Adam Hawkins
Appearance
Adam Hawkins (born July 1976) is an American recording and mix engineer.[1]
Life and career
[edit]Hawkins was born in New Jersey, and later moved with his family to North Carolina. After graduating from high school he moved back to New Jersey to become a studio assistant in Manhattan.[2][3]
The album Hello Hurricane, which Hawkins worked on, received the 2010 Grammy award for best rock or rap gospel album.[4]
Discography
[edit]- The Massacre by 50 Cent (2005)[5]
- Audio Daydream by Blake Lewis (2007)
- Used and Abused by Danger Radio (2008)
- Pocketful of Sunshine by Natasha Bedingfield (2008)
- P!nk Box by Pink (2009)
- Kris Allen by Kris Allen (2009)
- Holy Smoke by Gin Wigmore (2009)
- Hello Hurricane by Switchfoot (2009)
- Far by Regina Spektor (2009)
- A Fine Mess by Kate Voegele (2009)
- Nightmare by Avenged Sevenfold (2010)
- Live It Up by Lee DeWyze (2010)
- Come and Get It! by Eli "Paperboy" Reed (2010)
- Vows by Kimbra (2011)
- Vice Verses by Switchfoot (2011)
- The Hunter by Mastodon (2011)
- What We Saw from the Cheap Seats by Regina Spektor (2012)
- Moving Up Living Down by Eric Hutchinson (2012)
- Into the Wild: Live at EastWest Studios by LP (2012)
- Blak and Blu by Gary Clark Jr. (2012)
- Talking Dreams by Echosmith (2013)
- Hail to the King by Avenged Sevenfold (2013)
- Fiction Family Reunion by Fiction Family (2013)
- Weightless by Matt Andersen (2014)
- Lowborn by Anberlin (2014)
- Fading West by Switchfoot (2014)
- Blurryface by Twenty One Pilots (2015)
- For Life by Phases (2016)
- "Heathens" by Twenty One Pilots (2016)
- "Satisfied" by Sia (2016)
- The Hamilton Mixtape by various artists (2016)
- Surf the Web by Daye Jack (2016)
- Natural Causes by Skylar Grey (2016)
- Jessica Rabbit by Sleigh Bells (2016)
- A Living Human Girl by The Regrettes (2016)
- Feel Your Feelings Fool! by The Regrettes (2017)
- What If Nothing by Walk the Moon (2017)
- "FAB" by JoJo (2017)
- Tales from the Backseat by The Academic (2017)
- Dreamcar by Dreamcar (2017)
- Simulation Theory by Muse, (2018)
- "Dig Down" by Muse (2018)
- Black Reign by Avenged Sevenfold (2018)
- "Brief Exchange" by Chino Moreno (2018)
- "Youngblood" by 5 Seconds of Summer (2018)
- Expectations by Hayley Kiyoko (2018)
- "Red Death" by Brann Dailor (2018)
- "Setting Sun" by Jerry Cantrell (2018)[6]
- Winnetka Bowling League by Winnetka Bowling League (2018)
- Trench by Twenty One Pilots (2018)
- Loser by Jagwar Twin (2018)
- "Youngblood" by 5 Seconds of Summer (2018)
- Apologize by Grandson (2019)
- Bullet Holes by Bush (2019)
- Eye of the Storm by One Ok Rock, (2019)
- A Modern Tragedy, Vol. 2 by Grandson (2019)
- How Do You Love? by The Regrettes (2019)
- Launch Fly Land by Dreamers (2019)
- Miracle Pill by Goo Goo Dolls (2019)
- Native Tongue by Switchfoot (2019)
- The St. Nemele Collab Sessions by Toby Mac (2019)
- The Underrated Youth by Yungblud (2019)
- Acting My Age by The Academic/ Cid Rim (2020)
- Breathe You Got This by The Score, (2020)
- Death of an Optimist by Grandson (2020)
- "Level of Concern" by Twenty One Pilots (2020)
- Medium Rarities by Mastodon (2020)
- Set It Off by The Score (2020)
- The Bastards by Palaye Royale (2020)
- Tickets to My Downfall by Machine Gun Kelly (2020)
- "Swimming in the Stars" by Britney Spears (2020)
- Scaled and Icy by Twenty One Pilots (2021)
- Glow On by Turnstile (2021)
- I Can't Get High by Royal & The Serpent (2021)
- Obviously by Lake Street Dive (2021)
- Surface Sounds by Kaleo (2021)
- Tell Me About Tomorrow by Jxdn (2021)
- On To Better Things Iann Dior (2022)
- The Jaws of Life by Pierce the Veil (2023)
- One More Time... by Blink-182 (2023)
- Clancy by Twenty One Pilots (2024)
References
[edit]- ^ Troy (14 December 2015). "The Sonic Garage: Episode 13 Adam Hawkins". Sonic Garage Podcast. Archived from the original on 2 June 2016. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
- ^ Moir, Steve. "Owner". Moir Entertainment. Moir Entertainment. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
- ^ Vdovin, Marsha (April 2007). "Artist Interview: Adam Hawkins Goes From Rap to Rock to Big Band With Universal Audio". UAudio. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
- ^ Hicks, Mason. "Congratulations 2010 Grammy Winners". Universal Audio. Universal Audio. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
- ^ Jean-Pierre Hombach (2012). 50 Cent. Hombach. p. 46. ISBN 978-1-4716-0385-3.
- ^ "Jerry Cantrell – Setting Sun (from DC's Dark Nights: Metal Soundtrack)". Discogs. Retrieved August 31, 2018.