gets done.

What do you like best about touring?

I love seeing new places and meeting wonderful people everywhere. And that every day is different. I feel I am at my best when everything has to be done on the spot, and maybe even is a bit chaotic. I sometimes even find myself thriving in chaos. (And smiling in the middle of it)

What do you like least?

Hanging around at airports.

What is your favorite day off activity?

Doing some touristy stuff, seeing the surroundings. Trying local food, when there is a vegetarian option available.

What if any obstacles or barriers have you faced?

The sound world is tough in general, and you do need to have a thick skin. I started at the end of the nineties when everything seemed even a bit rougher. More yelling, more making fun of people mistakes and all was never good enough. Being slightly insecure already, this didn’t help me. 
I can’t tell for sure if it was especially harder because I was a woman, I did get all the ‘you aren’t rock n’ roll enough’ ‘are you the sound guy’s girlfriend’ ‘this sounds rather good, did your boyfriend mix it’ and more of that stuff. 
It’s all small stuff, but together, it’s a constant reminder that I am less trusted by sight as my male colleagues. But to be honest, I had the same lack of trust in myself, so I may have been my biggest obstacle.

I didn’t meet a lot of women doing sound in the first ten years, so everything seemed personal instead of about gender, which maybe made it harder to get around it.

But I know I’ve seen a lot of guys leave as well.

How have you dealt with them?

I made it through the first part by being stubborn. Taking all the crap and just kept on going. Also, I didn’t know that there was any other option. After a while, people gave me more responsibility and opportunities to do things on my own, and in my own way, which worked better for me.

One day I decided I wasn’t going to take being yelled at from anyone anymore. So I started talking back, asking why people thought it is okay to do that, or stopped working with people and at places that got me down. I just found the best space for me. 
It took a lot of years to get to this point. Realising at least some of it wasn’t personal really helped me, and a place like SoundGirls is amazing to discover that. 
The SoundGirls community also told me to stop complaining about needing to know twice as much as my average male colleagues to be taken equally seriously. But just go for it.

In the end, gaining knowledge is never a waste. So I am still trying to learn as much as possible. Taking courses, asking questions, learning every day.

Advice you have for other women and young women who wish to enter the field?

Don’t forget things are rarely personal. Things people say are more about themselves as they are about you. Having said that doing sound is also never about you, but about the music being made on stage. And how to bring that to the audience as much as it is intended to be.

And if you lose a gig, don’t dwell on it, there are always more gigs, and sometimes it’s just someone else’s time. The best way to deal with this is to keep going and get other gigs, preferably things that fit especially for you. But to establish that you mustn’t be afraid to take an honest look at yourself too. 
And never forget to stay your own person in the whirlwind off the rock and roll, it’s the best person you can be.

Never forget to broaden your musical horizon, because if you work in sound, this can never be wide enough. Every kind of music has his own sound ideas and sometimes even rules. And every new thing you discover can give you new information you might be able to use in the next show. So don’t be afraid to listen to music outside of your comfort zone.

Must have skills?

Stubbornness, patience, always staying relaxed, and a lot of curiosity.

Favorite gear?

For live, I am at the moment pleased with my d-live rack and the Allen and Heath d-live series in general. If I could bring one thing, this would be it. It has amazing possibilities with getting audio in lots of directions. Great sounding internal fx and compressors, and very easily flyable. And also very useful to do recording sessions on location. 
For in the studio, my favourite piece of gear is a Schoeps MK4 microphone, which makes everything it records sounds amazing.

 

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