Sound designer/coordinator

Dustincoc

Active Member
What's the difference between a sound designer and a sound coordinator?
 
I have heard of a sound f/x person (different person from the one running the board) referred to as a sound coordinator. Also, we have on occasion used someone who provided various walkup music for an awards show. I called him a DJ but he would frown when I said that. Maybe he was a sound coordinator as well.
 
Coordinators tend to be the ones managing people, purchasing and paper work.

A designer literally does just that, they determine the best possible implementation for the equipment they have on a show by show basis.
This sometimes includes collaborating with a SM to work up a wireless microphone assignment sheet.
 
The experaince that i have, coming from a high school tech dept., is there is one person that ran everything/did everything for the sound : (. That always made it fun, we are about to produce monkey house, and i am really pushing for more people in the sound dept. But that i have found working with a local production company is; The Sound Coordinator is responsible for the design, implementation, and cueing of sound effects. And the Sound designer does ya just that; the best lay out and implementation of the equipment relative to the event that is being produced

:arrowr:Plz, correct if anything is wrong
 
Last edited:
From my experience, the sound designer would be primarily in charge of coming up with the concept and then working out a way to implement it. If the production was large enough, a coordinator would worry about the physical plant so the designer could concentrate on the concept. Think of the coordinator as roughly equivalent to a master electrician.
 
I've never heard of a sound coordinator ...

In the corporate world the term "coordinator" in a job title generally implies a pretty lightweight role.

With a quick Yahoo search I came up with:
http://www.luc.edu/theatre/pdf/job_sound.pdf
so it looks like Loyola Univ uses this term for the Sound Designer job.

My guess is that the term is being incorrectly used. As has been posted on other threads, the common terms are "Sound Designer", "Sound Engineer", "Audio Engineer", "Sound Guy" (if you're male), "Sound Operator", "Sound Board Operator", "FOH Mixer", etc. The difference within this list is that the first three terms generally imply the person who sets it all up and maybe also runs the show, the last three are the person who specifically doesn't set it up but does run the show, and the "Sound Guy" in the middle can be both.
 
We basicly have the same setup as Loyola Univ.
 
Then what they describe is what I think of as a combination of Sound Designer and Sound Technician. I still personally wouldn't use the term "coordinator".
 
Never heard of a "coordinator" position. At Ithaca, there is the sound designer who is responsible for providing sound cues, recorded music, vocal/orchestral reinforcement and the design of the reinforcement system. The sound engineer manages the sound crew and is responsible for the installation and integrity of the sound system, following the designer's specs. The mixer is responsible for the operation of the design. On reinforced shows this means learning the show and knowing pickups and ensuring adequate levels for audibility. Usually on shows that are not reinforced, we do not have a mixer position. On the larger shows, there may be an assistant sound engineer who may run the cue software/hardware during the show and assist the engineer with the management of the crew.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back