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Bill Porter (sound engineer) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Bill Porter (sound engineer)
Bill Porter (June 15, 1931 – July 7, 2010) was an American audio engineer who helped shape the Nashville sound and recorded such stars as Chet Atkins, The Everly Brothers, Elvis Presley and Roy Orbison from the late 1950s through the 1970s. In one week of 1960, his recordings accounted for 15 of Billboard Magazine's "Top 100," a feat none have matched.〔 Porter mixed concert sound for Presley from 1970 until the singer's death in 1977. At the University of Miami, he helped create the first college program in audio engineering, and he taught similar courses at the University of Colorado Denver, and at Webster University in St. Louis, Missouri. Porter, said to have a golden ear, was inducted into the TEC Awards Hall of Fame in 1992. ==Early life== Porter was born Billy Rhodes Porter in St. Louis, Missouri on June 15, 1931.〔 His family moved to Tennessee when he was 10. He grew up loving jazz music and baseball, and for a time considered an athletic career starting with the minor leagues.〔Rumble, Part One, p. 27〕 He graduated from East Nashville High School in 1949, then served in the U.S. Army Reserves for a few years〔 while he made a living as a television repairman, learning electronics at a University of Tennessee extension program in Nashville.〔
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