Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Andy Jackson (recording engineer)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Andy Jackson


Role
  
Recording Engineer

Andy Jackson (recording engineer) wwwtubemasteringcomimageshomeandygif

Albums
  
Signal to Noise, 73 Days at Sea

Nominations
  
Grammy Award for Best Surround Sound Album

Similar People
  
James Guthrie, Michael Kamen, Roger Waters, Jackie Leven, Tom Newman

Archive andy jackson interview at astoria studios


Andrew Brook "Andy" Jackson is a British recording engineer best known for his work with the British progressive rock band Pink Floyd. He is also the owner and operator of Tube Mastering, a private studio specializing in recorded music mastering.

Contents

Andy Jackson (recording engineer) Andy Jackson legendary Pink Floyd recording engineer feature at

Career

Andy Jackson (recording engineer) Andy Jackson legendary Pink Floyd recording engineer feature at

Originally trained in the profession at Utopia Studios, Jackson began work as an engineer for Pink Floyd in 1980, assisting in the recording of the performances of The Wall at Earls Court. He then worked on the film soundtrack recordings for Pink Floyd – The Wall and the studio album The Final Cut. Jackson became the band's primary engineer beginning with A Momentary Lapse of Reason and then The Division Bell plus the material recorded for the soundtrack to the band's 1992 auto racing documentary film La Carrera Panamericana. He was also the Front of House engineer on the band's 1994 world tour. He was producer of Pink Floyd's final studio album The Endless River. His current primary responsibility is as the Senior Engineer for David Gilmour's studios, Astoria and Medina, and has worked on all of Gilmour's recordings/multimedia projects as an engineer and/or co-producer since 1984. He was also the engineer on Roger Waters' first solo album, The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking, and worked Front of House on Waters' 1984 tour.

Andy Jackson (recording engineer) andyjacksonmusiccomwpcontentuploads201410Es

Jackson (in collaboration with engineer Damon Iddins) has remastered the majority of the bonus features material on the Immersion editions of The Dark Side of the Moon and Wish You Were Here for the Why Pink Floyd...? reissue campaign, and the 2016 box set The Early Years 1965–1972.

In addition to his work with Pink Floyd, Jackson has also worked with artists such as Heatwave, Strawbs, The Boomtown Rats (most notably mixed their hit "I Don't Like Mondays") and goth rock group Fields of the Nephilim, and recorded a solo album, Obvious, which was released in 2001. He was also a guitar player in the live band version of The Eden House for four years. Two further solo albums followed, "Signal to noise" in 2014 and "73 days at sea" the following year.

He currently combines his continuing work through his own company, Tube Mastering.

In late 2014 he released another solo album, Signal to Noise, which was followed in 2016 by a third album, 73 Days at Sea.

Awards

  • Grammy nomination for Best Engineered Recording - Non-Classical, Pink Floyd’s A Momentary Lapse of Reason, 1988.
  • Grammy nomination for Best Engineered Album - Non-Classical, Pink Floyd’s The Division Bell, 1995.
  • Grammy nomination for Best Surround Sound Album, Pink Floyd’s The Division Bell, 2014.
  • References

    Andy Jackson (recording engineer) Wikipedia