Recording 50's style


I bet they could make some great analog records here.


https://youtu.be/_Q-scxybnp0

tzh21y
Lots of tubes and transistors. The service techs must be treated like kings to keep it operating. Knowledge of that stuff is slowly disappearing.
Here is another example, but of the '60s & '70s style in the modern New York. It's the Daptone analog studio tour. The home of Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings, Charles Bradley, The Budos Band and others. 

My favorite place in Helsinki is the Timmion studio. I admire these guys for what they are doing! This is a true independent label, here is something from the last LP. Everything recorded in Finland (100% analog). 
I have a friend with a small pro studio, and his gear (2" reel-to-reel 16/24 trk. recorder, vintage and contemporary mics, Altec A7 monitors) includes tube and transistor stuff from the 1950's to the present. Mics, mic pre-amps, limiters, compressors, recorder electronics, mixing console, etc. Guess which technology requires the most upkeep. Not the tubes, the transistors.

Dave Edmunds put out his debut solo album (after having put out a couple in his band Love Sculpture) Rockpile (album title, not his later band with Nick Lowe of the same name) in 1970, and had a hit with its’ single "I Hear You Knocking" (a remake of the Smiley Lewis song, on which Dave plays every instrument. He pounded on a cardboard box to create the 2/4 back beat ;-). He used the money made to buy into a small studio in Wales (his home country), Rockfield. He spent the next few years experimenting, learning how to produce music in the style of Sun Records owner/recording engineer/producer Sam Phillips. He also discovered how to create the Phil Spector Wall Of Sound, as can be heard on Daves' album Subtle As A Flying Mallet. Listen to it to hear his incredible recording of the Chantels' fantastic 1958 hit "Maybe". Absolutely breathtaking!

Dave is a master in the style, producing albums for The Stray Cats, The Everly Brothers, Carl Perkins, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, and his own Rockpile. For a taste of his work, pick up a copy of his Get It album. Pure 100 proof American Rock ’n’ Roll, 1950’s style.