presonusRarely does a manufacturer receive a standing ovation from its users, but the PreSonus team received a heartfelt and enthusiastic one at the closing ceremony of its third annual PreSonuSphere user conference. PreSonuSphere 2013 brought 450 musicians, producers, engineers and other music-business professionals from all over the globe to the Manship Theatre at the Shaw Center for the Arts in downtown Baton Rouge. Attendees sold out two hotels and filled numerous area restaurants while enjoying Southern cooking, Southern hospitality, crowd-pleasing music, informative educational seminars and many networking opportunities.

The event kicked off on October 24 with a rooftop jambalaya cookout, serenaded by Louisiana country/folk rockers L’Angelus and Baton Rouge bluesmaster Chris LeBlanc. The next morning started with Breakfast with the Chiefs, in which journalist, musician and industry personality Craig Anderton grilled a panel consisting of PreSonus CEO Jim Mack, Chief Strategy Officer Jim Odom, Chief Technology Officer Bob Tudor, VP of Sales Rick Naqvi and Executive VP John Bastianelli about industry trends and their vision of the future.

October 25 and 26 were filled with presentations on a wide range of topics. Anderton, Grammy-winning engineer Khaliq Glover, renowned acoustician John Storyk, composer and sound designer Justin Lassen, veteran FOH engineer John Mills, producer and clinician Martin Atkins and church-sound specialist Doug Gould were among those presiding over seminars and fielding questions on recording, mixing, mastering, acoustics, music education, stage lighting, the music business and more.

PreSonus staff offered in-depth tips and techniques for the company’s StudioLive AI-series digital mixers, Studio One music-production software, Notion music-notation software and Nimbit direct-to-fan service. Attendees heard the presentations and music via PreSonus’ new StudioLive AI PA speakers and auditioned Sceptre- and Eris-series studio monitors, as well as getting a sneak peak at as-yet-unannounced products.

Multitrack recordings of performances by L’Angelus were captured live to Studio One, and attendees were treated to an up-close-and-personal journey from recording the first riff all the way to final release on Nimbit. An assortment of partner companies staffed booths where attendees could check out their products and ask questions.

 

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