The AES welcomes Dr. Sean Olive (pictured) as its new President, taking over from outgoing President Frank Wells. Currently serving as Director, Acoustic Research, for Harman International, and based in Northridge, Calif., Dr. Olive is in an ideal position to guide the AES into the 137th Convention, which will take place in Los Angeles in the fall of 2014.
Dr. Olive’s education includes a bachelor’s degree in music from the University of Toronto, a master’s degree in sound recording from McGill University, and a Ph.D. in sound reproduction from McGill. He served as an audio research scientist for the National Research Council of Canada for several years, before joining the Harman team in 1993.
Olive occasionally teaches classes at UCLA, and has been involved in various aspects of the AES’ technical committees and research initiatives. Olive’s perspective as a musician, educator, recording engineer/producer, audio researcher and consumer places him in an ideal position to guide the course of the society through the next year and help plot that course for coming years.
“The recording industry has been at times resistant to change, and we are still feeling the effects of the failure to fully embrace digital technology,” Dr. Olive says. “The ways that consumers are experiencing music are evolving at a rapid rate, with audio as a mobile experience now being much more common than a living room with a hi-fi system. Headphone sales are through the roof, and the AES has a chance to help improve the consistency and quality of the mobile experience. As our membership continues to move toward this world, along with the worlds of film, sound contracting, live sound, automotive audio and gaming, we need to further explore these avenues in order to better serve our members. There is also huge room for AES member expansion into the so-called ‘BRIC’ countries —Brazil, Russia, India and China—and we plan to increase our outreach in those regions. The AES has a tremendous leadership role and a strong membership base, and I look forward to leveraging these assets to assist in the ongoing transition to the AES of the 21st century.”
For further information on the Audio Engineering Society and upcoming events, visit www.aes.org.