Recording Engineer

Role

Captures clean, usable audio through microphones, levels, signal flow, and recording systems.

Description

A Recording Engineer captures clean, usable audio: choosing and placing microphones, managing levels and signal flow, running the session, and delivering takes that need no rescue later.

Interactive projects raise the difficulty in specific ways. A branching script may need thousands of voice lines that match in tone and level even when pickups happen months apart, so the engineer documents everything — mic, distance, preamp settings, room — to make session two sound like session one. Field recording for ambiences and foley capture bring their own disciplines of noise control and coverage.

Discipline-Specific Description

Recording is the capture end of the sound chain: everything downstream — editing, implementation, mixing — works with what this role brings back.

Scope Note

Usually covers microphone selection and placement, session setup and running, level and signal-flow management, voice, foley, and field recording, session documentation for matchable retakes, and delivery of organized, labeled takes.

Boundary Note

The Recording Engineer captures; the Audio Engineer covers the broader technical audio territory including playback systems and routing, and editing or mixing the captured material belongs to editors and mix roles. Directing the vocal performance is the Voice Director's job.

Collaboration Note

Close collaborators include voice directors and actors, sound designers, foley artists, dialogue editors, audio engineers, and the data wranglers who take custody of the files.

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