Archive for the ‘Los Angeles’ Category

Brad Sundberg of BSUN Media Systems on Working for Michael Jackson

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010 by BSUN Media Systems

After 18 years of installing his systems, Brad Sundberg saw everything from the pop star’s work ethic to his behavior to his chimps.

image

Integrators tend not to be star-struck since many cater to extremely affluent clientele.

There are celebrities, and then there was Michael Jackson.

  • Right Image: Michael Jackson plays Jenga with Brad Sundberg, owner of BSUN Media Systems.

When Brad Sundberg, owner of BSUN Media Systems, mentioned his work on Jackson’s infamous Neverland Valley Ranch during his CE Pro of the Week profile, questions came to mind:

What was Michael Jackson like as a client?

What was he like away from the cameras?

Sundberg, who says he worked with the famous performer on countless personal and professional projects over 18 years, wrote about his experiences in a long essay in a BSUN e-newsletter sent a year after Jackson’s June 2009 death. Following are some excerpts:

On meeting Jackson …

Michael was working on Captain EO for Disneyland and Epcot Center. He was fresh off the Victory Tour, the Thriller album, his dominance of MTV, and he was back in the studio. I wish I could remember our first meeting, but it was likely just passing each other in the hallway. He was always warm, yet shy. Over time we would chat now and then, but it took time to build the trust.

On Jackson’s nickname for Brad Sundberg …

Early in 1986 the team moved into Westlake Studio D in Hollywood to record the Bad album, and welcomed me in. I worked other sessions during the day, but at night I was invited to sit in and learn. Eventually I worked my way up to technical director for the team, and the trust was solidified. It was during this time that Michael nicknamed me “Really Really Brad,” a twist on the chorus, “Bad, Bad, Really, Really Bad.” Check the album credits, it’s there.

imageOn what Jackson was like …

Not for a moment do I pretend to have been a close friend of his, or a confidant. Rather I worked for him and with him, and considered it an honor.
He was a consummate professional. If his vocals were scheduled for a noon downbeat, he was there at 10 am, with his vocal coach Seth, singing scales. Yes, scales. I would set up the mic, check the equipment, make coffee, and all the while he would sing scales for two hours.

He typically drove himself to the studio alone. For a while he drove a big Ford Bronco with dents and scrapes on it. He was not a great driver. More than once he called into the studio to say he would be late after being in a fender bender.

He was intensely curious about “normal life.” He asked me about Christmas once, and couldn’t understand how kids could wait until Christmas morning to open the gifts. You see, he was raised Jehovah’s Witness, so Christmas was not celebrated in the Jackson family.

On working in-studio with Jackson …

A “typical” MJ album would take between 10 and 16 months in the studio. His budget allowed for as many as 100 songs to be recorded for any given project. Some would be discarded early on, while others were fine tuned. Musicians would be brought in to add their textures and ideas, but in the center of it all was Michael.

The team was remarkably small given the scope of the projects. Each project was slightly different, but typically there were less then eight of us working day to day, from the first day until the project was mastered. No entourage. No Elephant Man bones. No groupies. No drugs. Just music. And food.

On Jackson’s love of food and “family day” …

During the [making of the] BAD album, Fridays quickly became known as “family day.” He would have his two chefs, affectionately known as the Slam Dunk Sisters, prepare a large dinner for the crew, musicians and any family members that might be around. Since I was working sometimes 80 hours a week, it was not uncommon for Deb to come have dinner with us. Michael loved these family get togethers.

In later projects I would bring my girls, whom he loved and would play with. There is one moment in time in my head when Deb brought my daughter Amanda, who was just a baby at the time, into the studio for the afternoon. She set up a play mat and brought some toys, and Michael sat and played with her for a while. He looked at Deb and said, “This is her own little world, isn’t it?”

On celebrity visitors and chimps …

It was not uncommon for celebrities or VIPs to stop in. One day the Secret Service searched the building for a couple hours before Nancy Reagan came for a visit. Next it was Princess Stephanie from Monaco … The chimps were common guests in the studio, as was a giant snake, both of which I would wind up holding during MJ’s vocals.

On watching Jackson write songs …

I have watched him write many songs, and the process is amazing. I asked him where they came from, and he said they were gifts from God. He could hear the entire song in his head before we could get tape on the machines. He would sometimes sing the drums, bass, percussion, keyboards, etc., and we would later bring in musicians to replace his demo tracks.

On Jackson’s childhood …

I remember him telling me about grown women throwing themselves at him when he was just 9 or 10 years old.

One story I will never forget was him telling of flying with his dad and brothers through a lightening storm at night. The plane was being tossed around, lightening was flashing, and he started crying in fear. His dad ignored him, embarrassed. A flight attendant sat with until the plane cleared the storm. Hearing him tell that story, with tears in his eyes, gave a glimpse into his life.

On working at Neverland …

Somewhere around 1991 he asked me to visit a ranch he had purchased, and design a sound system for a carousel. The next thing I knew I was at Neverland Valley Ranch, in Santa Ynez, CA. There was construction everywhere, and the amusement park was in the early stages of installation.

Over the next few years Michael asked me to build system after system, putting music on the bumper cars, in the petting zoo, on two trains, all around the amusement park, the boat lake, the train stations, and eventually inside the house, and inside his bedroom and bathroom. Deb loves to tell of the times Michael would call at 2 in the morning (his sleep schedule was never normal) to talk to me about a new attraction he had coming to Neverland, and if I would put music on it.

I still have an old answering machine tape of him thanking me for one of the systems we had built.

Via: http://www.cepro.com/article/integrator_on_working_for_michael_jackson/

CE Pro of the Week: Brad Sundberg, BSUN Media Systems

Monday, August 2nd, 2010 by BSUN Media Systems

He describes the wildest installation requests ever. Think Michael Jackson, Madonna and rattlesnakes.

By Tom LeBlanc
Originally Published: July 30, 2010

Brad Sundberg - Owner of BSUN Media Systems

Brad Sundberg, owner, BSUN Media Systems

Each week, we aim to provide an informative – yet colorful – profile of one of your fellow CE pros. Interested in being featured yourself? See below.

How would you use Twitter to describe what your company does (140 character limit)?

Quality audio and video still matter to me. Like a great recipe, you can’t go wrong with great ingredients and a lot of experience.

After you complete a project, what do you think your typical client tells his friend about the experience?

I hope it is something like what Lucy Buffett [Jimmy’s sister] wrote after the work we did for her restaurant Lulu’s on Alabama’s Gulf shore:

“I humbly applaud Brad with a vociferous BRAVO BRAVO! Thank you for the absolutely impeccable job and rising to the occasion! You now are entitled to ‘gumbo for life.’

“Last January, we decided to upgrade our audio-visual program and somehow found Brad! He did an expert job and was always willing to work cheerfully and diligently especially when we would ‘make it up as we go’ — a LuLu’s trademark.

“Food and beverage establishments underestimate the importance of the quality of ambient music. We are hyper vigilant about how our music communicates an exceptional experience, especially since we have live entertainment every night of the year. It absolutely delights me to walk around the entire restaurant and property and to enjoy quality sound.

“I am completely confident in saying the quality of our audio-visual system actually increases my sales and makes a major contribution to the overall success of LuLu’s.”

What can CE pros learn from your company to make them think differently and run their business better?

When I built my Los Angeles office I spent a lot of money on a showroom. I had motorization, lighting control, top-of-the-line everything from cabinetry to carpet.

And guess what? No one came to it.

People are busy and are not likely to carve out 90 minutes to come sit in your showroom. I did 95 percent of my sales in my clients’ homes and offices, bringing key pieces with me. When I opened the Fairhope location I refined this concept into what I call a “portable showroom.”

I bring CrestronSpeakerCraft and Kaleidescape into potential client’s homes and let them try it for a few days on their schedule. I also bring it to architect, interior design and real estate offices for trainings. This approach builds a deeper trust and friendship with my clients because I am on their turf, not the other way around.

What trade tip can you offer your fellow CE pros?

Stay in touch with your client base. Write a newsletter, email them or call them periodically. And don’t take yourself or your products too seriously.

What’s the wildest request you’ve ever had for an installation?

That’s a tough one. I built all of the music and video systems for Michael Jackson’s Neverland Valley Ranch, plus did extensive work for Madonna, Tom Cruise, Elizabeth Taylor and Quincy Jones.

I have put music on bumper cars, horse drawn carriages, a steam train, a Gulf Stream jet and three custom motor coaches.

I have built a one-of-a-kind whole-house baby monitor for a celebrity in Brentwood, Calif.

I have built a fully mobile recording studio in rack cases for a touring musical artist.

I’ve folded TVs into ceilings, built a home with 60 zones of music control, even built a trio of matched recording studios in California, France and England for a producer with three homes.

And just last month we floated a 33-foot HDTV on barge for a secret Jimmy Buffett concert.

But perhaps the “wildest” was to provide a complete narrative and sound effect system for a snake barn. We recorded the narration off-site, but had to complete the installation above, below and around the snake enclosures with the snakes in them. I am not afraid of snakes, but being on a mechanic’s creeper in the dark, installing a speaker below a cage of perhaps 25 rattlesnakes (we had a microphone in the cage so guests could hear the rattles through the glass) sort of stands out in my mind as being out of the ordinary.

What is your 3D strategy and do you think the technology will live up to the hype?

I may lose my CE Pro ribbon for this, but I am totally bored of 3D. I have no interest in it; I consider it gimmicky; and in the past 12 months I would estimate that only one of my clients has even mentioned 3D. Her comment was how much she would hate to have to wear glasses to watch TV.

As far as a strategy, if my clients want to play 8-track tapes through speakers in their swimming pool, I will make it happen. Likewise if they ask for 3D, 3D they will get … but I am not promoting either one.

What is your absolute favorite piece of audio demo material?

Quincy Jones’ “The Places You Find Love.”

In my previous overlapping career, I was a technical director on several major albums including Jones’ Back On The Block. When you work on a song like “Places” in the studio for 16 months, you get a pretty good idea of how it should sound, and that comes in very handy when I tune systems.

My good friend Bruce Swedien bent the meters on that song. It goes from a whisper to scream and back to a whisper. Huge drums, huge bass, huge choir, Chaka and Siedah vocals with Quincy driving the train! That makes for a big song.

My other go-to song is “Secret Silken World” by David Baerwald. It is dark and warm and masterfully recorded.

What is your absolute favorite piece of video demo material?

I am such a dork with my video demos. Most CE Pro readers will dismiss me right now.

I don’t like loud explosions with trucks and body parts flying over my head. (Neither do most of my female clients, and they often control the checkbook.) For rich colors I show Finding Nemo. For a jaw-dropping scene I show Step Into Liquid where they surf 66-foot waves 100 miles off the coast of California. I have never played that scene without people stopping what they are doing and just staring at it in disbelief.

What is something most people don’t know about you?

When I was about nine years old my dad gave me a box of wires, batteries, motors, switches, buzzers and electronic parts for Christmas. It was the best gift ever, and I was hooked. Thanks again, Dad.

Michael Jackson, Madonna, Quincy Jones

Michael Jackson, Madonna and Quincy Jones are on Brad Sundberg’s past clients list.
Originally published at: http://www.cepro.com/article/ce_pro_of_the_week_brad_sundberg_bsun_media_systems/

Lucy LuLu Buffett’s Recent Testimonial of BSUN Media

Saturday, July 24th, 2010 by BSUN Media Systems

We recently had some feedback from Lucy “LuLu” Buffett of the installation of BSUN Media’s install at LuLu’s at Homeport Marina. Here’s what she had to say:

It was the most memorable night in the history of LuLu’s! I humbly applaud Brad with a vociferous BRAVO BRAVO! Thank you for the absolutely impeccable job and rising to the occasion! You now are entitled to “gumbo for life.”

Last January, we decided to upgrade our audio-visual program and somehow found Brad! He did an expert job and was always willing to work cheerfully and diligently especially when we would “make it up as we go” – a LuLu’s trademark.

Food and beverage establishments underestimate the importance of the quality of ambient music. We are hyper vigilant about how our music communicates an exceptional experience, especially since we have live entertainment every night of the year. It absolutely delights me to walk around the entire restaurant and property and to enjoy quality sound. I am completely confident in saying the quality of our audio-visual system actually increases my sales and makes a major contribution to the overall success of LuLu’s.

Lucy, we thank you for the kind words and hope the relationship we’ve forged lasts for many years to come!

GoVision and BSUN Media Helps Pull Off ‘Supersize Surprise’

Friday, July 16th, 2010 by BSUN Media Systems
Jimmy Buffett makes unplanned appearance, backed by world’s largest mobile HD LED GULF SHORES, AL (July 15, 2010) – Sometimes, you just have to be creative. When tropical storm Alex forced the postponement of a Gulf Shores charity concerts to benefit victims of the BP oil spill, LuLu’s at Homeport Marina was left without an act to entertain the large crowds expected on June 30 and July 1.

Fortunately, when your name is Lucy Buffett, you’ve got an ace up your sleeve. Lucy convinced her brother, Jimmy Buffett, to make an impromptu, surprise appearance with his Coral Reefer Band at her harbor-side restaurant and bar on June 30. But this was no lazy day in Margaritaville. Special accommodations for staging, video, sound and other logistics had to be made at the last minute to enable the legendary performer to do what he does best. It helps that a resourceful company like BSUN Media was on the job, and willing to jump through hoops to help pull off an event that, thanks to frenzied alerts on Twitter and other social media, soon drew thousands to LuLu’s.

The third key ingredient was “GoBigger”: the world’s largest mobile high-definition LED screen. The massive 19′ x 33′ unit, featuring Daktronics HD-16 LED video technology, was provided by GoVision (www.jumbo.tv), one of the nation’s premier suppliers of turnkey mobile LED units and customized modular LED walls. GoVision’s technicians worked with BSUN Media to float the 53′ trailer-mounted unit on a barge just off the dock – another impressive feat of ingenuity – and integrated the screen into LuLu’s audio and video systems. “It all came together smoothly thanks to an outstanding group effort,” said Brad Sundberg, owner of BSUN Media Systems (www.bsunmedia.com). “LuLu’s staff, the Buffett crew and the BSUN team worked together to pull this show off virtually overnight, and GoVision’s flexibility and technical support were huge contributors to our success.”

“You might think we bent over backwards on this event because it was a Jimmy Buffett show,” said Chris Curtis, CEO of Argyle, TX-based GoVision. “But the truth is, we didn’t know who was performing until the eleventh hour. We’ve made a name for ourselves over the years as client-service specialists, and I think we earned a couple more gold stars on this job.” The charity concert, Jimmy Buffett & Friends: Live From the Gulf Coast, finally went off on July 11 a mile down the road, and was simulcast back to LuLu’s on another giant screen. Since GoBigger was already booked, GoVision sent the next-best-thing: its 9′ x 16′ “GoBig” unit.

The show, carried live on the CMT network and CMT.com, featured a Parrothead’s delight of greatest hits, along with guest performances by singer-songwriter Jesse Winchester and New Orleans music legend Allen Toussaint.

“As I said in my newsletter,” said Sundberg following the event, “if we at BSUN Media Systems can float a 33′ HDTV on a barge and have it online in seven days for a secret Jimmy Buffett concert, is there really anyone else you should consider calling if you need a 50″ plasma installed in your family room?’”

About GoVision™
GoVision L.P. (www.jumbo.tv) provides affordable day or night, larger-than-life video broadcast for outdoor and indoor events nationwide through state-of-the-art LED walls and a fleet of custom-built mobile units. Its fleet ranges from GoBigger, the world’s largest mobile high-definition LED screen, to GoTron, a 9′ x 12′ screen perfect for events with smaller crowds and budgets, and everything in between. GoVision boasts the world’s largest inventory of Daktronics 12HD modular rental equipment. The company has had a prominent role in countless national events, including the 55th (Bush) and 56th (Obama) Presidential Inaugurations, the Breeders’ Cup, Olympic Torch Relay and Lance Armstrong’s Ride for the Roses. The Argyle, Texas-based company is the screen provider of the NCAA Final Four, Texas Motor Speedway, Dallas Cowboys Stadium, the University of Oklahoma and San Jose State football teams, and several PGA tournaments.

About BSUN Media Systems
BSUN Media designs, sells and installs cutting edge home theater, surround sound, media room and listening systems. We offer smart home lighting and climate control systems that can set the mood for any occasion and provide energy saving benefits from a sophisticated, yet simple user interface. BSUN Media can install a system that matches your lifestyle, needs and budget. Solutions including home theater systems, automated lighting control, media room designs and recording studios for residential and commercial locations. With three locations nationwide and a combined 75 years professional experience, BSUN Media is the solution for all of your multimedia needs. Enjoy the show!

Serious BBQ at Moe’s

Saturday, May 15th, 2010 by Brad Sundberg - BSUN Media

moes-bbq.jpg

BBQ.  It should be simple, but it’s not.  I think my skills at the grill are OK, but these guys that smoke meat for 12 hours sort of mystify me.  Who has the time??  My feeble attempts at slow cooking meat have been mildly successful, but when you taste the real thing at a place like Moe’s, I wonder why should I even waste my time.

Moe’s is a franchise with nine locations (so far) in Alabama, plus a handful in Colorado, Georgia and North Carolina.  I suppose BBQ purists would not like the fact that it is a franchise, but I’m not a purist, I just like to eat.  The Daphne location is in a converted historic house at 6423 Bayfront Park Drive.

After parking, you walk up a ramp past the outdoor stage and bar, and through the front door.  The menu is written on the wall (always a good start), with a small chalkboard next to the cashier showing what specials are left.  They go fast.

The menu is pretty straight forward with ribs, pulled pork, chicken, wings, catfish and turkey, plus a few more choices.  One meat and two sides costs just ten bucks, drink included!  You can have a combo plate with two servings of meat, two sides and a drink for a buck and a quarter more.

I’ll get to the food in a moment.  This is an old house.  You wander through 3 or 4 rooms to find a table, with concert posters plastered all over the walls.  This is not a white table cloth environment… it’s paper towels and plastic forks, as it should be.  There are also several tables outside and in the little building housing the bar.

Having been there a few times before, I already have my favorites.  Now, keep in mind I am a beef and pork guy most of the time.  But several visits ago I tried something on a whim:  Smoked Turkey.  I don’t know what it is about the smoked turkey at Moe’s, but I am hooked.  It is tender and moist, but it comes with some crazy white sauce that takes it to a new level.  So I ordered the combo plate with turkey and wings, and mac and cheese and collard greens.  Old school southern food.  Deb got the pulled pork and catfish.

They yell out your number from the kitchen window and the food is served.  The BBQ sauce bottles are kept hot in a crock pot full of water, another sign that these guys do it right.  Time to eat.

The wings are smoked, then deep fried and sauced.  They taste great, with the chicken being smokey, yet the skin and sauce having a nice spicy bite to them.  Not crazy heat, just great flavor.  The turkey, as described above, was moist and full of flavor.  Again, I don’t know what that sauce is, but I could eat it on Corn Flakes, a burger, a shoe… it’s just good.  The mac and cheese is good, but not the best I’ve ever had.  The greens are firm and flavorful, not mushy  at all.

Deb’s pork and catfish were also great, with enough to take home for leftovers.  My turkey plate was all but licked clean.  She also had the pickled slaw (her favorite) as one of her sides.  Moe’s also makes a great corn bread, with the little bits of jalapeno peppers.  It is a huge slab, and I didn’t even think of putting butter on it.

Moe’s also has live music most weekend nights, but for some reason the stage was quiet tonight.

BBQ is one of those topics where 50 people will have 50 different opinions, and I am not going to try to be the expert, especially when the majority of life has been in California.  But I do know what I like, and Moe’s BBQ is some seriously tasty food at a great price.  Two giant plates of great food and beverage for less than $23 is a great deal.  The only drawback is they are a Pepsi place instead of Coke.  A minor strike.

Try Moe’s in Daphne, Fairhope , Orange Beach or any of their other locations for some serious BBQ and a great value.

Moe’s Original BBQ

6423 Bayfront Park Drive

Daphne, AL  36526

251-625-7427

We love letters!

Saturday, May 15th, 2010 by Brad Sundberg - BSUN Media

Lyle and Robin Minton of Daphne, AL, are the perfect combination of great friends and great clients.  They sent me following review of our work for them today, and it is greatly appreciated.  With their permission it will be added to the website in the coming days.

“In a day and age when the bar of excellence is being continually lowered, it’s a rare privilege to work with professionals who are pressing that bar ever higher. We found BSUN Media to be creative, cutting edge, dependable, honest and super responsive in solving our home entertainment challenges.”

Thanks Lyle and Robin for the very kind words!

Programming Simplicity

Thursday, May 13th, 2010 by Brad Sundberg - BSUN Media

At the end of the day, no matter how large or small a BSUN Media System installation may be, or how much time I spend tuning the speakers or calibrating the video, the client is either going to find it easy to use, or be frustrated.  Enter the programmer.  Lulu’s Restaurant in Gulf Shores, AL, is a great example of how critical it is to have a great programer on your team.  You see, we have more than 15,000 watts of musical power, 10 TV’s, nearly 90 speakers and subwoofers, video and audio switchers, keypads, lighting dimmers, DirecTV receivers, Apple TV, iPod dock, XM radio and a blu-ray player, all controlled by a simple on-wall touchpanel.  My esteemed programmer Todd is the master magician.

Today, in just a few short hours, he managed to get the XM tied into the system, got three new keypads working, set up nine lighting dimmers and set up some really cool graphics on my touchpanel showing temperature in various parts of the restaurant, all while eating Fiddle Faddle in his home in Southern California.  OK, I don’t know if we was eating Fiddle Faddle, but it is tasty.

Todd’s programming chops make me look good.  He is the technician behind the curtain that makes the magician onstage look like a rock star, and I couldn’t do my job without him.

If you want to see what I am talking about, go to Lulu’s yourself and ask to see “Brad’s system.”  Any of the managers (if they are not too busy) will be more than happy to show you how simple this massive system is to operate.  Programming is not simple, but when done well it makes the world, your restaurant, or your home theater, a happy place.  Kudo’s Todd… good work today!

Guido’s Restaurant, Daphne AL 36526

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010 by Brad Sundberg - BSUN Media

I was spoiled, plain and simple.  I lived in Los Angeles for roughly 25 years and I was spoiled.  There were great restaurants within minutes of our house, ranging from Japanese to French to Italian.  Not the celebrity stops you see on E, I’m talking little family-owned joints where they take pride in their food and deliver a great meal at a fair price.  I was spoiled.


When we moved to the Eastern Shore some 18 months ago, we tried not to think about those great little places very often, and instead asked about restaurants in our new home.  Fried fish, fried shrimp, fried oysters, fried french fries with a side of fried cole slaw was not a problem, in fact it can be found in great abundance, but we wanted a taste of Italy.  (OK, I made up that part about fried cole slaw, but it really wouldn’t surprise me to find it.)  We were sent to a place which shall remain nameless for “authentic Italian” food.  It was so awful that we decided from then on we would either make pasta at home, or head up Olive Garden in Spanish Fort and stand in line for 60 minutes for, well, Olive Garden food.


Today I had a lunch meeting in Daphne at Guido’s.  I arrived early and found a wobbly table.  I stuck some sugar packets under the offending leg and ordered an ice tea.  The waitress (is it OK to say waitress?) brought me some soft, fresh bread while I waited for my friend to arrive.  The bread was clearly homemade and tasted great.  Off to a good start.


The decor of Guido’s is very plain, to be honest.  Very clean and well lit with giant windows facing Main Street, and a giant chalkboard with the lunch menu written on it.  Pastas, fresh fish dishes, even lamb chops, and I don’t think there was anything more than $14.  I ordered the scallop risotto, for a whopping $8.95.


The risotto arrived in a large bowl, with a very generous portion.  Before I took my first bite I commented that this same dish at almost any restaurant in Hollywood or Beverly Hills would likely cost $23 or more.


Risotto is one of my favorite pasta dishes, with that delicate balance of getting the sauce just to the right consistency so the dish is not soupy or dry.  This one was spot on.  Huge scallops, mushrooms and asparagus pieces balanced out and flavored the perfectly cooked pasta.  There is nothing I would have differently, rather I wish I could make it home for my family and friends!


Guido’s also has a very interesting and affordable wine selection, which can be purchased and carried to the adjoining Cousin Vinnie’s for pizza.  It’s a bit complicated, but it all works out.


This is hands down the closest meal I have had to one my favorite little Italian places in California (Cafe Sole’ in Montrose stands out in my mind), and I can’t wait to bring my wife back to Guido’s for another meal.  I highly recommend it.


Guido’s Restaurant

1709 Main Street

Daphne, AL  36526

251-626-6082

Celebrity Backstage Pass: Elizabeth Taylor

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010 by Brad Sundberg - BSUN Media

Elizabeth TaylorI have had the opportunity to work with Hollywood’s elite for more than twenty years.  From Michael Jackson to Elizabeth Taylor to Will Smith, I have had unique encounters and working relationships with many people in the entertainment industry.  In that time I have collected a story or two, and from time to time I’ll share one with you.

Elizabeth

Taylor

I don’t remember the exact year I first met Elizabeth Taylor, but my nearest guess would be 1990, before her wedding to Larry Fortensky.   I had been working up at Neverland Valley Ranch for Michael Jackson, and I got a call from Elizabeth’s office about doing some work for her.  She had seen and heard my music and video systems at Neverland, and wanted me to come up with some ideas for her estate in Bel Air.

At our first meeting I was escorted down to a private patio where she and Larry were waiting.  She was sweet, poised, self assured and every bit a star.  Larry, despite was has been said and written about him, was a genuinely nice guy who was tossed into a world he was very unfamiliar with.  (On a side note, Larry and I became friends, and after his separation from Elizabeth I did considerable work in both his home and RV.  He loaned me his RV for a week, and his German Shepard bit my rear end, but those are stories for another time).

We went on do build an amazing outdoor music system at her Bel Aire home.  The system incorporated something I call sound layering (my phrase, give me credit if you steal it), where I have music playing from rock and outdoor speakers, then another system in the same area plays soft cricket sound, layered with another system playing birds chirping in the trees from birdhouse speakers.  It’s an awesome effect of sounds coming from all directions.  She was very pleased with the sound, so it eventually led to me designing music and video systems inside house.

Elizabeth was one of my favorite clients.  She was kind, yet wickedly funny, and a great story teller.

I built a home theater in her bedroom, and went to great lengths to make it as simple as possible to operate.  Despite my efforts her office would periodically call and say she wanted to meet with me.  When Elizabeth Taylor summons you, you respond.  I would jump in my truck and drive to Bel Air and be escorted up to her bedroom.  Her bedroom, it should be clarified, was a huge room, nearly an apartment on it’s own, and she spent much of her time up there watching TV, making phone calls, etc.  (Sorry, another side note.  She used the other two upstairs  bedrooms as her closets, with endless dresses and gowns on racks, and enough shoes to sink a ship).

I would knock and go into her bedroom, and her dog Sugar would start barking like crazy.  I ALWAYS called her Elizabeth, never Liz, and waited for the show.  She would greet me sometimes with a smile, sometimes feigned agony, sometimes mock anger, and explain that her remote had failed.  (She was after all, an actress.)  To say she would “explain” that her remote had failed doesn’t really do the conversation justice.  She might grit her teeth and snarl how much she hated the remote, or threaten great bodily harm against me if she couldn’t watch TV.  Don’t underestimate how hard I strive for my systems to work perfectly day in and day out, but I secretly enjoyed these private performances by a true Hollywood legend.

I would check the remote, change the batteries or reset the system, and have it running often in less than a minute.  Suddenly her mood would change to overacted relief and joy, and she would laugh her well known laugh.  Then (I swear this is true), quite often she would ask if I wanted to see something she had recently received.  Of course I would say yes, and out would come the jewelry.  Let me say that again:  Out would come the JEWELRY.  Now I am not a connoisseur of jewels, but this stuff was like a glimpse into the vault at Tiffanys.  Of course her collection is world renowned, but to be able to have her hand certain pieces to me to look at and hold was pretty amazing.

She and I had a common friendship with Michael Jackson, which I suppose instilled a certain trust from her to me.  There was one time when she was showing me (again, not making this up) a pair of earrings shaped like gold monkeys with diamonds, emeralds,  and who knows what else.  In the middle of all of this Deb calls me on my cell.  I explained that Elizabeth is showing me her monkey earrings, at which point Elizabeth grabs the phone and starts describing them to my wife.  “I’m afraid they are one of a kind Debbie, ” she said in a thick Elizabeth accent.  “Sad for you, glad for Brad!”  She laughed and handed the phone back to me.

After the 911 attack, my daughter Amanda made and sold American Flag Pins for $5 each to raise money for the Red Cross.  I showed one to Elizabeth, and she ordered $1000 worth on the spot.  A few days later (after several long nights of assembling the pins) I delivered them and Elizabeth gave them away to her friends.

I continued to work for her for several more years, and she never failed to make me laugh as she told stories and memories of her brilliant career.  She was and always will be a truly class act.

Your comments are always welcome.

Brad

It All Starts With A Plan (eNews 2-10-10)

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010 by Brad Sundberg - BSUN Media

ParisBonjour!


Several years ago we visited France for the first time.  I was a bit younger and had more hair back then, but c’est la vie.

I was commissioned to build a recording studio in Cannes for one of my clients, so we packed up the bags and flew to Paris.  Truthfully, it wasn’t quite that easy.  A tremendous amount of planning went into the trip, both in terms of how to build a studio in another country, as well as setting aside some time for sightseeing with the family.  It was our first trip abroad, so I wanted to make sure we handled all of the details.  OK, that’s not quite true either.  You see, I get very focused on one thing, and rely heavily on Deb to handle the travel details.

Let me start from the beginning.  My client already had a studio that I had previously built for him in Los Angeles, so it was vital that the two rooms function in the same way, so he could bring songs back and forth as he was working on them.  Working overseas brings many unique challenges to the forefront.  For example, there were voltage differences to consider (France is 230 volts and 50 cycles – the US is 115 volts and 60 cycles), plus I was going to be working in a place where running to the local electronic supply was not really an easy option.  After much consideration, we agreed that the best way for this to project to take place as efficiently as possible was for me to build the studio in my shop in California, test it thoroughly, then crate it all up and ship it to Cannes for installation.

Meantime Deb went to work checking every flight, train and hotel.  We had just three girls at the time ages 7, 5 and 2, so there were many logistics involved.  (Before I go on, you are asking yourself about the sanity of bringing 3 young girls to France, right?  I could not recommend it highly enough.  We had a blast, and the girls fell in love with international travel.  We were treated like family everywhere we went and have memories and photos that still make us laugh.)  The plan was to spend a week in Cannes, with me installing my crated up studio while the girls played on the beach of the Mediterranean, then jump on the TGV to Paris and bang around the Louvre and Monet’s Garden for a week.

With the plan in place, I ordered all the equipment for the studio, and began assembly in my shop in California.  After it was functioning to my satisfaction, I hauled a band in to cut some tracks.  It is not hard to find a band wanting to record when you have a free studio to test.  They were patient as I made wiring changes and fine tuned the system, and were quite happy with the final product.  The studio worked great, and was ready for packing.  Oh, for those of you paying attention, the key to making it work in France was a really cool battery-based power inverter made by Toshiba that converts everything from ranging from coal, whale oil, lumber, even European electricity into good old American 115 volts.  Amazing device!  (OK, I made the part up about whale oil.)

The studio was shipped to Cannes, made it through Customs, and we boarded our flight a few days later.  The next seven days were a blur of long days, late nights, unpacking boxes, wiring, building, soldering upside down, testing, eating croissants and drinking lots of coffee.  But the pieces all came together beautifully.

My client treated us very well, and had even arranged that we all have dinner together one night on the beach in front of the Carlton Hotel, for the annual 4th of July Celebration.  Yes, you heard me correctly.  In response to the large American population and tourist trade in Cannes, the city presents an awe-inspiring fireworks show on the Mediterranean.

I put on a clean shirt and we dined in the warm salt air at sunset.  As the evening got darker, the crowds continued to fill the beach.  The sidewalk along the beach was peppered with speakers, playing classical music to accompany the fireworks.  It was a magical night we will never forget.

After one final all-night session of training and testing every microphone, patch point and outboard device in the studio, we jumped on the train and “flew” to Paris at something like a view-blurring 170 mph.  I slept the entire trip.  But this was when Deb’s pre-planning really came into play.  Our apartment-hotel was perfect, and once I caught up on a bit of sleep we were all over the City of Lights.  There really is no place like Paris, and we have returned a few times since that first trip.

So how does a trip to France to build a studio relate to my company and benefit you?  Two words:  planning and experience.  There is no shortage of fast talking salespeople in my industry, ranging from superstores to high-end showrooms, trying to sell you any and everything.  But there needs to be a plan in place.  Your job is not to become an expert on the latest technology available, or to buy something you don’t understand because someone is telling you how great it is.  Your job is find someone you can trust, who will listen to you and design and system that fits your needs and budget.

I suppose if I were to boil down to one sentence, it would be that if I can build a recording studio on another continent and have the pieces come together like a puzzle, I would be honored to have you consider BSUN Media Systems for your home or commercial entertainment needs, large or small.

We not only help you plan a system that matches your budget, but we even have many key products that we can bring into your home and let you try for a few days, to truly see if it is the right system for you.  Is there a better place to demo a system than with your family in your own home?

So while I do not have any recording studios in Europe booked in the coming weeks, you never know what’s around the corner.  That’s what keeps life interesting.

I may share more travel stories with you in the coming months, as travel is such a passion of ours, both professionally and for pleasure.  Every successful journey starts with a good plan and an experienced guide.  We are in the process of finishing a project for a large restaurant on the Gulf Coast (more on that in our next issue) that started with a plan, which I am proud to share with you below.  If you or someone you know is ready for home entertainment system beyond the ordinary, we are ready for the challenge.  It’s going to be a great year, with a little planning!

Lulu's design

Your comments are always welcome.

Brad