[…]edge, so that he must have taught me an awful lot. And John Dennis was one of the main mixers and I worked with him quite a lot. B. C. Sewell was the dubbing mixer...Alan Lawson : Oh yes!Gordon McCallum : Do you remember Mr Sewell?Alan Lawson : Oh yes, yes.Gordon McCallum : Now he went to The Bush, […]
[…]job. Poor John Morris the composer had to score two full versions of the movie which were quite different.SPEAKER: M17We then had to go into separate dubbing rooms at the same time and mix two separate versions with two separate dubbing crews. It was as if we were making two movies of course and we […]
[…] and explore together when the documentary unit in Birmingham started, was not very was not progressing anywhere else. The there was no rock and roll dubbing for example at that time, you had to dub a complete 8 or 10 minute block of sound, which was an enormous step back from the techniques that we[…]
[…] no... Jim Shields: Burns Red! [Chuckles] Maurice Askew: [Chuckles] Brilliant dubbing editor. Jim Shields: Ex Naval man, of course. Maurice Askew: […]
[…]suring that we had enough copies of that sound effect, getting a transfer made, extending the transfer, so that you were doubling up on it, doing the dubbing sheets, which was when 1000 foot of film for example, going through a synchronizer for every foot had to be a bit of sound, or whether it was […]
[…]aurice AskewTape 1, Side 1 Jim Shields: This is a recording made in 1972 at the Gate recording theatre at Elstree, of Maurice Askew, who was the dubbing mixer there - and a very find dubbing mixer too. [break in recording]... You know, just when you started in the industry, roughly, and where?M[…]
1 John Aldred (sound recordist and dubbing mixer from 1936 -1986 ) BIOGRA PHY : John Ald red w orked […]
[…]use at Shepperton but I'm talking about much later in the 60s.Peter Musgrave: So there were just four stages. Did they run as far as having their own dubbing theatre?John Aldred: Yes they did. They had three small theatres and one was equipped for dubbing but there was no dubbing crew employed as su[…]
[…]ther. I, if I'm going to work, I want to be paid a reasonable wage for it. And my father use somebody for the film society called Lou Hines who ran a dubbing Theatre in London. And he said he thought he could get a job as a projectionist. So as 18 years old, I went up to telephone services and Baker[…]