Megastar Studios located in Harlem New York at 148th and Broadway are looking for the best audio engineers in New York/New Jersey Area. At Megastar Brand Studio's work is always in high demand,with some of the best unsigned and underground talent one hit away from fame and fortune. If interested email Megastardvd@gmail.com or call (917) 238-6081 to inquire about openings to engineer, ask to speak with Aaron Mcbride. Look at the job qualifications below to see if you qualify. Role and Responsibilities
Mix and Master Artist Songs
Send mixed / mastered tracks to clients via email
organize artist sessions in folders
enforce studio rules
make artist feel comfortable and give the quality sound recording advice.
Job Functions
Excel at Pro Tools 8 and Higher
Have inner working of Digi Design Sound board and Studio equipment
Understanding of major plug-ins and info on where to find more plugins to ensure the highest quality mixes.
down with James and former Raptor and Miami Heat all-star
Chris Bosh, as they discuss their admiration for one another
and former Raptor-turned-veteran journeyman Vince Carter's
influence on their lives.
In the clip, the trio reflected on their respective careers and
how they eventually met each other. Bosh took a moment to
praise Drake for his success and all he's done for Toronto,
saying that while being labeled a "Canadian artist" used to
have a "negative connotation at the time," Drake found a
way to step outside of that box and "do so many great things." "It's been a journey and it's been incredible to do it this way,"
the rapper told Bosh, later adding that "there was a time
where it was really, it was really tough to feel like we could
ever transcend that actual literal border" but his hometown
has created a "monster" due to the passion and support
from fans.
The men then shifted their focus to discuss Carter and his
affect on each of their lives. James starts by reminiscing
about how impactful the eight-time all-star's athleticism was
to him as he developed his own craft.
"Vince was that guy where you're like if he gets one dribble
inside that three-point line, you better move," James said.
"For a kid like myself who started to find his way with some
athleticism, you looked at Vince like, 'Damn, I ain't gon be
able to get to that point but if I could get half [or] three-fourths
of it, then I'm doing something right.'"
Drake on the other hand, says that Carter's presence made
Toronto's nightlife feel "larger than life."
"We had celebrities coming to our city and performing that
would’ve never been here before. We had rappers and people from here that were acting like we were in New York, " Drizzy added. "People were driving different cars and starting businesses, he created a culture for us that we had only seen on television." Drake and LeBron James are currently promoting
The Carter Effect, a documentary on Vince Carter's
basketball career and impact on the Toronto scene.
Drake and James are executive producers for the film,
Not all heroes wear capes, but some wear hoodies. During Oklahoma City Thunder media day, Carmelo Anthony showed up wearing a charcoal hoodie under his new OKC jersey. If there were any questions about "Hoodie Melo" going with Anthony to the Thunder, we got our answer pretty quickly. As Anthony fielded questions from the media, one reporter had the audacity to suggest the idea of Melo coming off the bench. "Who me?" he asked in disbelief. Does this reporter know Hoodie Melo's NBA2K18 rating?
After regaining his composure following the biggest laugh he's had in probably years, Hoodie Melo responded, "I don't know where that started, where that came from. Aye P, they said I gotta come off the bench!"
Later on, Anthony revealed the origins of Hoodie Melo. "It started with a beanie, like I was just in the gym and I didn't have a haircut, and I was like, 'I'm just gonna go and throw a hat on. I wanted to sweat, and I just started working back out in the summer," he explained. "From there, it went to a hoodie and it got out, and the phenomenon started."
"For me, it was just about showing a different focus that I have, a different motivation, and just locking in to what I have to do. And locking myself into the gym, and locking myself into focusing in on my body," Hoodie Melo continued. "Because I didn't know what was going to happen. It was so much going on that was surrounding me that I just wanted to find a way that I can just focus in, and that's when Hoodie Melo was created."
Cardi B is the first female rapper to rule without any other billed acts since Lauryn Hill in 1998. Plus, Portugal. The Man earns its first top 10.
Cardi B becomes the first female rapper to top the Billboard Hot 100 chart without the assistance of any other credited artists in nearly 19 years, as her debut hit "Bodak Yellow (Money Moves)" rises from No. 2 to No. 1 on the latest chart (dated Oct. 7). Plus, Post Malone's "Rockstar," featuring 21 Savage, roars in at No. 2 on the Hot 100, and at No. 1 on the Streaming Songs and Digital Song Sales charts, and Portugal. The Man earns its first Hot 100 top 10, as "Feel It Still" pushes 14-10. "Bodak," released on The KSR Group/Atlantic Records, makes Cardi B (born Belcalis Almanzar, in the Bronx, New York) just the second female rapper to top the Hot 100 without any other billed artists, following Lauryn Hill's first solo Hot 100 entry (apart from the Fugees), "Doo Wop (That Thing)," for two weeks beginning with its Nov. 14, 1998, debut at No. 1. Cardi B is only the fifth female rapper ever to lead the Hot 100 at all. After Hill, Lil' Kim ruled for five weeks in 2001 with Christina Aguilera, Mya and P!nk on "Lady Marmalade"; Shawnna reigned as featured on Ludacris' "Stand Up," which topped the Dec. 6, 2003, chart; and Iggy Azalea's introductory Hot 100 hit, "Fancy," featuring Charli XCX, led for seven weeks in 2014. Cardi B is also the first female soloist to top the Hot 100 with a debut track unaccompanied by another artist since Meghan Trainor, whose "All About That Bass" led for eight weeks beginning Sept. 20, 2014. "Bodak" bullets at No. 2 on the Streaming Songs chart with 46.4 million U.S. streams, up 14 percent, in the week ending Sept. 21, according to Nielsen Music. It bounds 12-3 on Digital Song Sales, up 85 percent to 56,000 downloads sold in the week ending Sept. 21, marking the Hot 100's top gain in download sales (aided by a 69-cent discount price in the iTunes Store). The track also lifts 16-13 on Radio Songs, with 62 million all-format audience impressions, up 8 percent, in the week ending Sept. 24. ("Bodak" spends a fifth week at No. 1 on the Rap Airplay chart and a second week atop R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay; crowns the Rhythmic Songs airplay chart, with a 3-1 rise; and debuts on Pop Songs on at No. 37.) Notably, for a second straight week, a song tops the Hot 100 but is not the week's No. 1 title in streaming, airplay or sales; still, it accumulated enough overall chart points to reign. As for Atlantic Records in 2017, thanks to Cardi B's new No. 1, multiple leaders on the label have ascended to their first weeks at the Hot 100's summit in the same calendar year for the first time since 2012, as Ed Sheeran's "Shape of You" ruled for 12 weeks from its debut at No. 1 in Jan. 28. Five years ago, Flo Rida's "Whistle" and Bruno Mars' "Locked Out of Heaven" each ascended to the top for Atlantic. Cardi B's breakthrough hit also spends a sixth week at No. 1 on the Hot Rap Songs chart and a fourth frame atop Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs.