Andy Wallace

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Andy Wallace (producer)

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Andy Wallace is a Grammy Award-winning music studio engineer with a long track record of successful productions, beginning with the 1986 production of the Run-DMC/Aerosmith collaboration on "Walk This Way" with Rick Rubin. Following this breakout success, Wallace went on to work with Feeder, Sum 41, The Cult, Slayer, Prince, Bruce Springsteen, Sepultura, Nirvana, The Misfits, White Zombie, Jeff Buckley, Faith No More, Rollins Band, Rush, Alice Cooper, Bernard Butler, Bad Religion, Sonic Youth, L7, Guns N' Roses, Rage Against the Machine, Front 242, Alabama 3, Linkin Park, Trapt, Foo Fighters, Silverchair, At the Drive-In, Staind, Sevendust, Blind Melon, System of a Down, Phish, Skunk Anansie, A Perfect Circle, Limp Bizkit, Disturbed, Paul McCartney, The Cribs, Atreyu, Avenged Sevenfold, Dream Theater and many others. As of October, 2005, over 80 million albums had been sold worldwide that contained a credit to Andy Wallace.[1]

In 1999, Wallace shared a Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical with Tchad Blake and Trina Shoemaker, for their work on Sheryl Crow's album, The Globe Sessions.

Partial discography

p – produced, m – mixed, e – engineered

External links

References

  1. ^ http://mixonline.com/mag/audio_andy_wallace/ Interview with Andy Wallace in Mix magazine

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Mentioned in

Whatnot (1997 Album by Cola)
Earshot (Rock Band, 2000s)
Somewhere in Between (2001 Album by Systematic)
Bond (Rock Band, '90s, 2000s)
Building (1996 Album by Sense Field)