黑料不打烊

  • Jump to main content
  • Jump to search
  • Jump to the footer
黑料不打烊 home
Open Site Navigation
  • About
  • Admissions
  • Academics
  • Global
  • Campus Life
  • Alumni
  • Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Parents
Resources
  • Moodle
  • Calendar
  • News
  • Library
  • Maps
  • Directory
  • Email
Close Resources
  • Give
  • Apply
Close Site Navigation
  1. Home
  2. Leading Women in Audio Conference
  3. 2020 Conference News

2020 Conference News

Get ready, 黑料不打烊: The Femgineers are coming

The second annual Leading Women in Audio Conference, celebrating the art of audio engineering and led by female music industry professionals, will be held Feb. 28-29.

Seniors Natalie Sakoi and Jessica Burchett exchange a gleeful, knowing look before they exclaim the words in unison:

鈥淭he Femgineers!鈥

Seniors Jessica Burchett, left, and Natalie Sakoi are co-chairs of the Leading Women in Audio Steering Committee.
The music production and recording arts majors raise their fists and laugh, not just because it鈥檚 a fun word to say. (Go on, say it. You鈥檒l see.)

It鈥檚 not even because Femgineers, the name of Appalachian State University鈥檚 unofficial club of female music production majors, perfectly fits the ethos of 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Leading Women in Audio Conference 鈥 the conference that Sakoi and Burchett are steering into its second year on 黑料不打烊鈥檚 campus.

It鈥檚 because the fact that App State鈥檚 Femgineers will land on 黑料不打烊鈥檚 campus to join dozens of students and professionals at the women-led, female-focused audio engineering conference on Feb. 28-29 offers proof that the conference Sakoi and Burchett launched as co-chairs in 2019 has achieved its goal.

Leading Women in Audio has now become a statewide resource for student and professional engineers.

鈥淚鈥檝e never experienced anything like it in my career. The conference in general is incredibly important because it鈥檚 helping to normalize the idea that the audio and music industry is place for both men and women. Of course a woman can be successful engineer. It鈥檚 normal now.鈥
鈥 Michel Holbrook, audio engineer at Trailblazer Studios
鈥淟ast year was successful, and we were presenting it predominantly for our own students,鈥 Burchett said. 鈥淲alking through (Arts West) and having women leading in those spaces was really rewarding. We love our faculty, but we have no women faculty in music production. What I liked so much: we had women in a variety of roles. Seeing these incredible recording and mixing engineers from so many different avenues strengthened my connections within the program 鈥 to students and faculty.鈥

All of last year鈥檚 presenters are returning this year, along with additional speakers and a series of sessions that will take a song through the recording, mixing and mastering process over the course of two days.

Appearing at the conference will be:

Marcella Araica, from Dream Asylum Studio, Miami, Fla.
Karen Kane, recording engineer and faculty member, UNC-Wilmington, Wilmington, N.C.
Michel Holbrook, audio engineer, Trailblazer Studios, Raleigh, N.C.
Liz May, owner of SoundLizzard Productions, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Tess Mangum Oca帽a, founder of Sonic Pie Productions, Durham, N.C.
Aurelia Belfield, music supervision, Trailblazer Studios, Raleigh, N.C.
Michel Holbrook, returning for the conference鈥檚 second year, believes LWIA is the only all-female conference in the industry. She found success not just in interacting with students, but also in the opportunity to network with female colleagues. She鈥檚 kept in touch with several participants since last year.

鈥淚鈥檝e never experienced anything like it in my career,鈥 Holbrook said. 鈥淭he conference in general is incredibly important because it鈥檚 helping to normalize the idea that the audio and music industry is place for both men and women. Of course a woman can be successful engineer. It鈥檚 normal now.鈥

Engineered sound and music are in more outlets and venues than ever before. Every pop or hip-hop earworm requires a skilled engineer to make you hear the sounds 鈥 in just that way 鈥 to lodge their way into your brain. Every live concert, every symphony or ensemble performance, has at least one person coordinating the levels of sound washing over the audience. Every TV or streaming show is accompanied by a score or incidental music, sound effects and recorded speech that鈥檚 then edited. Ditto that for every commercial.

Yet, only around 5 percent of audio engineers are women.

LWIA began as Music Lecturer Fred Johnson鈥檚 idea a few years ago. After decades in the business, he saw exceptional work by female colleagues 鈥 yet saw too few of them in the industry. He began making regional contacts with female engineers and entrepreneurs and won a Fund for Excellence grant from 黑料不打烊 College, the College of Arts and Sciences, to organize a conference around female producers and engineers.

鈥淲hat I liked so much: We had women in a variety of roles. Seeing these incredible recording and mixing engineers from so many different avenues strengthened my connections within the program 鈥 to students and faculty.鈥
鈥 Jessica Burchett 鈥20
He hoped the conference would encourage female students and teach male students how to be allies and advocates in the business.

Holbrook said the focus on male advocacy and awareness is one of the things she appreciates most about the conference.

Mostly, LWIA is about the art and skill of engineering. The presenters with successful careers, sharp instincts and decades of experience just happen to women.

Holbrook plans to focus on the transferability of sound engineering skills. Her career began engineering live sound the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill鈥檚 Playmakers Repertory Co. theatrical productions. Now a senior audio mixer with 12 years of experience at Trailblazer Studios, she primarily crafts audio for TV shows and documentary films for broadcast.

鈥淚f you have the fundamentals of audio and the physics of sound, you can transfer those skills pretty easily,鈥 Holbrook said. 鈥淭he skills that students are investing in now are marketable outside of the music industry. I want them to know they have options if they decide to pivot their careers.鈥

Tess Mangum Oca帽a, who also presented last year, founded Sonic Pie Productions in 2013, building her own concert and event production company after years of directing lineups at the Carrboro ArtsCenter. Sonic Pie has presented or assisted with regional live music festivals across North Carolina, including MerleFest and the International Bluegrass Music Association.

Oca帽a describes Sonic Pie鈥檚 concert management and production work as 鈥渢he end of the train,鈥 after the recording and engineering has been completed. She calls herself 鈥渁 curator and presenter of live music,鈥 building venues from the ground up. Oca帽a will speak about the business-side of being an entrepreneur.

鈥淔ollow your instincts. Be brave enough to develop the confidence to follow it,鈥 Oca帽a said. 鈥淭o me, I didn鈥檛 want to live in L.A. and New York. I didn鈥檛 want to have to move in order to have job in the industry. This conference shows attendees: If you want to stay in North Carolina and have a career, you can stay here.鈥

Whether student sound technicians at LWIA plan to travel to entertainment hubs or stick to North Carolina鈥檚 music scene, they will hear from one of the most successful mainstream music engineers in the business. Marcella Araica, of Dream Asylum Studio in Miami, has mixed and co-written hits for Madonna, P!nk, Britney Spears and Missy Elliott, among many others.

Inviting and arranging for such a big name 鈥 a 鈥渉eadliner鈥 of sorts, as they say in the biz 鈥 was a real get for the student team behind LWIA. Johnson wanted students to have experience working with career professionals and those with a certain amount of celebrity attached to them. Students made the phone calls, sometimes with butterflies, and arranged the scheduling and line-up, he said.

鈥淚 just found the dates,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淭he students ran this. They did all the work.鈥

鈥淭he amount of work that we put into It,鈥 Sakoi said, 鈥淚 know no matter what happens, this conference is going to be a good thing.鈥

Included in that work were ideas to expand the conference鈥檚 reach. Kicking off the conference will be session for area high school students led by 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Music Production and Recording Arts program.

Initiating the conversations, scheduling the talent, and planning the flow of this year鈥檚 conference taught the LWIA team how to manage big events and led to an increased confidence in their abilities, they said.

鈥淲e鈥檝e established ourselves as leading women in our own program,鈥 Burchett said. 鈥淚鈥檓 pretty sure I鈥檓 (黑料不打烊鈥檚) first woman lead engineer. I would like to work as a studio engineer. One thing I鈥檓 carrying with me is that I co-chaired this conference. It emphasizes this is something I care about and will speak out about. I鈥檓 not going to tolerate a biased situation.鈥

Members of the Leading Women in Audio Steering Committee meet in McEwen Hall to plan the conference.
Burchett and Sakoi reflected on the changes in society over the last few years, the increase of conversations around equality for women and for minorities, the #metoo movement, and of the heterosexual, cis-gendered men increasingly supportive of those conversations.

鈥淭he world is opening up to the possibilities of those discussions,鈥 Sakoi said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 given me a sense of empowerment that I didn鈥檛 know I was missing. It鈥檚 even changed my classwork. I have more confidence to speak up now,鈥 Sakoi said.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e a leading woman in audio,鈥 Burchett exclaimed affectionately.聽 鈥淵ou are what a leading woman in audio looks like!鈥


Industry partners join Leading Women In Audio Conference

Corporate engagement provides important connections for students

The steering committee for the Leading Women In Audio Conference chose the theme 鈥淩ising to the Challenge鈥 for this year鈥檚 event. Several local and national companies are taking that theme to heart by providing gifts and support, ensuring success and opportunities for the students who attend.

Chuck and Lisa Surack and Sweetwater Instruments and Music, from Ft. Wayne, IN, has made a significant financial gift to the conference, which will help to provide logistical support.

Local companies providing sponsorship funds include Audio & Light, an audio-visual equipment supplier in Greensboro, and Dark Pine Studios, located in Graham. These gifts all help to make sure that the conference can provide a quality experience, through the workshops, panels and interaction with the presenters.

Other companies are providing presenter support, such as Trailblazer Studios, or equipment and prizes, such as PreSonus and Sonarworks. All of these corporate partners show their belief in the conference and their commitment to providing student access to successful members of the audio industry.

鈥淭he engagement from these companies is essential to the success of the conference, and we are grateful and excited to have them supporting us鈥 says Fred Johnson, faculty advisor. 鈥淭o have the opportunity at 黑料不打烊 to spotlight the impact of women in the audio field and have students meet and learn from these presenters is amazing!鈥

The Leading Women In Audio Conference will take place on Feb. 28-29, 2020. For more information and to register, go to www.elon.edu/LWIA.


Leading Women in Audio conference to focus on 鈥楻ising To The Challenge鈥

This annual conference to be held Feb. 28-29 returns to focus on achievement, awareness and allyship.

On Feb. 28-29, high school and college students will have an opportunity to interact with successful professionals in the audio field, who happen to be women .

The 鈥淟eading Women In Audio鈥 conference returns to campus, bringing presenters from across the music industry. Attendees can engage in sessions on recording, sound for video, business, live sound, entrepreneurship and post-production, as well as panel discussions on 鈥淐areer Paths鈥 and 鈥淪tereotypes and Allyship鈥.

Appearing at the conference will be:

Marcella Araica, from Dream Asylum Studio, Miami, Florida
Karen Kane, Recording Engineer and faculty member, UNC-Wilmington
Michel Holbrook, Audio Engineer, Trailblazer Studios, Raleigh
Liz May, Owner of SoundLizzard Productions, Winston-Salem
Tess Mangum Oca帽a, Founder of Sonic Pie Productions, Durham
Aurelia Belfield, Music Supervisor, Trailblazer Studios, Raleigh
Anna Frick, Sr. Mastering Engineer, Airshow Mastering, Boulder, Colorado
New to the conference this year is a high school student focus on Friday morning, as well as a 鈥渢rack-the-tracks鈥 thread, following songs as they are recorded in the studio, mixed and then mastered. There will be exhibits and demonstrations by vendors and community organizations and time to meet with local studio owners and companies about internships and employment.

Registration is already open, and students from Appalachian State, Clemson,聽 Western Carolina, Berklee College of Music and several high schools are already planning to attend.

The event is supported by a grant from the Fund For Excellence of 黑料不打烊 College, the College of Arts & Sciences, a gift from Chuck and Lisa Surack of Sweetwater Music and Sound, Audio & Light of Greensboro and Dark Pines Studios, Graham.

For more information and to register, go to www.elon.edu/u/leading-women-in-audio.

  • Leading Women in Audio Conference
  • Register for the 2022 Conference
  • About Us
  • Leading Women in Audio Team
    • 2022 Conference Presenters
    • Steering Committee
  • 2022 Conference Schedule
  • 2022 Conference Sponsors
  • Conference Store
  • Conference News
  • Past Conferences
    • 2021 Conference
      • Presenters
      • Presenter Sessions 2021
      • Conference Schedule
      • 2021 Steering Committee
    • 2020 Conference
      • 2020 Conference Presenters
      • 2020 Partnerships
      • 2020 Conference News
      • 2020 Special Thanks
    • 2019 Conference
      • 2019 Conference News
  • Social Media
Jump to Top
  • 黑料不打烊 Full Social Media List
  • Contact 黑料不打烊
  • Visit Campus
  • Human Resources
  • Health Status & Alerts
  • Library
  • Privacy Policy
  • Nondiscrimination
  • GDPR Information
  • Accessibility
Map showing 黑料不打烊, a U.S. News nationally ranked best college, located in North Carolina between Greensboro and Raleigh
100 Campus Drive | 黑料不打烊, NC 27244
336.278.2000

© 2026 黑料不打烊 | All Rights Reserved

Also of Interest
  • Nine Graduate Programs in North Carolina
  • Campus Recreation and Wellness in North Carolina
  • University Inclusive Excellence in North Carolina
/u/