I can use my values in the job as a Recording Engineer very well. I have musical strength and a recording engineer has to know a lot about music. I am also interpersonal so I can talk to people and tell them what/how I feel about their recordings. I am also interpersonal so I can work well alone in a editing booth work with recordings. But also I can help a person one on one with a problem. All of these values, I feel, would help me a lot with being a recording Engineer. I am a healer. I am interested in music and helping others. The recording engineer is responsible for operating all of the equipment involved in a recording session.
Recording is a very detailed process. A step in a session is placing the microphones on the instruments, and this is very important. When they begin recording, they have to be very careful about the levels and the quality of the sound. Recording Engineers make about $25,000 to $100,000 a year. As a fully fledged recording engineer, you will have a pretty busy lifestyle. If you are good, your services should be in demand every day of the year, and you may find it difficult to get any time away from work for rest, recreation or holidays. What will fill your working day in this way? Well, the recording engineer's job on a recording project complements that of the producer (and the programmer, if the nature of the work calls for one). The producer is in charge of setting the overall tone of the recording, in close consultation with the record company and the writer, or perhaps the key members of the band. As the recording engineer, you are there to make the producer's dream a sonic reality. Audio recording engineers work in air-conditioned studios that are acoustically accurate performance and listening environments. Lighting is designed to provide an intimate and inviting performance environment for the band as well as a comfortable working environment for the engineer.