A&R Recording had two buildings in midtown Manhattan. Within a 10-block area of this part of Manhattan during the disco era existed an epicenter of recording studios, including
Mediasound, the
Hit Factory, Sony, and the
Record Plant at 321 W. 44th Street, with four studios, duplication room, two mobile recording trucks, a master cutting room, and the Record Plant Shop. A & R Recording Inc.112 West 48th StreetOpened by Jack Arnold and Phil Ramone 1959. Corner of 6th Avenue, next door to Jim & Andy's Bar (116 West 48th Street) and Manny's Music (156 West 48th Street), both famous musicians hangouts. Used regularly by
Tom Dowd for
Atlantic sessions and producer
Creed Taylor for
Verve.
Van Morrison recorded "
Brown Eyed Girl" there. A & R Studio 2 (formerly Columbia Studio A)799 7th AvenueOpened by Jack Arnold and
Phil Ramone early 1968 Associated Sound (now Quad Recording Studios)723 7th AvenueNear corner of West 48th Street, a few doors down from
Dick Charles.
The Angels' "
My Boyfriend's Back," the Raindrops'"What A Guy" and
The McCoys' "
Hang On Sloopy" were cut there
Bell Sound (later
The Hit Factory)237 West 54th StreetFounded June 1950 by Allen Weintraub and Daniel Cronin (1929–1968), both classmates from
Brooklyn Technical High School; studio was located at 135 West 54 beginning June 1959;
Burt Bacharach's favorite studio. Bought by
Jerry Ragovoy 1968 and reopened as
The Hit Factory; sold 1975 to partner Eddie Germano
(né Edward F. Germano; 1941–2003); now run by Troy George Germano (born 1962), his son. Capitol Studios, Studio A (
Capitol Records, Inc.)(the studio operated under Capitol from 1949 to 1961)(
see )151 West 46th StreetFirst floor (one floor up) in the 14-story Eaves Building (built in 1928). The Eaves Costume Company – founded by Albert Grammer Eaves (1847–1900) in 1863 ( years ago), and still in existence – occupied the ground floor. Century Sound135 West 52nd StreetOne flight up. Former radio studio. Opened by Brooks Arthur in 1967.
Columbia 30th Street207 East 30th StreetConverted Armenian church. Opened 1949, closed mid-1982, torn-down, now an apartment building.
Columbia Studio A (later A & R Studio R2)799 7th AvenueOpened in the 1930s. Columbia's main facility prior to East 30th Street. Sold to A & R late 1967.
Columbia Studio B49 East 52nd StreetFormer site of CBS Radio Network building, near Madison Avenue. Opened late 1967.
Dick Charles Recording Service Inc.729 7th AvenueSmall demo studio, in the United Artists building, near corner of West 48th Street, a few doors up from Associated Sound. Dick Charles Recording Inc., founded by Dick Charles (
né Richard Charles Krieg; 1919–1998), was taken over in the 1980s by audio engineer Dick Charles (
né Richard Charles Waldspurger; 1941–2002), who worked with him. Many of S'pop's favored songwriters recorded demos there. Engineer Jack Malken introduced Tommy Ramone to the studio and in February 1975,
The Ramones recorded their first demos there. The studio also was contracted for all the demo work for music publishers
Screen Gems, the company that provided many of the hits for
The Monkees, with songwriters that included
Neil Diamond,
Gerry Goffin, and
Carole King. Les Paul, Jr. (Lester George "Rusty" Paul, Jr.; 1941–2015) (engineer);
Les Paul's son. Master Cutting Room (MCR)250 West 49th Street(a
Record Plant offshoot)Opened 1971, closed 2006Building demolished in 2022. Joe Brescio (mastering engineer)
George Marino (mastering engineer) (1971–1973) Duncan Stanbury (April 1990 – April 1998) Kevin Hodge (1995–2005). Mira Sound145-155 West 47th StreetOn the ground floor of the Hotel America, now a Euro-style hotel. Recorded there: "
Remember (Walking in the Sand)" by
The Shangri-Las and "
Society's Child" by
Janis Ian.
Power Station (known as Avatar Studios from 1996–2017).441 West 53rd StreetNear 10th Avenue. Founded 1977 by
Tony Bongiovi. Previously home to
ConEdison (hence Power Station).
RCA Victor155 East 24th StreetNear Lexington Avenue. RCA
Webster Hall125 11th StreetIn the
East Village. Built late 1800s. Converted by RCA early 1950s. Now a nightclub.
The Record Plant (later Streetlight)321 West 44th StreetOnce home to
Warner Brothers Pictures; opened by
Gary Kellgren and
Chris Stone in 1968. Stea-Philips7th AvenueCorner 51st Street, close to Columbia Studio A and 1650 Broadway. Owner: Lenny Stea
(né Leonard J. Stea; born 1928).
The Four Seasons cut "
Sherry" there. Talentmasters Recording Studio126 West 42nd StreetOwners: Bob Gallo and Robert (Bob) Harvey. Later bought out by
AtlanticThe Who recorded there. World United1595 BroadwayOwner:
Harry Lookofsky,
aka Hash Brown, father of
Michael Brown of
The Left Banke, who recorded "
Walk Away Renée" there.
JAC Recording, Inc.152 West 58th StreetOwner:
Charles LeightonThis is where
Phil Ramone got his start. Allegro Sound Studios1650 BroadwayOwner (original):
Kama Sutra Records This was actually on the 51st Street side of the 1650 Broadway building, located in the basement, around the corner from the famous jazz club Birdland. Originally a demo studio for Kama Sutra, it was then purchased by Laurie Records, who gave it an extensive upgrade under chief engineer Bruce Staple. After several changes in ownership, it became known as Generation Sound Studios in the 1970s. Many of the
Tommy James hits were recorded there, including
I Think We're Alone Now and
Crimson And Clover. After the departure of Bruce Staple, Tony May of A&R became chief engineer. == Personnel ==