René Tinner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
René Tinner
Born (1953-02-18) 18 February 1953 (age 71)
St. Gallen, Switzerland
GenresExperimental, rock, ambient, blues, jazz, world music
Occupation(s)Record Producer, Engineer

René Tinner (born February 18, 1953, in St. Gallen) is a Swiss recording engineer and producer, who has produced over 200 studio records and numerous live performances.

Career[edit]

Tinner began his career as the audio engineer of the noted German Krautrock band Can in 1973, with whom he recorded seven albums until 1989. In 1978, he took over the so-called Can-Studio, the rehearsal and recording room of the Cologne based band. Tinner managed the studio until it was dismantled and integrated into the German rock'n pop museum in Gronau on November. 9 2007 where it was inaugurated in the presence of all the Can band members and René Tinner himself.[1]

During this time, he also worked as a producer with a variety of artists and bands. During 1978-79, he worked with Lou Reed on Live: Take No Prisoners and The Bells. Other artists and bands Tinner worked with in his capacity as a producer include Maloo (on their worldwide hit single “The Captain of Her Heart”)[citation needed], KFC, Joachim Witt, Trio, Traffic, Holger Czukay, Die Krupps, Floyd George, Julian Dawson, Marius Müller-Westernhagen, Helen Schneider, Fury in the Slaughterhouse, Jule Neigel Band, and Kreisler. In addition, Tinner also produced Jim Capaldi's Living On the Outside (2001).[2]

Tinner went on to work with clients from various backgrounds in other studios, predominantly across Europe, such as German actor and musician Marius Müller-Westernhagen, multi-award winning Russian band Mumiy Troll, German comedian Dieter Nuhr, Norwegian alternative rock band Serena-Maneesh, and others.

Tinner has also worked on a number of television and film soundtracks. In 2008, Tinner recorded the film music for the Wim Wenders production Palermo Shooting (which was presented at Cannes Film Festival in 2008).[3] Other notable television and film soundtrack productions include Knife in the Head (Reinhard Hauff, 1978), Schneeland (Hans W. Geißendörfer, 2004) and Stolen Ransom [de] (Stephan Wagner [de], 2012). Tinner is also active as a producer at the Minneapolis-based independent production company Megabien Entertainment.

Discography[edit]

Filmography[edit]

  • Eurogang (TV-series), engineer (4 episodes), 1975
  • Messer im Kopf (film directed by Reinhard Hauff), engineer, 1978
  • Flächenbrand (directed by Alexander v. Eschwege), engineer, 1981
  • Die Heimsuchung des Assistenten Jung (film directed by Thomas Schamoni), engineer, 1981
  • Rote Erde I & II (TV-series directed by Klaus Emmerich), engineer (14 episodes), 1983/86
  • Westernhagen Live (video), music producer and mixing engineer, 1990 [4]
  • Lola da musica (TV-series), himself, 1997 [5]
  • CAN: Het zwarte gat (TV documentary), himself, 1997
  • Tausendschönchen (TV-series (Bloch) directed by Christoph Stark), engineer, 2003
  • Silbergraue Augen (TV-series (Bloch) directed by Markus O. Rosenmüller), engineer, 2003
  • Ich werde immer bei Euch sein (TV-series directed by Markus Fischer), engineer, 2003
  • Wenn Frauen Austern essen (TV film (Tatort) directed by Klaus Emmerich), engineer 2003
  • Fleck auf der Haut (TV-series (Bloch) directed by Stephan Wagner [de]), engineer, 2004
  • Schwestern (TV-series (Bloch) directed by Edward Berger), engineer, 2004
  • Der Stich des Skorpion (TV film directed by Stephan Wagner [de]), engineer, 2004
  • Schneeland (film directed by Hans W. Geißendörfer), engineer, 2004
  • Ein krankes Herz (TV-series (Bloch) directed by Michael Hammon), engineer, 2005
  • Palermo Shooting (movie directed by Wim Wenders), engineer, 2008 [6]
  • Da Da Da - Drei Mann im Doppelbett (TV movie documentary), himself, 2009 [7]
  • Spiegel TV - "Inside Nazi Germany" (documentary), engineer, 2011
  • Stolen Ransom [de] (film directed by Stephan Wagner [de]), engineer, 2012
  • Hundstage [de] (TV film (Tatort) directed by Stephan Wagner [de]), engineer and mixing 2015

References[edit]

External links[edit]