Wikipedia:WikiProject Professional sound production/Article requests

This is a list of professional sound production articles to be written.

Equipment and technology

 * 500-series format and Lunchbox Audio modular audio processing equipment
 * Acoustic lens
 * Acoustic transduction
 * AES50
 * DTRS Digital Multitrack Tape (needs own article - split from DA-88 article) Split not clearly needed; DA-88 already covers a whole family of recorders and their DTRS format.
 * E Snake
 * Pultec, Pultec EQP-1A
 * Stamper (phonograph) (redirected to Record press)
 * MS recording (redirects to )
 * Dynamic equalization (redirects to Equalization (audio) with no mention there)
 * TEF analyzer

Companies
Before an article is created, these subjects must be demonstrated to meet WP:NCORP
 * 360 Systems
 * A&M Studios Hollywood recording studio (iffy redirect to Jim Henson Company Lot)
 * Audio Engineering Associates (AEA) manufacturer of ribbon microphones based on classic RCA designs
 * Auralex makers of acoustic treatment
 * Avalon Industries
 * Blackbird Studio Nashville recording studio founded by John & Martina McBride; Jacquire King's "favorite recording space in the world"
 * CAMCO (audio)
 * Dangerous Music
 * Digigram
 * Eminence (company) largest manufacturer of speakers in the US
 * Empirical Labs makers of the Distressor and Fatso
 * Event Electronics
 * Future Music
 * HK Audio
 * Josephson Engineering
 * KRK Systems (iffy redirect to Stanton Magnetics)
 * Langevin Audio
 * McDSP software DSP plug-ins
 * One On One Recording Los Angeles recording studio (iffy redirect to 17 Hertz Studio)
 * Otari (company) multitrack analog & digital recorders, synchronizers, time-code gear
 * Production Resource Group (PRG) who bought ProMix, Burns Audio, A-1 Audio and Electrotec, and the SFX group
 * Radial Engineering
 * Sonnox software evolved from Sony Oxford
 * Soundtoys software DSP plug-ins, founded by former Eventide designers
 * Soundtracs
 * Spectra Sonics manufacturer of mixing consoles and studio processors
 * Summit Audio
 * Magic Shop (recording studio) New York recording studio
 * Turbosound

People

 * Craig Anderton music industry editor (iffy redirect to PAiA Electronics)
 * George Augspurger audio and acoustical engineer
 * Russ Berger acoustician and studio designer
 * Jeff Berryman (concert loudspeaker design for Jason Sound, Westsun, Sound Art, Jasonaudio)
 * John F. Blackburn (Altec-Lansing)
 * Mahlon D. Burkhard digital delay, piano frames, shock/vibration testing, simulation of human hearing
 * Wade Burns (Dynaco engineer)
 * Lou Burroughs (co-founder, Electro-Voice)
 * Richard S. Burwen (parametric filtering)
 * Charlie Butten (touring sound mixer who helped develop ClearCom)
 * Bob Cohen (audio engineer) (ClearCom founder)
 * Emory Cook (early stereo applications)*Don Davis (audio engineer) (Synaudcon)
 * Carolyn Davis (Synaudcon)
 * Ken DeLoria (Apogee Sound loudspeakers, processing and amplifiers)
 * Dave Derr (Empirical Labs, Eventide)
 * Robert Easton (engineer) (360 Systems)
 * C. Robert Fine (recording engineer) currently redirects to Wilma Cozart Fine but worthy of its own article. Majestic Records studio, Beaux Arts studio, Fine Recording studios and, with his wife, developed Mercury Living Presence recording techniques.
 * Avery Robert Fisher (hifi)
 * Janet Furman (Alembic, Furman)
 * Steve Gagne (FM Productions; developed long-throw concert bass horns)monitor mixer; first multi-angle stage wedge)
 * Jim Gamble (audio engineer) (Gamble mixing consoles)
 * Gordon Gow (McIntosh Laboratories)
 * William J Halligan (Hallicrafters)
 * Richard C. Heyser, JPL. Time delay spectrometry. Ultrasound. Earthquake fault mapping using sound waves.
 * Anthony Hofmann audio engineer, co-founder of KLH, "Hoffman's Iron Law"
 * Al Kahn (audio engineer) (co-founder, Electro-Voice)
 * Herbert Keroes (1951 ultra-linear transformer patent)
 * Ed Laurent (Dynaco engineer)
 * John Leslie (audio engineer) (AMPEX)
 * Saul Marantz (Marantz hi-fi gear, stub biography needs expansion)
 * Allan Markoff (1969 Woodstock sound system)
 * Harry McCune, Sr. (Founded Harry McCune sound service in 1932; said he was the inventor of the first telephone answering machine)
 * Harry McCune (son of Harry McCune Sr. took over for Harry Sr. as president, touring sound engineer. Was the first sound man to travel with an act -Herb Albert and the Tijuana Brass. Also toured with Bill Cosby, Frank Sinatra, Miles Davis, Quincy Jones, Elvis Presley and many more.)
 * Allan McCune (president of McCune Audio/Video/Lighting - Harry McCune Sound Service. Sound Engineer.
 * Colin McDowell (audio engineer) founder, designer, McDSP
 * John G. "Jay" McKnight (MRL, AMPEX)
 * Frank McIntosh (audio engineer) (McIntosh Labs)
 * Stan Miller (first to safely fly concert speakers)
 * Stanley R. Miller (Stanel Sound; longtime live concert mixer for Neil Diamond)
 * Eugene Patronis, Jr. stadium sound system design
 * Dr. Don Pearson (Ultrasound: Grateful Dead concert system engineer)
 * Nicholas Phoenix Quantum Leap virtual instrument designer
 * Pat Quilter (founder, QSC Audio)
 * Douglas Rogers (audio) founder, EastWest / soundsonline.com, virtual instrument designer
 * Dave Rossum (E-MU)
 * Roger Russell (audio engineer) (McIntosh Labs)
 * Hermon Hosmer Scott (hifi. Short article needs expansion.)
 * Jack Sondermeyer (Peavey engineer)
 * Gerald Stanley (audio engineer) (Crown engineer)
 * Willi Studer (redirects to Studer likely independently notable)
 * Heinz K. Thiele (voicecoil parameters)
 * Walter Weber (engineer) (1907-1944) (Reichs-Rundfunk-Gesellschaft (RRG)) or German Broadcasting Company. Bias implementation and stereophony in magnetic recording. Short biography needs expansion.
 * Ron Wickersham (Alembic)
 * Susan Wickersham (née Frates) (Alembic)
 * Ronald Prent (audio engineer)
 * Bruce Black (Acoustician)