Can you imagine the confidence (or insanity) to look at the big room Sinatra recorded his 50s tracks in, and then say...."I'll make it better, let's change it all around..." Thanks for the tour!
Back in the 70's our country rock group, Stagecoach, recorded an album at Studio West in San Diego. We had the album pressed to vinyl , so being ambitious young men, we jumped in our car and drove up to this Capital record building in L.A. and somehow thought we'd just "march into the building and get to talk to an A&R man about our new record". Well we marched into the building, alright, with our new record album, which even had a couple of songs written by Jack Tempchin, who wrote Peaceful easy feeling for the Eagles, but the first guy we ran into was the security guard. He stopped us and ask us where we were going. Of course we told him we wanted to talk to someone about our new album, but he told us basically: It ain't gonna happen. He said go over to this spot and talk to that person, so we did. Well that person told us there's no way we're gonna talk to an A&R man or any one else for that matter, but you can leave your album here if you want to, along with a whole bunch of other albums that other groups and artists have brought in, and we'll call you if we're interested. Soooooo, we did that but we never heard back from them. Well that was our first reality check with the music business, and we almost gave up, but I said to the band. Hey, let's go over to A&M records. I did a session over there with a friend of mine some time back, (which I had done), so we went there. We couldn't even get in the parking lot at first, but I talked to the guy on the speaker phone and told him we'd like to talk to a guy named Ed Soltzer, (I believe it was). Well Ed Soltzier was the guy who ran our session when I was there, and just happened to be Karen Carpenter's producer at the time, so they let us drop the album off, but we never got to talk to Ed, but at least they let us leave our album there. Well, shortly after that, the band let me go for another pedal steel player, but the leader later called me up and said that A&M did call him back and I think they, Stagecoach, maybe went back to A&M and did a re-cut on one of the songs on the album, but apparently it never went anywhere. All I can say, 50 years later is: Man what a ride the music business is, and like the man said, There's no business like show business. Marc Trainor.
Marc Trainor, , yep good ole shoe business,, we have heard and seen 78s, 45s,33s,4&8 track, cds, to the cloud,, crazy now the record co. Is your cell,, but like Vince Gill said (I think, you can get a download of my song for .99 or an app that farts, the app is doing well. ... Music was very important to us it’s not so much any more, yay studio west I did a lot of work there,, Bill Blue!! Where did he go good soul! B well,
Loved reading your story, Marc, and The Carpenters' agent/producer at A&M Records was Ed Sulzer. Not sure if they ever gave him an official title, but he was basically their A&R guy, (Artist & Repertoire), who would listen to demos for Karen and Richard, including mine in 1973, I think. Funny, I still remember A&M's address and phone number... 1416 N. LA Brea, (213) 469-2411. Can't believe that's all still in my head! Now it's Jim Hensen's place, (Muppets). Anyway, I used to hang out at that place, and like you, dreamed of a recording contract, but as I was then a session player at Capitol Records (playing for music groups and singers that were on Capitol's "we're interested" list), I realized that I never wanted to be a "star". I only wanted to do session work. But I also grew tired of that, after doing so many sessions, and I grew especially tired of sound engineers treating all these up and coming people like crap. So much for the glitz and glamour. Sessions are hard work, as you know. And I've been up in Capitol's tower playing my own demos to the A&R guys, but that's another story. And in conclusion I did appear on The Merv Griffin Show in 1974, which was taped at the famous Hollywood Palace, so I got to sing on that stage where every famous person in Hollywood performed. From Judy Garland to the Beatles. So that's my personal experience in Show Biz. Or some of it. Nothing special about it or me, I guess. Thanks for your memories, as I pictured everything you and your band experienced. Sounded familiar.
I owned the console and tape machine that was in Studio B throughout the 70s - custom-built by the Capitol engineering staff over an Electrodyne frame with Quad-Eight parts, as well as in-house designed preamp & EQ section. Total Frankenstein monster and maintenance headache, but we loved it anyway. The tape machine was a 1970 3M M56, serial # 17. We moved it from Hollywood in 1984 and kept it running until 1989. The late Jay Ranellucci, who had been there since about the time the studios opened, gave me a wonderful tour of the rooms. I later found, when we dismantled the old system which was beyond any more repair, that I had a lot of extra paperwork among the thousands of pages of technical data, going back to 1950s architectural drawings, internal memos, etc. Paula was wonderful to work with in re-connecting that history with the building, and I was very sorry to hear that she has recently been let go by Capitol.
They didn't let her go, Universal (they own captiol now) picked her up to a VP role to be over all of their studios. She's a legend in her field. They would never let go.
@@SOUNDCONTROLFLA You know it was a music store that was close by them? I only saw the lobby of Capitol Records, Oh! and Motown Records, I think it was on Sunset.
Fortnum Sound nahh you cant but I know what you mean. Yes, you can make a commercially viable record on a laptop, that’s for sure. But to suggest that a cheap mic, into a cheap interface, into a laptop, all recorded in a room with almost 0 acoustic treatment, will sound “just as good” as a multi million dollar facility that’s designed & built from the ground up with the best acoustics, gear, and recording & mixing engineers, is completely false. There’s a reason studios and expensive gear still exist.
Matthew G You are wrong, it’s all perception. My music I made at home sounds better than most commercial made music in million dollar studios. Expensive studios are the past. What you have is just an opinion.
[raised hand] That old equipment you mentioned that doesn't work well anymore that doesn't stick around - do you ever throw it in your dumpster with the follow up question where does Capital keep it's dumpsters?
Studio A , one of the best rooms in music ! From the phenomenal Acoustics to Nat King Coles Steinway. Thank you for keeping this place so well preserved for the generations of musicians yet to come and experience .
One thing not mentioned in this, in the 70's the Capitol Records parking lot (once a month) was the greatest place to buy bootlegs!🤣 Tons and tons of vinyl.
Bob Marley aka The wailers held a rehearsal session at this beautiful venue on the 24 October 1973 bad bootlegs had been on u tube and in circulation with traders until recently saw an official release oh finally to see the footage in better condition DVD, CD and 2XLPS love the jacket as it's got the capital building in it Thought I would highlight this as no one else has pointed it out Love to know which studio they used studio A or Studio B Any info be great love to know
What a great insight into this iconic studio. I have walked and driven by hundreds of times. Now I have a much better idea of what’s inside! Thank you.
Hello from a former studio employee, maintenance tech, and Grammy nominated sometime mixer who, along with Jerry Jensen, John Harkin, Ted Novak, and others, designed and built that Neve 8068 SN 001, which also had the first NECAM system in the U.S. We spent many hours demolishing the old, and building the new Studio B, which has a circular staircase up to the lounge above. Plus, you can prolly still find my fingerprints on those Neumann lathes, which we modified for more reliability (sometimes they would start up at the wrong speed). Any way, this is a great story about the studios. That view down the hallway is so memorable, and I wish you had opened up the double-doored echo chamber patch cabinet. Or was that the mic locker? It's been too long since I was there. Maybe I will have to visit again if possible. -- Mitchell Tanenbaum. PS Al Schmitt used to call me Mitchkin.
My late father (Milt Holland) played tons of sessions there, he retired in about '85. He told me some guys would play a 'joke' on the engineers by blowing cigarette smoke into a ribbon mic and calling them in saying something was burning...haha? Ring any bells?
@@TiqueO6 I never saw that, but I'm sure it helped to break the tension during a long and maybe difficult recording session. Over the many years since I worked there, I have often missed just being around, and who knows, maybe even helping great musicians such as your father make their music. But Shelley Mann once chastised me for putting up too many mics on his kit. I was just doing Hugh Davies' standard drum setup, but of course it was my fault anyway.
Mitchell Tanenbaum Milt was always impressed with the clarity of the play back in the great studios, he used to comment how it was getting better and better. But around the time of more tracks and more isolation there was a setback in natural sound recording and things started sounding thinner for a while. Milt has a system built in to our home in Laurel Canyon and as I remember it was designed by “Bones” Howe (sp?). I still have the Altec Lansing mono power amps and a Marantz 7 preamp but sadly the speakers were lost in a remodeling job.
PS, I’m a huge fan of ribbon mics (been collecting since about 1997) and very pleased they’re coming back into use (I often advocate for all-ribbon sessions because too many people put condenser mics on the drum set and then expect the ribbons to be able to compete with the exaggerated high-end?? And the results of using all good ribbons is so rich that it’s hard to argue with, of course artistry works with all kinds of mics and techniques in the right hands and ears.
@@TiqueO6 If I recall correctly, the ribbons (RCA 44's and 77's) were used by the great mixers as overheads on the drum kits. And those amps you mention are classic and I think quite valuable today. The mixers at Capitol in your father's heyday would have been John Krause, Hugh Davies, and others I was too late to know. I was often Hughie's assistant, but specialized more in classical recording for Angel. But most of my time was spent as a maintenance tech, so I saw everyone. And as I tell everyone, Al Schmitt called me Mitchkin. I'm still very proud of that for some (well, obvious) reason.
The 2nd session in studio A on the new console was the GRAMMY Band. We came in a day or two after Paul. Great experience and I was honored to produce those sessions with Steve. Al Schmitt mixed it
As to the old Neve stuff - Even Rupert (god rest his soul) wasn't real keen on that old stuff. I was invited to meet him at an AES in NYC back in the 1990's. On further phone calls with him I asked how he liked wimberley tx where he had just relocated. He told me how he and his wife loved it and how it was so sunny, "... unlike dreary old England". I then asked what he was doing down there - he was still working for AMEK and Harmon (wasn't real fond of that either) and mentioned something about rebuilding all those old modules like the ones every pulls out of stuff like 8068's and rack mounts to use in their DAW studios. His response - "I don't know why anyone would use that old gear - it's just God-awful... Wayne, you know how far things like semiconductors and passives have come along... why would anyone use that old stuff? This was during a conference call and I remember the guy from Mercenary on the line. And this was well before he spun off the Portico line and his other company (still exists to this day run by his widow and Josh from Amek) So later I see this interview with him - where he says EXACTLY that - ruclips.net/video/k6OwY0XbqV4/видео.html This should start at 17minutes and 24 into the interview. I recall looking at a lot of gear in my lab (see me beating on a newer digital thing here: ruclips.net/video/zDGTD7bGh3k/видео.html ) and it's true. But I knew this. I had been a broadcast engineer as well as studio tech from the mid 1970's onward) and recall all the issues with that old gear... I have to say - analog will probably never be totally replaced - in fact, most of the signals going in to DAW's and the like are in the analog domain. I find it difficult to really fatten a kick track with any plugin I've come across. As a bassist, I recall when I got my first modeling amp and playing 1,000's of gigs here in D.C. with Jon Fritz. Unlike the old analog amps I used, once the night and crowd got going and they wanted to turn it up a notch, the modeling amp would just fold... "You just hit all 1's - no more headroom for you!!" It was frustrating... unlike the old analog amps where it'd hit the rail and even tho it didn't get more amplitude per se, i did generate some harmonics that filled it out and made it so you felt like you had some headroom. So anyway - great to see these old studios. Love to have one. Kinda like how people love vinyl again. I recently did a rant on Facebook in response to the NPR article talking about how vinyl outsold CD's. I mentioned working as the head tech in a high end audio shop - Opus One in Pittsburgh (RIP Tasso) and dealing with things like MC cartridges on stuff like Linn-Sondek tonearms on Thorens tables. I remember working on Transcription tables - the ones that went for $3K or more. And that sucked. Really did. So I mentioned all this in my rant. Well, the next day none other than Larry Boden - the guy that wrote the book on mastering vinyl "Basic Disk Mastering" commented; said I nailed it - everything wrong with vinyl - even tho I didn't mention a good bit of stuff I used to deal with as a tech. I think you might be hearing more from Larry about all this... But when I asked Larry in a phone call if he'd get another lathe and do it again... "Hell yea..." was his reply. Once stuff like that gets in your blood it's intoxicating. Kinda like me - Love to have a pair of Studer 827's - even tho the tape will eventually go sticky shed. Not the most practical way of doing it nowadays. But I love the romance of it. BTW - heard that United Recording just closed it's studios ruclips.net/video/FxrPsN80Fi4/видео.html
I visited once for a masterclass really wonderful atmosphere there, and yes very social. I remember leaving A to go for a walk while they were setting up the session and running into Corine Bailey Rae in the hallway (which was literally on my bucket-list back then).
This is basically a commercial for Dolby Atmos. I've seen some vid and read stuff about Capitol Studios in the past and nothing's changed. This one though, is a commercial for Atmos. Atmos requires the listener to have a 12 speaker array located 360 in order to experience it propertly. Most folks listen to their stuff on phones and headphones and car stereos. Any bets on how long this will last? What is the Vegas line on whether or not this thing goes longer than TV 3D technology? Quad speakers? Lol.
Fantastic! Loved every minute of it and will continue to do so. Thank you so much for sharing this. I remember vividly doing an internship with the AR department in 1993. This was around the time when "All Balls Don't Bounce" by Aceyalone had come out. Along with The Beastie Boys (Grand Royal) label with Abstract Rude, Tribe Unique. The film scores, classic television series, and the magnetic albums that has changed all of our lives. Thank you so much for everyone involved with the project. Gift!
HISTORY ....and skills of the engineers and stuff...musicians...analog mics and keyboards....compressors...and ideas from 1970/80 which very rare come today...
Amazing waste of real estate. Especially when there are a vast myriad of reverb units (both digital AND electroacoustic) available on the market today.
I am both old and selectively old school, and how I love the Capitol philosophy of gear! I haven't been to Capitol in decades, but maybe a 60 year old version of "a runner", i.e., a rather fast walker, can secure a gig. lol
Ayman Zygote Totally overcompressed. Whoever mixed the audio should have made the voiceover more prominent too. It’s way too quiet in comparison to the people being interviewed.
The room that Nat built. Never knew that. Imagine that, during that era in American history. One black artist made the company enough money to build and entire building and really a business that's still around to this day. Interesting and revealing.
In the early 80s, an older accountant from Capitol saw one of our shows in LA and invited us over for a tour. This was our big break!.. so we thought. Little did we know that we'd be touring the upper offices and not the studios. I think we made it to the 3rd floor. The whole thing is so laughable now :)
Translation, ... gotta assure your mix translates across various systems. The NS10s have a very mid-fi familiarity that many engineers want to check their mix on. Or, you already know and simply being funny. Either way, there you go.
There's a famous clip of legendary bassist Carol Kaye (Wrecking Crew film), who wanders into Capitols main entrance to give a glimpse of where she worked to help create some of pops greatest records. The idiots in reception had no idea who she was and basically ran her off.
@@sobe3045 There is NO EXCUSE for morons not knowing their history and giving Carol carte blanche. Don't forget the morons at Capitol passed on the Beatles first several singles and LP - that's how hip they were - and are. Plus she had a camera crew, identified herself and they basically acted like total fools in the end - that's all that matters. ⏚
She's now President of Capitol Studios after years of being the studio manager at Capitol. Talked with her many times in the 1990's. Was always a wonderful person.
Great video but why is the narrator/host Vox so much lower in volume than the subjects? I would give this a pass if it weren’t an official Sound on Sound production.
We want to know more about the fire and hear how many artist have been screwed believing they have remastered product? What is the current number of law suits?
Maybe they meant the male vo to sound like that but it's unnatural. Sounds like the mids of his voice have been deliberately hollowed out. Whereas by comparison the Capitol staff voices, even though recorded with lav mics, are relatively clear and natural. If doing mixing it helps to know what a real voice sounds like.
Exactly what I was thinking when watching this. Ironic that a video about a recording studio has such a badly recorded voice over. Maybe Capitol Studios should have recorded it ?
Sinatra recorded one of His best albums with Nelson Riddle "Songs For Swingin Lovers" (1955-56) @ Capitol Melrose Studios @ 5515 Melrose Ave 'around the corner from My grandparents' N Bronson Ave home
Use clear graffiti tint on both sides of all glass, reduces reflection improvement. Area coverage adds up. Also there is paint water based that gives a reduced reflection. Note: equivalent of 5" mat insulation.
Great overview of the studio! However, I would suggest getting your audio levels correct in your productions... this is sound on sound after all, no..? Lol Roman
I did a session there in the mid eighties. At one point the engineer came on the squawk and said "Do a good job, you're using Frank Sinatra's mic. I looked at it, and sure enough, it was aU-47 with the Capital logo. I've seen pictures of Sinatra singing in that mic.
That video was amazing so much history! Open question: I am not sure if it is proprietary but; where can I find out how the RedNET setups were done in such a complex facility? I am very interested in AoIP and the various ways it is being incorporated.
I remember visiting this area of Los Angeles. It was very uncomfortable being there everybody seems zonked out there was no noise hardly any noise coming from traffic or people walking around there was nobody walking around and everybody seemed to be on some kind of Xanax type dang that's what the vibe I got was.
Was doing a record downstairs at the Village....a producer I had just worked with was upstairs....came down...said can you come up and make me one of those crazy guitar sounds...I said sure....came up plug in a few things, twisted some knobs, moved a mike..and that was that....one hit wonder...."Spirit in the Sky' Guitar Sound..long ago in LA. (Sunset Sound, Wally Heider LA, The Village Recorder)
Can you imagine the confidence (or insanity) to look at the big room Sinatra recorded his 50s tracks in, and then say...."I'll make it better, let's change it all around..." Thanks for the tour!
Back in the 70's our country rock group, Stagecoach, recorded an album at Studio West in San Diego. We had the album pressed to vinyl , so being ambitious young men, we jumped in our car and drove up to this Capital record building in L.A. and somehow thought we'd just "march into the building and get to talk to an A&R man about our new record". Well we marched into the building, alright, with our new record album, which even had a couple of songs written by Jack Tempchin, who wrote Peaceful easy feeling for the Eagles, but the first guy we ran into was the security guard. He stopped us and ask us where we were going. Of course we told him we wanted to talk to someone about our new album, but he told us basically: It ain't gonna happen. He said go over to this spot and talk to that person, so we did. Well that person told us there's no way we're gonna talk to an A&R man or any one else for that matter, but you can leave your album here if you want to, along with a whole bunch of other albums that other groups and artists have brought in, and we'll call you if we're interested. Soooooo, we did that but we never heard back from them. Well that was our first reality check with the music business, and we almost gave up, but I said to the band. Hey, let's go over to A&M records. I did a session over there with a friend of mine some time back, (which I had done), so we went there. We couldn't even get in the parking lot at first, but I talked to the guy on the speaker phone and told him we'd like to talk to a guy named Ed Soltzer, (I believe it was). Well Ed Soltzier was the guy who ran our session when I was there, and just happened to be Karen Carpenter's producer at the time, so they let us drop the album off, but we never got to talk to Ed, but at least they let us leave our album there. Well, shortly after that, the band let me go for another pedal steel player, but the leader later called me up and said that A&M did call him back and I think they, Stagecoach, maybe went back to A&M and did a re-cut on one of the songs on the album, but apparently it never went anywhere. All I can say, 50 years later is: Man what a ride the music business is, and like the man said, There's no business like show business. Marc Trainor.
Hey I went to school at Studio West for engineering. What a small world
Marc Trainor, , yep good ole shoe business,, we have heard and seen
78s, 45s,33s,4&8 track, cds, to the cloud,, crazy now the record co. Is your cell,, but like Vince Gill said (I think, you can get a download of my song for .99 or an app that farts, the app is doing well. ...
Music was very important to us it’s not so much any more, yay studio west I did a lot of work there,, Bill Blue!! Where did he go good soul!
B well,
Loved reading your story, Marc, and The Carpenters' agent/producer at A&M Records was Ed Sulzer. Not sure if they ever gave him an official title, but he was basically their A&R guy, (Artist & Repertoire), who would listen to demos for Karen and Richard, including mine in 1973, I think. Funny, I still remember A&M's address and phone number... 1416 N. LA Brea, (213) 469-2411. Can't believe that's all still in my head! Now it's Jim Hensen's place, (Muppets). Anyway, I used to hang out at that place, and like you, dreamed of a recording contract, but as I was then a session player at Capitol Records (playing for music groups and singers that were on Capitol's "we're interested" list), I realized that I never wanted to be a "star". I only wanted to do session work. But I also grew tired of that, after doing so many sessions, and I grew especially tired of sound engineers treating all these up and coming people like crap. So much for the glitz and glamour. Sessions are hard work, as you know. And I've been up in Capitol's tower playing my own demos to the A&R guys, but that's another story. And in conclusion I did appear on The Merv Griffin Show in 1974, which was taped at the famous Hollywood Palace, so I got to sing on that stage where every famous person in Hollywood performed. From Judy Garland to the Beatles. So that's my personal experience in Show Biz. Or some of it. Nothing special about it or me, I guess. Thanks for your memories, as I pictured everything you and your band experienced. Sounded familiar.
you make me laugh old man, with no masonry degree you spent your time since the begging good luck in next incarnation.
@@stevenbagner3407 👏
I owned the console and tape machine that was in Studio B throughout the 70s - custom-built by the Capitol engineering staff over an Electrodyne frame with Quad-Eight parts, as well as in-house designed preamp & EQ section. Total Frankenstein monster and maintenance headache, but we loved it anyway. The tape machine was a 1970 3M M56, serial # 17. We moved it from Hollywood in 1984 and kept it running until 1989. The late Jay Ranellucci, who had been there since about the time the studios opened, gave me a wonderful tour of the rooms. I later found, when we dismantled the old system which was beyond any more repair, that I had a lot of extra paperwork among the thousands of pages of technical data, going back to 1950s architectural drawings, internal memos, etc. Paula was wonderful to work with in re-connecting that history with the building, and I was very sorry to hear that she has recently been let go by Capitol.
I think she changed role, and also now the studios are closed for two years.
??
They didn't let her go, Universal (they own captiol now) picked her up to a VP role to be over all of their studios. She's a legend in her field. They would never let go.
I would hang outside that studio dreaming about recording there until it was time for me to go to work at the Wendy's on Sunset and Labrea.
Dante' it’s possible i’ve seen you bc i used to walk by capitol every day to get to work at 33 taps
@@SOUNDCONTROLFLA You know it was a music store that was close by them? I only saw the lobby of Capitol Records, Oh! and Motown Records, I think it was on Sunset.
@@SOUNDCONTROLFLA Jordan, what is 33 taps?
Fortnum Sound nahh you cant but I know what you mean. Yes, you can make a commercially viable record on a laptop, that’s for sure. But to suggest that a cheap mic, into a cheap interface, into a laptop, all recorded in a room with almost 0 acoustic treatment, will sound “just as good” as a multi million dollar facility that’s designed & built from the ground up with the best acoustics, gear, and recording & mixing engineers, is completely false. There’s a reason studios and expensive gear still exist.
Matthew G You are wrong, it’s all perception. My music I made at home sounds better than most commercial made music in million dollar studios. Expensive studios are the past. What you have is just an opinion.
[raised hand] That old equipment you mentioned that doesn't work well anymore that doesn't stick around - do you ever throw it in your dumpster with the follow up question where does Capital keep it's dumpsters?
Studio A , one of the best rooms in music ! From the phenomenal Acoustics to Nat King Coles Steinway. Thank you for keeping this place so well preserved for the generations of musicians yet to come and experience .
One thing not mentioned in this, in the 70's the Capitol Records parking lot (once a month) was the greatest place to buy bootlegs!🤣
Tons and tons of vinyl.
never seen a major studio like this that has such a healthy and artistic approach still inside it all. so refreshing omg yes
ruclips.net/video/qpsoRqGrsko/видео.html
Got to visit Capitol a few months back, was the thrill of a lifetime, and meeting Al Schmitt was a pleasure.
Bob Marley aka The wailers held a rehearsal session at this beautiful venue on the 24 October 1973 bad bootlegs had been on u tube and in circulation with traders until recently saw an official release oh finally to see the footage in better condition
DVD, CD and 2XLPS love the jacket as it's got the capital building in it
Thought I would highlight this as no one else has pointed it out
Love to know which studio they used studio A or Studio B
Any info be great love to know
Love these SOS studio tours. Great insights provided by the staff.
Thanks Paula, Steve, and Sound On Sound magazine for the enjoyable and informative visit! 👍👍
This building is so much a part of the California vibe. Glad the studios still exist.
I love how much these people know and care about what they're doing!!!
"We have this door between rooms. We can open it. We can open it halfway... We can even have it closed. Absolutely unique! Nowhere else in the world"
Has science gone too far?
What a great insight into this iconic studio. I have walked and driven by hundreds of times. Now I have a much better idea of what’s inside! Thank you.
It would have been really nice to see more of the studios.
Hello from a former studio employee, maintenance tech, and Grammy nominated sometime mixer who, along with Jerry Jensen, John Harkin, Ted Novak, and others, designed and built that Neve 8068 SN 001, which also had the first NECAM system in the U.S. We spent many hours demolishing the old, and building the new Studio B, which has a circular staircase up to the lounge above. Plus, you can prolly still find my fingerprints on those Neumann lathes, which we modified for more reliability (sometimes they would start up at the wrong speed). Any way, this is a great story about the studios. That view down the hallway is so memorable, and I wish you had opened up the double-doored echo chamber patch cabinet. Or was that the mic locker? It's been too long since I was there. Maybe I will have to visit again if possible. -- Mitchell Tanenbaum.
PS Al Schmitt used to call me Mitchkin.
My late father (Milt Holland) played tons of sessions there, he retired in about '85.
He told me some guys would play a 'joke' on the engineers by blowing cigarette smoke into a ribbon mic and calling them in saying something was burning...haha? Ring any bells?
@@TiqueO6 I never saw that, but I'm sure it helped to break the tension during a long and maybe difficult recording session. Over the many years since I worked there, I have often missed just being around, and who knows, maybe even helping great musicians such as your father make their music. But Shelley Mann once chastised me for putting up too many mics on his kit. I was just doing Hugh Davies' standard drum setup, but of course it was my fault anyway.
Mitchell Tanenbaum Milt was always impressed with the clarity of the play back in the great studios, he used to comment how it was getting better and better. But around the time of more tracks and more isolation there was a setback in natural sound recording and things started sounding thinner for a while.
Milt has a system built in to our home in Laurel Canyon and as I remember it was designed by “Bones” Howe (sp?). I still have the Altec Lansing mono power amps and a Marantz 7 preamp but sadly the speakers were lost in a remodeling job.
PS, I’m a huge fan of ribbon mics (been collecting since about 1997) and very pleased they’re coming back into use (I often advocate for all-ribbon sessions because too many people put condenser mics on the drum set and then expect the ribbons to be able to compete with the exaggerated high-end?? And the results of using all good ribbons is so rich that it’s hard to argue with, of course artistry works with all kinds of mics and techniques in the right hands and ears.
@@TiqueO6 If I recall correctly, the ribbons (RCA 44's and 77's) were used by the great mixers as overheads on the drum kits. And those amps you mention are classic and I think quite valuable today. The mixers at Capitol in your father's heyday would have been John Krause, Hugh Davies, and others I was too late to know. I was often Hughie's assistant, but specialized more in classical recording for Angel. But most of my time was spent as a maintenance tech, so I saw everyone. And as I tell everyone, Al Schmitt called me Mitchkin. I'm still very proud of that for some (well, obvious) reason.
What great history was made in those walls! Amazing equipment for sure, but equally amazing people to bring it to life! Thanks for the tour!
The 2nd session in studio A on the new console was the GRAMMY Band. We came in a day or two after Paul. Great experience and I was honored to produce those sessions with Steve. Al Schmitt mixed it
ruclips.net/video/qpsoRqGrsko/видео.html
My buddy was Chief Electronic Engineer and he took me there a few times. I’ve been everywhere in that building.
ruclips.net/video/qpsoRqGrsko/видео.html
As to the old Neve stuff - Even Rupert (god rest his soul) wasn't real keen on that old stuff. I was invited to meet him at an AES in NYC back in the 1990's. On further phone calls with him I asked how he liked wimberley tx where he had just relocated. He told me how he and his wife loved it and how it was so sunny, "... unlike dreary old England". I then asked what he was doing down there - he was still working for AMEK and Harmon (wasn't real fond of that either) and mentioned something about rebuilding all those old modules like the ones every pulls out of stuff like 8068's and rack mounts to use in their DAW studios.
His response - "I don't know why anyone would use that old gear - it's just God-awful... Wayne, you know how far things like semiconductors and passives have come along... why would anyone use that old stuff? This was during a conference call and I remember the guy from Mercenary on the line. And this was well before he spun off the Portico line and his other company (still exists to this day run by his widow and Josh from Amek)
So later I see this interview with him - where he says EXACTLY that - ruclips.net/video/k6OwY0XbqV4/видео.html
This should start at 17minutes and 24 into the interview.
I recall looking at a lot of gear in my lab (see me beating on a newer digital thing here: ruclips.net/video/zDGTD7bGh3k/видео.html ) and it's true. But I knew this. I had been a broadcast engineer as well as studio tech from the mid 1970's onward) and recall all the issues with that old gear...
I have to say - analog will probably never be totally replaced - in fact, most of the signals going in to DAW's and the like are in the analog domain. I find it difficult to really fatten a kick track with any plugin I've come across. As a bassist, I recall when I got my first modeling amp and playing 1,000's of gigs here in D.C. with Jon Fritz. Unlike the old analog amps I used, once the night and crowd got going and they wanted to turn it up a notch, the modeling amp would just fold... "You just hit all 1's - no more headroom for you!!" It was frustrating... unlike the old analog amps where it'd hit the rail and even tho it didn't get more amplitude per se, i did generate some harmonics that filled it out and made it so you felt like you had some headroom.
So anyway - great to see these old studios. Love to have one.
Kinda like how people love vinyl again. I recently did a rant on Facebook in response to the NPR article talking about how vinyl outsold CD's. I mentioned working as the head tech in a high end audio shop - Opus One in Pittsburgh (RIP Tasso) and dealing with things like MC cartridges on stuff like Linn-Sondek tonearms on Thorens tables. I remember working on Transcription tables - the ones that went for $3K or more.
And that sucked. Really did. So I mentioned all this in my rant.
Well, the next day none other than Larry Boden - the guy that wrote the book on mastering vinyl "Basic Disk Mastering" commented; said I nailed it - everything wrong with vinyl - even tho I didn't mention a good bit of stuff I used to deal with as a tech. I think you might be hearing more from Larry about all this...
But when I asked Larry in a phone call if he'd get another lathe and do it again... "Hell yea..." was his reply. Once stuff like that gets in your blood it's intoxicating.
Kinda like me - Love to have a pair of Studer 827's - even tho the tape will eventually go sticky shed. Not the most practical way of doing it nowadays.
But I love the romance of it.
BTW - heard that United Recording just closed it's studios ruclips.net/video/FxrPsN80Fi4/видео.html
Great interviews with this iconic studio, thank you!
I visited once for a masterclass really wonderful atmosphere there, and yes very social. I remember leaving A to go for a walk while they were setting up the session and running into Corine Bailey Rae in the hallway (which was literally on my bucket-list back then).
Nothing short of absolutely amazing. Kudos to the maintenance crew.
it's hard to even find good techs here now, this is the stuff of fluffy pink dreams.
This is basically a commercial for Dolby Atmos.
I've seen some vid and read stuff about Capitol Studios in the past and nothing's changed. This one though, is a commercial for Atmos.
Atmos requires the listener to have a 12 speaker array located 360 in order to experience it propertly.
Most folks listen to their stuff on phones and headphones and car stereos.
Any bets on how long this will last? What is the Vegas line on whether or not this thing goes longer than TV 3D technology? Quad speakers?
Lol.
Fantastic! Loved every minute of it and will continue to do so. Thank you so much for sharing this. I remember vividly doing an internship with the AR department in 1993. This was around the time when "All Balls Don't Bounce" by Aceyalone had come out. Along with The Beastie Boys (Grand Royal) label with Abstract Rude, Tribe Unique. The film scores, classic television series, and the magnetic albums that has changed all of our lives. Thank you so much for everyone involved with the project. Gift!
ruclips.net/video/qpsoRqGrsko/видео.html
Yet another iconic studio where the equipment is more worthy than most current artists.
😁
Hahaha. How true. And it gets more valuable and they decrease ever year.
That was marvelous, including voiceover -- thank you so much. To think the old (and new) literal echo chambers are still in use!
Great video - really fascinating to see the inner workings of such a legendary studio :)
HISTORY ....and skills of the engineers and stuff...musicians...analog mics and keyboards....compressors...and ideas from 1970/80 which very rare come today...
"We have 8 live echo chambers. They get used everyday. We fight over them all the time". Amazing.
Amazing waste of real estate. Especially when there are a vast myriad of reverb units (both digital AND electroacoustic) available on the market today.
I want to work with Steve! He sounds like a great guy and a good recording engineer! Yeah, Steve!
I love how excited he gets about the ATMOS room lol
Got to watch recording in the Nat King Cole room for a tv score. Musicians were exemplary and the room sounds great!
I am both old and selectively old school, and how I love the Capitol philosophy of gear! I haven't been to Capitol in decades, but maybe a 60 year old version of "a runner", i.e., a rather fast walker, can secure a gig. lol
| glad to have seen the inside of this iconic studio
Great to see such places behind the scenes. More please
Ouh, Boah
What a amazing report.
This would be my dream working in this music studio.
You are lucky guys.
Thank you.
Enough 1176s to pave a small family home garden patio with...
She said, "Universal and Capitol has a lot of catalog." Uh, not anymore for Universal. It's all gone!
Scott Stuit agreed... a shocker
Yup! But that under UMG's negligence in 2008, before they acquired Capitol Records (2012).
The geniuses at Universal improperly stored master tapes that went up in flames. They almost buried that story successfully. IDIOTS
@@lionheartroar3104 yeah, they were at Universal's back lot. That was one STINKY fire. Lol!
The worlds 54 most jealous people in music business are the ones who hit "dislike" :)
This is the greatest studio I've ever worked in!!!
Ive never been this quiet in 59 years.......
IM 59 BTW !
Great look into such an iconic studio!
Professionalism personified! American Exceptionalism!
ruclips.net/video/qpsoRqGrsko/видео.html
Narrator sounding like a sat nav
Ayman Zygote Totally overcompressed. Whoever mixed the audio should have made the voiceover more prominent too. It’s way too quiet in comparison to the people being interviewed.
@@AlexKnightVancouver The technical issues pale into insignificance compared with the actual delivery!
They should have done it in Dubly
@@cartnhorse Yeah, whatever you say....
The room that Nat built. Never knew that. Imagine that, during that era in American history. One black artist made the company enough money to build and entire building and really a business that's still around to this day. Interesting and revealing.
Great video. Thanks for producing & posting it ! Very entertaining, and informative ..... and nostalgic.
In the early 80s, an older accountant from Capitol saw one of our shows in LA and invited us over for a tour. This was our big break!.. so we thought. Little did we know that we'd be touring the upper offices and not the studios. I think we made it to the 3rd floor. The whole thing is so laughable now :)
I'm in love with the outboard gear!
Then you need to get out more and see humans ;-)
I feel that same feeling.
The always beautiful and studio legend Paula Salvatore. Sound City and then Capitol.
edited to correct spelling of Capitol. Damn auto correct. 😂
"Capitol"
@@mattiemclean9882 Yes...good catch.
Whoa!
this is so cool, what a dream job!!!!!!!
It's amazing that they spent $150K or more on PMC speakers yet retained the old Yamaha NS-10's on top of the console. :)
Translation, ... gotta assure your mix translates across various systems. The NS10s have a very mid-fi familiarity that many engineers want to check their mix on.
Or, you already know and simply being funny.
Either way, there you go.
@@FOH3663 Yep I know. And love them. Was saying that no matter what you spend them NS-10's still are reliable as shit.
@@GeoZero
Gotcha
Perfect example of comment section miscommunication
the PMCs for curb appeal
This was really dope! I would love to visit this studio and check out a real echo chamber
Dope?
My dream is to record here with Al Schmitt on the board!
PMC studio speakers are among the best I ever heard.
There's a famous clip of legendary bassist Carol Kaye (Wrecking Crew film), who wanders into Capitols main entrance to give a glimpse of where she worked to help create some of pops greatest records. The idiots in reception had no idea who she was and basically ran her off.
You have to have clearance in order to enter. They probably knew who she was but it’s very strict security in order to get in
@@sobe3045 There is NO EXCUSE for morons not knowing their history and giving Carol carte blanche. Don't forget the morons at Capitol passed on the Beatles first several singles and LP - that's how hip they were - and are. Plus she had a camera crew, identified herself and they basically acted like total fools in the end - that's all that matters. ⏚
Its Paula from Soundcity!
She's now President of Capitol Studios after years of being the studio manager at Capitol. Talked with her many times in the 1990's. Was always a wonderful person.
it wouldnt kill you to show those storage rooms
It wouldn’t kill you to be a little more polite and respectful, or perhaps even use the word ‘please’!
Lot of good information.
Love how they have the old tech and new
ruclips.net/video/qpsoRqGrsko/видео.html
Great video but why is the narrator/host Vox so much lower in volume than the subjects? I would give this a pass if it weren’t an official Sound on Sound production.
MorbidManMusic it's way over 2 db difference , , !
Estes estudios nao sabem os momentos de felicidade que suas musicas nos deram.
Wow...she used to be at sound city for a long time.
We want to know more about the fire and hear how many artist have been screwed believing they have remastered product? What is the current number of law suits?
Great Video, love the content & production
I only recently learned that the Capital Records building has studios in it. Then found this vid, spectacular!
"Capitol"
Yeah, I always thought it was just administration .. mind blown
Thank you very much for this video!
transfer which vintage audio tapes, exactly!? UMG torched them all over a decade ago 🔥🎶🔥
But how many SM57s do they have?
well.... do they track guitars and drums....and ? I guess a few right?
"...universal and capitol have a lot of catalog".... Yeah, and they block it all, right here on RUclips! 🤣🤣🤣
The house that Nat built..... so true. Every time I drive past, so proud.
These studios must have some crazy signal flow, amazing!
Great interview
For an audio magazine, you've really butchered that voiceover!
Sounds okay at 28.30!
@@kenmccormack7297 I'm missing your point - what do you mean?
Was just thinking the same thing!
Maybe they meant the male vo to sound like that but it's unnatural. Sounds like the mids of his voice have been deliberately hollowed out. Whereas by comparison the Capitol staff voices, even though recorded with lav mics, are relatively clear and natural. If doing mixing it helps to know what a real voice sounds like.
Exactly what I was thinking when watching this. Ironic that a video about a recording studio has such a badly recorded voice over. Maybe Capitol Studios should have recorded it ?
Sinatra recorded one of His best albums with Nelson Riddle "Songs For Swingin Lovers" (1955-56) @ Capitol Melrose Studios @ 5515 Melrose Ave 'around the corner from My grandparents' N Bronson Ave home
Use clear graffiti tint on both sides of all glass, reduces reflection improvement. Area coverage adds up. Also there is paint water based that gives a reduced reflection. Note: equivalent of 5" mat insulation.
26:44 ...they do traditional digital mastering also.
Congrats, folks, we're there. Digital mastering is "traditional".
awesome video
Great overview of the studio! However, I would suggest getting your audio levels correct in your productions... this is sound on sound after all, no..? Lol
Roman
Great studio!
I wanna see the timpani mic
It would seem that 'mic' is not listening
My God that "Frank Sinatra" mic must have a crazy value on it
Great video guys!
ruclips.net/video/qpsoRqGrsko/видео.html
Good to know that something nowadays as obsolete as a music studio, at least has such a great history to fall back on.
davidosolo “Obsolete”
Obsolete? Try recording an orchestra or big band at your home studio.
@@ChromaticHarp LOL
Wow!
Iconic landmark.
I did a session there in the mid eighties. At one point the engineer came on the squawk and said "Do a good job, you're using Frank Sinatra's mic. I looked at it, and sure enough, it was aU-47 with the Capital logo.
I've seen pictures of Sinatra singing in that mic.
It was on the front cover of our issue a few years ago. Did you get a shiver down your spine?
@@soundonsound Yup, I sure did! :D
this sounds like a great museum!
Really interesting, thanks
GREAT ! Hugs from Brazil
That video was amazing so much history! Open question: I am not sure if it is proprietary but; where can I find out how the RedNET setups were done in such a complex facility? I am very interested in AoIP and the various ways it is being incorporated.
I would love to track here.
Did Carol Kaye play there?
4:12 - familiar face from Sound City.
That's "Accentuate the Positive"
Mixers are artist, sculping frequencies! Cheers
I remember visiting this area of Los Angeles. It was very uncomfortable being there everybody seems zonked out there was no noise hardly any noise coming from traffic or people walking around there was nobody walking around and everybody seemed to be on some kind of Xanax type dang that's what the vibe I got was.
He's playing tambourine on the session next door .. that's how it should be!
Was doing a record downstairs at the Village....a producer I had just worked with was upstairs....came down...said can you come up and make me one of those crazy guitar sounds...I said sure....came up plug in a few things, twisted some knobs, moved a mike..and that was that....one hit wonder...."Spirit in the Sky' Guitar Sound..long ago in LA. (Sunset Sound, Wally Heider LA, The Village Recorder)
Studio A is where Gwen Stefani filmed her music video for "What You Waiting For?"
this is deep