blank
blank blank blank
blank
Home | Current Issue | Reviews | Archives | Mix Forums | Subscribe Now | Online Extras











blank


AES New Products Guide
NAB Audio Products
Education Directory


TEC Awards
Studio Showcase


Headline News
Site Index
About Mix
Contact Us
Advertising Information
Subscribe Now
Customer Service


Radio
Broadcast Engineering
Broadway Sound Master Class
Electronic Musician
Entertainment Design
Lighting Dimensions
Millimeter
Mix
Onstage
Remix
Sound & Video Contractor
Staging Rental Operations
Video Systems
Primedia Business

blank

IN LOVING MEMORY

Mix, Apr 1, 2008

Print-friendly format E-mail this information

J. PAUL HUNTSMAN, 1953-2008

J. Paul Huntsman, a supervising sound editor who worked on films including The Thin Red Line, The Illusionist and Starsky & Hutch, among others, died at his home on February 21 from complications resulting from a brain tumor.

Born in Idaho Falls, Idaho, Huntsman graduated from the University of Utah and later spent two years in Morocco with the Peace Corps. His first credited film in Hollywood was Loving Couples in 1980, followed by Michael Mann's Thief a year later. His final credit was The Illusionist in 2006. Huntsman worked for many years as a supervising sound editor at Todd-AO before moving over to Warner Bros., where he maintained a room until his passing.

Huntsman, an avid outdoorsman, represented the Sound Editorial Branch on the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences. The family asks that donations be made in his name to the Brain Tumor Society (www.braintumorsociety.org).

ALLEN STRANGE, 1943-2008

Composer/performer Allen Strange passed away on February 20. Considered a leading authority on analog electronic music, his Electronic Music: Systems, Techniques and Controls is still in demand as a comprehensive work on analog music synthesis.

In the late 1960s, Strange and his wife, Patricia, founded BIOME, a live electronic music performance, and in 1976 the Electric Weasel Ensemble with synth designer Don Buchla. He received two grants from the San Jose State University Foundation (1969 and 1974) for research into electronic music, and in 1970 became professor of music and director of the electronic music studios at the university, retiring from that position in 2002.



© 2008, Primedia Business Magazines and Media, a PRIMEDIA company. All rights reserved. This article is protected by United States copyright and other intellectual property laws and may not be reproduced, rewritten, distributed, redisseminated, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast, directly or indirectly, in any medium without the prior written permission of PRIMEDIA Business Corp.

Get Copyright Clearance Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2008, PRIMEDIA Business Magazines & Media Inc.

Print-friendly format E-mail this information
SITE SEARCH
blank
blank
blank


MixLine E-newsletter
MixLine Live
Sign Up Now
MixLine Archive
MixLine Live Archive

blank





blank
blank