
Recordings & Productions
Excerpt from a solo piano recital that I recorded and mixed (Performed by Al Gilliom).
A collection of sound design pieces for an immersive multimedia installation project (Collab with Felicia Ybarra):
(See more in )
Room 1: Textural piece that's supposed to feel cold, sterile, and uncomfortable. Sounds primarily sourced from Buchla synths and Eurorack modules.
Electronic production-focused track that relies heavily on vocal sampling and layered softsynths (Collab with Nick Cicero).
A collaborative academic project which focuses on blending field recordings of real-world sounds with acoustic instruments and electronic elements (Collab with Jesse Humes).
Room 2: Textural piece with melodic elements. It's supposed to feel warm and comforting, directly contrasting the soundscape for Room 1. Sounds primarily sourced from Eurorack modules.
Room 3: Stereo bounce of a soundscape that was originally mixed for a ten-piece speaker array.
Zeaux
Zeaux was a musical project I was involved with in college. We were a four-piece indie band with roots in electronic music production, traditional acoustic singer-songwriter styles, and bedroom pop. Our combined experience with musical composition and audio engineering allowed us to write, produce, record, mix, master, and distribute all of our music ourselves.
Evergreen Student Media Project
I helped coordinate the production, recording, and distribution of the 2019 Evergreen Student Media Project. In addition, I mastered the album (with Felicia Ybarra).
About the ESMP: "In 1980, The Evergreen Student Music Project was born. The project was started by a student group wherein music was composed, performed, recorded, and produced entirely by students at The Evergreen State College, culminating in the release of a vinyl record which contained the product of their hard work. In collaboration with Student Activities, Electronic Media and the Advanced Recording/ Multi-track Composition program, the ESMP still exists to this day. In more recent years the ESMP albums have moved away from the vinyl record medium to more contemporary mediums such as CD's, flash drives, and streaming services".
(http://blogs.evergreen.edu/esmp/)