Trident Studios was sold in December 1981. It was bought by its senior engineer,
Stephen Short, along with three other investors while Peter Booth, who oversaw day-to-day studio operations. In 1986, Short bought out the other investors and opened Trident 2 which was opened in 1983 and the investors were J.P. Illiesco and
Rusty Egan. There were also another group of producers and investors who tried to buy Trident in the 1980s after its initial closure, headed by Neville Kernick-Nixon, Flood and John Keating; the former then opened The Mad House, later known as The Music Station. The original Trident mixing desk also survived, and was purchased in the early 1980s from the studio's owners by songwriter and former
Cure bassist
Phil Thornalley. It is now housed in Thornalley's own recording studio, Swamp Studios in north-west London. The Swamp is actually centred on the Trident Tri‑mix desk. Since 1981, the studios have changed name(s) and hands multiple times, with the original building remaining
in situ. Between 1997–1998, the site was the headquarters of Rob Playford's influential drum and bass label, Moving Shadow. It was here that Goldie produced his second album Saturnz Return. Notably, David Bowie visited the site to record vocals for Goldie's song "Truth." ==Blue plaque==