NJ High School Adds New Recording Studio to Learning Spaces

A career and technical high school in New Jersey has added new professional recording gear to one of its teaching spaces. County Prep High School, part of Hudson County Schools of Technology, added hardware from Solid State Logic (SSL), a UK-based company that manufactures analog and digital audio consoles for music and audio production. Students in the music and audio technology program learn how to write their own songs and produce their own music. The senior project involves putting a label together and releasing songs.

To help students learn on industry-grade equipment, the high school acquired Solid State's SuperAnalogue AWS console with 48 inputs for a main studio classroom. The school already had an SSL XL-Desk studio console in a smaller recording space.

Although studio construction started in 2019, equipment deliveries were held up in 2020 due to the pandemic, and the space finally became operational earlier this year.

NJ County Prep High School Recording Equipment
The new studio at County Prep High School features professional equipment from Solid State Logic.
Source: Solid State Logic

The AWS 948 δelta is installed at the front of a teaching space with seating for about 16 students that overlooks a tracking room with a piano and two soundproof booths. In addition to the console, students can work with microphone preamps, equalizers and dynamics processing equipment from multiple manufacturers, installed in twin 19-inch racks. The setup also includes a Bricasti M7 stereo reverb processor, a rack of 500 series modules and a pair of ATC main monitors to support stereo listening with a 5.1 setup of Genelec nearfield monitors available for surround-sound projects.

The SSL XL-Desk was the first console installed at the school, and that's where students begin their mixing education. After they've mastered that, said Wilkis Figuereo, supervisor of Instruction, Music & Audio Technology for the schools, they're brought into the bigger studio for "large platform recordings," such as those requiring orchestral music.

"I need my students to learn real signal flow using a real console," said Figuereo in a press release. "And I wanted to be able to use the AWS not just for recording into the digital realm but also as a fully functional analog console. We're very happy with the console. It sounds beautiful."

Both studios sit on a facility-wide Audinate Dante network. The analog patch panels feed the console directly and all inputs to and outputs from the AWS desk interface via AVID Pro Tools software.

Figuereo said he added the Dante interface into the mix, to allow him to "capture and record 64 channels of audio from anywhere in the building and patch them into the console. And we can monitor everything throughout the recording studio and classroom spaces."

The studio also supports streaming. "We have a Crestron system with cameras and SDI connections everywhere," explained Figuereo. "I'm able to show the console with a camera and I can talk about signal flow and how it works. We can have video in all the rooms for the students, and also livestream performances."

Students receive Pro Tools and Dante network certification as part of their music and audio technology training. "We are exposing them to being able to record in a professional recording studio," said Figuereo. "I wanted to make sure we brought some real-world experience into the space. And you've got to have a real analog console for that." As he noted, "We’re just trying to change the game. How many kids get out of high school and can say they’ve had training on an SSL AWS 948 console?"

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • i-PRO, NovoTrax Partner for New School Emergency Response Solution

    i-PRO Americas, Inc., which manufactures edge computing cameras, recently announced a partnership with NovoTrax, provider of end-to-end life safety and mass notification solutions, to address gaps in emergency response workflows at K–12 schools, according to a news release.

  • Lawrence Group Announces Expansion of Student Housing Studio

    Integrated planning and design firm Lawrence Group recently announced that it has hired Nick Naeger, AIA, as the new Associate Principal / Senior Project Manager at its headquarters in St. Louis, Mo., according to a news release.

  • Allegion US Partners with Two Colleges for Mobile Credential Technology

    Allegion US recently announced a partnership with Florida Institute of Technology (FIT) and Denison College, in conjunction with Transact + CBORD, to install mobile credential technologies campus-wide, according to a news release. Implementing Mobile Student ID into Apple Wallet and Google Wallet will allow students access to campus facilities, amenities, and residence halls using just their phones.

  • ClassVR Wins Tech & Learning Best of Show at ISTELive 25

    Avantis Education recently announced that its flagship product, ClassVR, won the Tech & Learning Best of Show Award at ISTELive 25 in San Antonio, Texas, according to a news release. The program is designed to celebrate products that are “transforming education in schools around the world and that show the greatest promise for the industry,” and this is the fourth consecutive year that Avantis has claimed the award.

Digital Edition