🇺🇸 United States · Est. 1988

Mackie

The Console That Launched a Million Studios

Mackie ↗

Greg Mackie founded Mackie Designs in Woodinville, Washington in 1988. Before that, he had co-founded TAPCO in 1970 (producing the Model 6000, one of the first mixers designed for rock volume levels) and later AudioControl. His first Mackie product was the LM-1602 line mixer at $399 — a hint of the democratisation to come.

The CR-1604 (1991) was a desktop/rackmount mixer that sold hundreds of thousands of units and was inducted into the TECnology Hall of Fame in 2004. Paired with the Alesis ADAT, it was a foundational piece of the 1990s project studio revolution — delivering professional audio performance at a previously impossible price. Its impact on music production has been compared to the personal computer's impact on desktop publishing.

The 8-Bus series (1993) brought proper in-line multitrack recording into the same price bracket, and the d8b (1998) made Mackie the first company to put affordable fully automated digital mixing into the hands of home studio owners. Greg Mackie stepped down in 2003; the company is now part of LOUD Audio.

Notable Consoles

Vintage Advertisements

Mackie ad — Mix 1992-12
Mackie ad — Mix 1992-12 (1992)
Mackie ad — Mix 1994-02
Mackie ad — Mix 1994-02 (1994)
Mackie ad — Studio Sound 1994-07
Mackie ad — Studio Sound 1994-07 (1994)
Mackie ad — Mix 1994-10
Mackie ad — Mix 1994-10 (1994)
Mackie ad — Mix 1994-11
Mackie ad — Mix 1994-11 (1994)
Mackie ad — Mix 1995-12
Mackie ad — Mix 1995-12 (1995)