![]() Initially he operated from a modest studio in Springfield, VA, but in 1997 he expanded the company and moved to Colorado. ![]() Glasser’s background is in broadcasting (he started out at a commercial classical music station before moving to National Public Radio HQ in Washington, DC), but before long he was in great demand as a mastering engineer and shifted to full-time mastering in 1990, adding the word Mastering to the company’s name to reflect this new direction. Our work is primarily mastering, but more and more archival transfer projects have been coming in lately, along with restoration projects.”Īirshow was established by David Glasser in 1983, with the aim of providing ‘shows on the air’ – in other words audio services for live broadcasts and remote recordings. “We offer professional mastering and restoration, including MQA and Plangent technologies to take our customer’s music to a higher level. ![]() “As audio engineers, we are passionate about music making and proud to bring our expertise to artists’ recordings,” Glasser says. Airshow Mastering has now incorporated Verifle into all of its QC routines. ![]() Launched in 2018 after extensive testing by many of the world’s leading broadcast, recording, mastering and archival organisations, this revolutionary software overcomes issues of reliability by allowing computer audio recordings to be quickly checked for a wide range of errors and dropouts, without any compromise in the audio content or any additional metadata. Glasser also took the opportunity to install Prism Sound’s Verifile software that now comes as standard with all of the company’s audio conversion products. ![]() “The Lyra sounds very open and detailed and it brings the production room’s audio conversion quality up to the level of our mastering studio.” “After some initial confusion about the unit’s architecture and capabilities, the setup was a breeze,” he adds. Glasser adds that he was aware of most Prism Sound products and assumed the company’s pedigree would be present in the Lyra 2, even though he had no previous experience of using it. ![]()
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