Scott W. Colburn

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Scott W. Colburn
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BornDecember 1, 1964
Skokie, IL, USA
OccupationRecord Producer, Audio Engineer, Musician, Sounds designer, Teacher
Years active1981-[1]
Websitehttps://scottcolburn.com/

Scott W. Colburn is an American audio engineer based in Seattle. He was born in Skokie, Illinois, and grew up predominantly in Columbus, Indiana[2] where he discovered a love for punk rock. He played in the bands The Pattern (band), Killing Children, and ODIR, the latter of which played with Sonic Youth, The Leotard Geeks, and Sun City Girls.[2] Scott also created Blow It Off Magazine, in which he interviewed bands, critiqued albums, and advertised upcoming shows.

Scott later attended Columbia College Chicago and completed his BA in Audio Arts and Acoustics in 1989. While in Chicago, his relationship with the members of Sun City Girls would broadly define the next few decades of his personal and professional career as he recorded the bulk of their albums.[1]

Scott moved to LA in [date], where we spent a few years at Books on Tape (company) recording such icons as Kirk Douglas, Adrienne Barbeau, Gary Owens and Michael York, the outtakes of which he would later compile in to a piece titled "Stomach Noises Of The Stars", which featured heavily in his later performance pieces as Jabon (an acronym for Just A Bunch Of Noise).[3] He has also worked as a sound engineer for KEXP-FM.[4]

Scott has written articles for Tape Op , Mix and EQ magazines.

Scott has been interviewed by numerous sources, including KXSU Music https://www.kxsu.org/2019/04/30/scott-colburn-aka-jabon-talks-pasta-vr-audio-and-animal-collective/, TapeOp https://tapeop.com/interviews/11/scott-colburn/, Seattle Weekly https://www.seattleweekly.com/music/scott-colburn/ https://www.seattleweekly.com/music/august-and-everything-after/, Front of House Magazine https://fohonline.com/articles/production-profile/live-mixing-times-three/, West Coast Performer (by Katherine Hoffert, February 2008), and Ong Ong Magazine (by Scott Davis, July 2009).

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Settino, Curtis (1998). "Scott Colburn". Tape Op Magazine. Tape Op.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Barr, Brian J. (August 2, 2007). "August and Everything After". Seattle Weekly.
  3. Urbano, Riely (April 30, 2019). "Scott Colburn (AKA Jabon) Talks Pasta, VR Audio, and Animal Collective". KXSU: Seattle University's Student-Run Radio Station since 1994. KXSU.
  4. "Live Mixing Times Three". Front of House Magazine. October 15, 2006.

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