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Peers Honor Six Who Stand Out in Their Region
Despite their different zip codes, backgrounds and equipment preferences, every one of these six sound companies quickly jumped to the same ex-planation when asked about what makes them successful: It’s the people they hire.
“We invest in people,” Bobby Brantley says emphatically. “I say this again and again, you can have the best gear out there, but if you don’t have the right people behind the gear, you’re starting with one hand behind your back.”
“I think it’s the people we hire that help us stick out,” echoes Roy
Kircher of Austin’s Big House. “It’s as important as the gear.”
It’s hard to disagree — or argue with the success — of that. Yet
obviously, the “people” part of the equation must start at the top.
Selected by their peers, these six companies are honored as standouts
in their region. They are:
Midwest: Great Lakes Audio
Northwest: Carlson Audio
Southwest: Big House Sound
Southeast: Brantley Sound Associates
Northeast: Firehouse Productions
Canada: Sound Arts
Out of all these honorees, one will receive the Parnelli Award for
Hometown Hero in Orlando, Fla., at the gala award event on Nov. 16. The
Parnelli is the industry’s highest honor for live event professionals.
(For more information on the Parnellis and to make your reservation, go
to www.parnelliawards.com.)
Great Lakes Sound
Toledo, OH
Bill Robison was installing small sound systems for bars and working
with local bands when he founded Great Lakes Sound in 1985. Today, they
have ten full-time employees and serve corporate, music, sporting,
theatrical and festival clients. Their reach has expanded beyond the
Midwest, and they’ve grown into a full-service company handling
lighting needs as well.
“About a year and a half ago, we started focusing on the business end
of things,” says Vice President Todd Mitchell. “Not only audio and
light, but also staging and a store that sells equipment.”
Mitchell, who has been with the company since 1997, says that while
they go as far as St. Louis and Phoenix, Toledo continues to be their
biggest market, followed by the tri-state area that includes Michigan
and Indiana. “We do a lot of nonprofit fundraisers, and as Toledo has a
lot of big in-surance companies here, we handle many corporate events.
Also we do about 90% of the larger festivals around here.”
At Great Lakes, they keep their eye on the ball: “We have a creative
staff here and we just stay on top of things. We don’t focus on what
other peo-ple are doing; we focus on what our markets need, what our
customers want.” A solid foundation, a diversified customer base and a
passion for what they do are all key to their success. Also, respect is
important.
“We have a lot of good allies, and we try not to burn any bridges,”
Mitchell says. “We try to maintain friendships with everyone in the
area.”
The future entails Great Lakes making things better, bigger and
maintaining the infrastructure of the organization. “We follow Bill’s
business plan, which involves growing slowly and keeping up with trends.
“Bill is not a hands-off person. For example, he’s out driving a truck
down to a job this morning!” Mitchell laughs. “He has a lot of passion
about what he does.”
Carlson Audio
Seattle, WA
Two decades ago, Jonathan Myers worked for another sound company, which
also employed Mark Carlson, and left it to follow his own road. He
toured with bands, went back to school, and then was all set to start a
sound company in Spokane, Wash. Meanwhile, Mark Carlson got wind of
Myer’s idea. Carlson was already prepared to launch a similar company
in Seattle, so the two decided to join forces.
“We spent virtually a year putting a business plan together and then
officially launched the company in 1990,” says Carlson. “It started in
a 10-foot by 18-foot garage, and the plan was to service the
3,000-seat-and-under market, which wasn’t being serviced at the time in
Seattle. We achieved our goal rather quickly, and then business
flourished.”
Today they have a 22,000-square-foot facility, and their gear and
people have toured with clients all over the world. The core staff
numbers under 15, with a tried-and-true list of freelancers topping
100. They handle everything from corporate to national touring acts.
Recent clients include REM, Pearl Jam and Modest Mouse.
“I think our proudest achievement is that we’ve grown our market in and
out of our region, and we’ve gained the trust of clients as we’ve
grown,” Carlson reflects. “Picking up national tours, and gaining the
respect of FOH engineers has been really rewarding.”
Like all artists, they make it look easy: “We know who pays the bills,
and what we’re asked to do is often inconvenient. In fact, MOST often
it’s inconvenient! [Laughs.] But early on I heard, ‘You can’t tell your
clients what they want,’ and it’s something we take to heart.”
While they have toyed with opening offices elsewhere, including
Portland and Las Vegas, they took a step back from that and came to the
conclu-sion that their core business strategy still holds up — that
serving their customers as they have in the past makes the most sense.
“We’re sound guys,” Carlson shrugs. “We do events. So we’re happy where
we’re at.”
Brantley Sound Associates
Nashville, TN
Bobby Brantley was born into the business, a business his father built
out of the garage. At the age of nine, he found himself being the cue
card boy for Porter Wagoner, and from there he found himself pitching
in with dad doing sound for many Billy Graham Crusades. By 1983,
Brantley Sounds Associates (BSA) was incorporated. The next year, Bobby
graduated from high school and went to college to study radio/TV. He
hooked up with Amway and was suddenly doing 36 weeks a year in
corporate shows; then he was on to the Nashville Symphony Orchestra.
Clients over the years have included Summer Lights of Nashville, Fair
St. Louis, Ronnie Milsap, Tony Bennett, Amy Grant, Ray Charles, Tom
Jones and many others, including Pope John Paul II’s historic visit to
St. Louis. BMI, SESAC and ASCAP regularly turn to the company for its
an-nual events. Brantley’s father passed away in 2000, and his mother
was president of the company until he bought it outright in 2004. Since
then, he’s continued to build and expand on the company’s good work.
Despite it all, he has a favorite: “You set a goal, and when you hit
it, you feel like you succeeded,” he says. “Mine was to mix a show for
James Taylor.” In 1996, he mixed Taylor’s performance with the
Nashville Symphony Orchestra.
Today, Brantley has 26 employees, plus 45 freelancers. They “don’t have
all our eggs in one basket.” They equally handle corporate, touring and
local clients like Vanderbilt University, which can use up 16 rigs of
equipment when all of its colleges have commencement services.
Brantley’s future goal is not opening a new or even bigger office, but
to “grow the business to the point that I can let it run itself.” To
that end, he encourages everyone at Brantley to take ownership of the
work: “Everyone here is a vital operations manager.” He gives credit to
his upper man-agement team, too: “My posse is Operations Manager Dario
Ceragioli and General Manager Keith Beck.”
Sound Art
Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada
Dave Cousins started what would become Sound Art out of his parent’s
garage in 1981. “I was always the kid with the biggest stereo,” he
says. After college, he recorded demos for bands and did some road
work. When he made the leap into forming a company, three of his fellow
sound en-gineers jumped in with him. “They are still with me 20 years
later.
“We all did it because we had the same kind of passion,” he continues.
“We all like music so much…and we went from having the loudest stereo
in our room to the biggest one in a theater!” he laughs.
From Winnipeg, Sound Art has branched out with offices in Calgary,
Toronto and, most recently, Las Vegas. Vancouver is penciled in for the
Sound Art treatment in 2008. He has about 45 people working full time
with another 20 added in the summer. They handle everything from small
corporate work all the way up to international touring. “We’ve had
systems around the world,” Cousins says. “Recently, we’ve worked with
Jewel, Bryan Adams, Bare Naked Ladies, Dido and Sarah Mclaughlin.”
But only call on them if you just want sound.
“We’ve always been purely sound, and we’re kind of a dying breed. But
we have some good partners, companies that are pure lighting. Anything
that is not audio feels like work! Your heart is not in it.”
They handled the infamous post-SARS event at the Skydome in Toronto,
where numerous acts played to 70,000 people. “There was a lot of gear
in there! We had 24 delay clusters thrown around the place: That was
probably the largest single gig we’ve done.”
Typically, he salutes his people when asked the reason for his success.
“There’s a fair amount of ego in this business, and we try to avoid
that,” Cousins says. “Going back and forth between the different areas
of work is something we’re aware of. You get off a tour, and you need
to be de-programmed. Suddenly there’s no catering — you have to get
your lunch yourself!”
Big House Sound
Austin, TX
Anyone who has ever had the pleasure of being in Austin knows great
things happen on Sixth Street. You can add “Big House Sound” to that
list.
Roy Kircher spent 10 years with Asleep at the Wheel, and Rod Nielsen
had worked with national Christian acts and had a recording studio. “We
met on Sixth Street, both mixing for bands down there, and got to know
each other,” Nielsen explains. “Then we started talking about buying a
system together.” Big House Sound was launched in 1992.
“For years we reinvested everything we made back into the company,
expanding our inventory,” says Kircher. “We were gear junkies!
[Laughs.] And that made us stick out in the Austin market because we
always brought out the new technology and exceeded the standards of the
other com-panies who weren’t reinvesting.”
Today, the company boasts an 18,000-square-foot warehouse it purchased
five years ago. With 12 full-timers and 20 subcontractors, Big House
Sound handles large-scale events, tours and Texas symphonies. Most
recently, they were pushing faders for the Austin City Limits Music
Festival.
Nielsen considers Austin’s 1999 New Year’s Eve celebration as one of
the company’s crowning achievements (memory jog — all the computers
were going to crash, and the world was going to end, remember?). Around
260,000 partiers showed up, and they provided the audio support for the
entire event. Kircher adds that they’ve also done a lot of state
inaugurals, which are also important. “We try to treat every event,
whatever the size, with the same amount of respect,” he says. “Of
course the big ones stick out, but the smaller corporate events require
as much effort as the big ones! You take pride in those as well.”
“We’re still extremely interested in this work and still willing to put
in a lot of energy and keep up with the new equipment,” Nielsen says.
“We’re always figuring out how the new gear sounds — not just read
about it in press releases.”
Next up is a little more focus on the touring industry, which the
company has dabbled in, but not explored completely. They are currently
eqing for Blues Traveler.
Firehouse Productions
New York, NY
Bryan Olson started behind the controls as a monitor engineer. He
mixed for Peter Gabriel, Tears for Fears and The Cure, among others. He
also worked for other sound companies when he stared building his own
monitor packages.
“I was always looking for the perfect sound wedge,” Olson tells. “I
never came across anything I was entirely satisfied with, so I decided
to start experimenting in the wood shop. After making a lot of
different-shaped boxes and trying every driver available at the time, I
finally came up with and started using what is known today as the F-12
and F-15. With these proprietary boxes, for years we specialized only
in monitor systems.”
Firehouse officially was founded in 1994, and today it is a
large-format, full-service sound company. “Not only do we have a fairly
large P.A. in-ventory, we also have a full-scale communication and RF
division.” Recent projects include Live Earth, CBS Fashion Rocks,
Broadway on Broad-way, 911 Memorial, among others. “Currently, we are
gearing up for the VH1 Hip Hop Honors, BET Awards, and the Latin Video
Music Awards,” he adds.And then there’s the touring: Nine Inch
Nails, High School Musical, Interpol, Hall & Oates and Crowded
House are among the current acts Fire-house is taking care of, and
currently “The crew is hard at work getting Hannah Montana out the
door.”
His philosophy is simple: “Always plan ahead to avoid disappointment!”
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