“经营录音室是一项愚蠢的业务”:当代录音室行业的工作和就业

Allan Watson
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引用次数: 21

摘要

本文关注的是当代音乐经济中录音室部门的工作和就业情况。更具体地说,它的目的是开始解决对文化工作场所中个人主体性问题缺乏关注的问题,通过从该部门工作人员的角度出发,对录音室部门不断变化的经济条件如何影响工作的经验信息进行说明。这一部门的特点是继续向更临时和灵活的项目工作形式发展,最近发展了一种以自由职业项目为基础的录音模式。对于唱片制作人和录音室工程师来说,这些发展对雇佣关系、工作条件和工作保障产生了负面影响。数字技术的最新发展导致了音乐经济中的复制危机,这进一步凸显了这些问题的重要性。通过对在伦敦录音室工作的唱片制作人和工程师的定性采访,本文强调了自由职业的兴起是如何导致不稳定的工作环境的,这种环境已经将获得工作的压力和不这样做的财务风险转移到了个人制作人和工程师身上,同时导致了令人疲惫但又暴走的工作制度。无论是新手还是经验丰富的制作人和工程师,该行业都越来越难以找到并维持有收入的工作;对许多人来说,这是一种日益剥削的方式。然而,数字技术赋予制作人和工程师的个性,以及那些能够成功从事音乐制作的人潜在的象征和经济回报,意味着它仍然是一个有吸引力的、备受追捧的职业。
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‘Running a studio's a silly business’: work and employment in the contemporary recording studio sector
This paper is concerned with work and employment in the recording studio sector of the contemporary musical economy. More specifically, it aims to begin to address the lack of attention paid to the issue of individual subjectivity in the cultural workplace, through an empirically-informed account of how the changing economic conditions in the recording studio sector are impacting on work as seen from the perspective of those working in the sector. The sector is one marked by a continued move towards more temporary and flexible forms of project working, as seen in the comparatively recent development of a freelance project-based model for recording. For record producers and studio engineers, these developments have impacted negatively upon employment relations, working conditions and job security. Recent developments in digital technologies, which have resulted in a crisis of reproduction in the musical economy, have further heightened the importance of these issues. Drawing on qualitative interviews with record producers and engineers working in recording studios in London, the paper highlights how the rise of freelance work has resulted in a precarious work environment that has shifted the pressure of obtaining work, and the financial risk of not doing so, on to individual producers and engineers, and at the same time resulted in exhausting yet bulimic work regimes. Both for new and experienced producers and engineers, the sector is revealed as an increasingly difficult one in which to find and maintain gainful employment; for many, it is an increasingly exploitive one. Yet, the individuality afforded to producers and engineers by digital technologies, and the potential symbolic and financial rewards on offer to those who can successfully follow a career in music production, means that it remains an attractive and much sought after career.
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