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Chris James (engineer)
American sound engineer and music producer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Chris James is an American audio engineer who has worked as a recording engineer and/or mixing engineer for several musical artists, most famously alongside Prince with whom he has been nominated for two Grammy Awards. He currently resides in the Los Angeles, California area.
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Early life
Chris James was born in Memphis, Tennessee, moving when he was ten to Maryville, Tennessee. He was educated at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro with a focus on music and recording.[1]
Career
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At college, James shared a dorm room area with Matt Mahaffey, lead member of the band Self. Following the release of their debut album Subliminal Plastic Motives (1995), Mahaffey recruited James for live performances, later being inducted as a full-time member.[2] Playing keyboard and recording several albums for the band, he moved with the group to Los Angeles, California,[1] in 2001 to be closer with their parent label DreamWorks Records.[3] In the area, James opened his own studio named the Archive Studio. He's used the location to work with various artists, including Luther Vandross, Van Hunt, Ne-Yo, Paramore, Miguel, Frank Ocean, Janelle Monáe, and Kings of Leon.[1]
James grew up listening to Prince, inspired by him to write and record songs emulating his style.[4] He began working with the singer in 2012, mixing albums such as Plectrumelectrum (2014) and Art Official Age (2014) at Paisley Park Studios. He additionally performed guitar as part of Prince's live band and toured as a sound engineer.[1] A colleague of James was involved with mixing one of Prince's albums and was unavailable to return to record Hit n Run Phase Two (2015), leading to James' substitution and involvement with the singer's final project before his death. He later created Dolby Atmos mixes for the albums Diamonds and Pearls (1991),[4] Purple Rain (1984),[5][6] Around the World in a Day (1985),[7] and the concert film Prince and the Revolution: Live (1985),[8][9] additionally working on an unreleased demo for "Do Me, Baby".[10] At the 59th Annual Grammy Awards, James was nominated in the Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical category for Hit n Run Phase Two,[11] and was again nominated at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards in the Best Historical Album category for the super deluxe editon of Diamonds and Pearls.[12]
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