American recording engineer
Stuart Sikes is an American recording engineer and producer best known for his work with the White Stripes and for engineering Loretta Lynn 's Grammy Award -winning album Van Lear Rose , as well as producing Cat Power 's 2006 Shortlist Music Prize -winning album The Greatest .
Early life and education
Sikes grew up in Plano, Texas and graduated from Plano East High School in 1991. He attended Full Sail University . When his sister, who was living in Memphis, Tennessee , learned that Sonic Youth had recently recorded at Easley-McCain Recording , she suggested Sikes move to Memphis and get a job there.
Career
Sikes was hired at Easley-McCain as an intern in 1995 and advanced to assistant in less than 6 months. During this time, the studio worked on projects by such bands as Cat Power, Modest Mouse , the Walkmen , Rocket from the Crypt , and the Spinanes .[ 1] [ 2]
Sikes' first project at the studio was Two Dollar Guitar including band members Tim Foljahn and Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley . Sessions he engineered at Easley-McCain included The Promise Ring 's 1997 album Nothing Feels Good , Jets to Brazil 's 1998 album Orange Rhyming Dictionary , and The White Stripes ' 2001 album White Blood Cells .[ 2]
Sikes relocated to Dallas in 2001. He returned to Memphis to engineer Loretta Lynn 's 2004
album Van Lear Rose , produced by Jack White , which earned Sikes a Grammy Award for Best Country Album in 2005. Back in Dallas, he engineered the Happy Bullets ' 2005 album The Vice and Virtue Ministry , then returned to Ardent Studios in Memphis to produce Cat Power's 2006 Shortlist Music Prize -winning album The Greatest .[ 3]
In August, 2006 Sikes found a space for a permanent recording studio in the Elmwood residential area within the Oak Cliff neighborhood of Dallas. Sikes renovated the space himself and opened the studio as Elmwood Recording . John Congleton became involved with the studio, and took it over after Sikes relocated to Austin in 2012.[ 4]
References
^ Tanzilo, Bobby (April 26, 2007). "Maritime working with Sikes at Burst" . Retrieved August 29, 2024 .
^ a b Pittenger, Frank (May 2004). "Stuart Sikes: White Stripes, Loretta Lynn, Cat Power, more..." Tape Op . Retrieved August 29, 2024 .
^ Partridge, Kenneth (January 20, 2016). "Cat Power's 'The Greatest' at 10: Classic Track-by-Track Album Review" . Billboard . Retrieved August 29, 2024 .
^ Frost, Matt (June 2014). "John Congleton: Engineer & Producer" . Sound On Sound . Retrieved August 29, 2024 .
External links