Your browser is out-of-date!

Update your browser to view this website correctly. Update my browser now

×

Magnet Attracts API 1608

Nashville's Pearl-Cohn Entertainment Magnet School, which opened in May, features the first API 1608 console in a high school setting.

(l-r) Terry Palmer, (Terry Palmer Services); Ben Fowler, (Producer/Engineer and P&E Wing Committee Member); Steve Durr, (Owner, Steven Durr Designs and P&E Wing Committee member); Vickie Perdue, (Acoustics In A Box/Perdue Acoustics); Jay Perdue, (Acoustics In A Box/Perdue Acoustics); Larry Droppa, (API President/Owner); Jon Randall Stewart, (Singer/Songwriter/Producer and The Recording Academy Nashville Chapter President); Jeff Balding, (Producer/Engineer and P&E Wing Sub-Committee Chair); Julian King, (Producer/Engineer and P&E Wing Committee Member); Chuck Ainlay, (Producer/Engineer and P&E Wing Committee Chair).
Courtesy of The Recording Academy/WireImage.com 2013. Photo by Frederick Breedon.

Nashville, TN (August 26, 2013)-Nashville’s Pearl-Cohn Entertainment Magnet School, which opened in May, features the first API 1608 console in a high school setting.

At the grand opening of the new recording facility many important names in the recording industry rallied to show their support of the “Music Makes Us” initiative by welcoming the new API-equipped studio, which will serve almost 900 students this year. The Recording Academy P&E Wing as well as Nashville Mayor Karl Dean, senior vice president of A&R for Warner Music-Nashville Scott Hendricks, and API president Larry Droppa were among some of the attendees at the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the expert-designed $1.2 million multi-room facility and control room.

The API console will serve as a major part of the school’s Academy of Entertainment Management and Academy of Entertainment Communication divisions. Students will learn audio production from song creation to production and on to distribution. With the support of The Recording Academy Producers & Engineers Wing members and a partnership with the Warner Music Nashville label the facility is the home of the first ever student-run record label.

Built in 1986, the Pearl-Cohn Entertainment Magnet High School is located in north Nashville and is the sole entertainment magnet school in the country, offering courses in everything from audio engineering to television broadcasting.

API
www.apiaudio.com

Close