Thom Russo
Thom Russo | |
---|---|
Birth name | Thomas Russo |
Born | December 31, 1969 |
Origin | Los Angeles, United States |
Genres | Pop/rock, Latin, Alternative Latin |
Occupation(s) | Recording engineer, mixing engineer |
Years active | 1991 – present |
Labels | SONORO Productions, Inc. |
Website | http://www.thomrusso.net |
Thomas "Thom" Russo is an American record producer, engineer, mixer and songwriter.[1] His works range from Anglo-American pop/rock to Alternative Latin.[1] He is a recipient of 16 Grammy awards, most of them in recognition to his work with Latin music.[2]
Life and education
Thom Russo was born December 31, 1969 in Cleveland, Ohio.[3][4] He studied percussion and music theory at Northwestern University, in Chicago.[2] He lives and works in Los Angeles.[5]
Career
Russo started his professional career as a musician[2][5] but became already as a college student interested in engineering and recording for record production.[2] He worked first at River North Studios in Chicago, then at Larrabee Sound, one of the largest recording studios in Los Angeles, and later on his own under the Nettwerk Producer Management.[2]
As one of the first projects at Larrabee in the early 1990s, Russo mixed vocals for Michael Jackson's album Dangerous (1991),[2] Bobby Brown's album Bobby (1992), Cher's Greatest Hits 1965–1992 (1993), Diana Ross's Take Me Higher (1995) and Paula Abdul's Head Over Heels (1995).[1][6]
That early work laid foundation for Russo's later career. Over the years he has worked with a variety of well-known musicians, in addition to the ones named above,
- Alejandro Sanz (El Tren de los Momentos),
- Aterciopelados (Oye),
- Audioslave (Audioslave, Like a Stone, Doesn't Remind Me, Out of exile),
- Babyface (For the Cool in You, The Day, A Collection of His Greatest Hits),
- Bird York (The Velvet Hour, Wicked Little High),
- Don Tetto
- Enrique Iglesias (Enrique Iglesias),
- Eric Clapton (Change The World),
- Faith Evans (A Faithful Christmas, Keep the Faith),
- Huecco (Assalto, Huecco),
- Jay-Z (99 Problems),
- Jermaine Dupri (12 Soulful Nights of Christmas),
- Jesse and Joy (Electricidad),
- Jonny Cash (American IV: The Man Comes Around),
- Juanes (Fíjate Bien, Un Día Normal, Mi Sangre, La Vida... Es Un Ratico),
- Lili Haydn (Place Between Places),
- Love Star (Espectro),
- Macy Gray (The Id, The Trouble with Being Myself, The Very Best of Macy Gray),
- Maná (Amar es Combatir, Drama y Luz),
- Michael Jackson (King of Pop),
- Toto (Kingdom of Desire)
- Los Claxons (Un Día De Sol)
- Alan Munro (Ojala)
and others; full listings are available.[1][6]
Since 2000, Russo has been specializing more in Latin rock and pop music and has worked with Juanes, Mana, and other Latin artists from Latin America, Central America, and Spain.[1]
Russo's mixing techniques include the commonly used audio filtering with different microphones and equalizers, reduction and amplification by DRC, sound fading, and a range of more unconventional approaches.[7] He adapts his methods to accentuate the idiosyncratic features in the music he records,[7] citing the record producer and colleague Rick Rubin as one of the main professional influences.[5]
Awards
Russo has received 12 platinum record awards for his work in the music industry, and won 2 American Grammy Awards and 12 Latin Grammy Awards (listed below in chronological order).
- Rock Solo Vocal Album award for Fíjate Bien, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2001, engineer/mixer[8]
- Nomination for Album of the Year award, for Fijate Bien, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2001, engineer/mixer
- Nomination for Record of the Year award for El Alma al Aire, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2001, engineer/mixer
- Album of the Year award, for Un Día Normal, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2003, engineer/mixer[8]
- Best Rock Solo Vocal Album award for Un Día Normal, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2003, engineer/mixer[8]
- Record of the Year award for Es Por Ti, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2003, engineer/mixer[8]
- Best Rock Solo Vocal Album award for Mi Sangre, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2005, engineer/mixer[8]
- Best Latin Rock, Alternative or Urban Album award for Amar es Combatir, National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, 2006, engineer/mixer[9]
- Best Latin Pop Album award for El Tren de los Momentos, National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, 2007, engineer[9]
- Best Alternative Music Album award for Oye, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2007, engineer[8]
- Album of the Year award for La Vida... Es Un Ratico, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2008, engineer/mixer[8]
- Record of the Year award for Me Enamora, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2008, engineer/mixer[8]
- Best Male Pop Vocal Album award for La Vida... Es Un Ratico, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2008, engineer[8]
- Best Engineered Album award, for Distinto, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2010, engineer[8]
- Best Engineered Album award, for Drama Y Luz, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2011, engineer[8]
- Best Rock Album award, for Drama Y Luz, Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, 2011, engineer[8]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Thom Russo Credits, All Music, Accessed July 2, 2011.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Advice from a Producer/Mixer Musician Coaching, June 2, 2011, Accessed July 2, 2011.
- ↑ Thom Russo Biography AOL Music, Accessed July 2, 2011.
- ↑ Thom Russo IMDb, Accessed July 2, 2011.
- 1 2 3 Thom Russo -- Interview Latin Media Gurus, 2010, Accessed July 2, 2011.
- 1 2 Thom Russo Album Credits, Accessed July 2, 2011.
- 1 2 THE BLUE Q&A SESSION with Thom Russo Vintage Microphone, Accessed July 2, 2011.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Thom Russo Past winners, The Latin Grammy Awards, Accessed July 2, 2011.
- 1 2 Thom Russo Past winners, The Grammy Awards, Accessed July 2, 2011.