Grammy Award-Winning Audio Engineer Derek ‘MixedByAli’ Ali Raises $7.5M For His Music Tech Startup EngineEars

Derek “MixedByAli” Ali has a decade of experience in the music industry and remains dedicated to enhancing the field.

Forging A Lane In Music

Fresh off a recent Grammy win, the 33-year-old recording and mixing engineer, who has stamped his name alongside hit records such as “The Box” by Roddy Ricch, “This Is America” by Donald Glover, and Kendrick Lamar’s “Alright” and “Humble,” was not raised with a musical background or training.

Growing up with severe ADHD, he began to tinker with remote-controlled cars and computers and became fascinated with their functionality. When he learned he could experiment with music, it birthed a new passion.

“I started in high school — making ringtones. I was a hustler when I was playing football. I found out how to crack the Nextels and Boost Mobile chirp phones and put real songs on there rather than the model ringtones that were out during that time,” Ali told AFROTECH. “I would have friends come over after football practice and come record and put them on their phones, and that had me falling in love with just the art of recording. Just sitting there with somebody recording into a microphone and now this song is living forever. I can manipulate the frequencies and add different effects and make it sound completely different from what was originally recorded. It sparked interest and during that time, I didn’t have the money or the resources to go to the recording schools, but I was computer literate.”

With little financial resources, Ali would rely on blogs and online communities to educate himself on the craft of audio engineering, downloading various equipment and software. Through constructive feedback, he was able to water his craft and began to see it as a viable career path.

Working With Kendrick Lamar

His turning point would begin when he connected with local artist K.Dot, otherwise known as Kendrick Lamar, assisting him with his early mixtapes and other projects.

“I got with him early on, working on every project from the K.Dot mixtape ‘C4’ that you could find on YouTube, going into when he changed his name to Kendrick Lamar, where we did another ‘The Kendrick Lamar EP’ and Kendrick Lamar ‘Section.80,'” he explained. “It was just literally do it yourself online — learning how to audio engineer my way [and] not the way that the books teach you. And it was a blessing in disguise. In music school, you’re learning based on past creativity where when you’re learning and doing it yourself, you’re figuring out how to fail the right way. You can take all the lessons that you learn and apply ’em to, you know, future records. And that’s how I was able to develop a sound.”