
You can also find out more about Capitol Studios here. Designed by Louis Naidorf of Welton Becket Associates, it is one of the citys landmarks. This excellent video below from Sound on Sound will remedy that nicely, as you get to see all 3 studios, the famous echo chambers, the mastering studios, and hear great interviews with studio manager Paula Salvatore and staff engineer Steve Genewick. The Capitol Records Building, also known as the Capitol Records Tower, is a 13-story tower building in Hollywood, Los Angeles. Unless your working here though, you never get to see inside. Capitol Studios is right up there with best of the best. Just walking down the corridor to the studios oozes with history thanks to the large pictures on the wall of artists like Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Dean Martin and others recording there that just jump out at you.Īnd you can’t ask for a better facility in terms of gear, acoustics, and people. The feel of the place can’t be duplicated. News 9:07pm PT Capitol Studios Shutters Its Mastering Division The most visible face of Capitol Studios, 30-year veteran Paula Salvatore, a VP, is also described as taking on on a. Over the years I’ve been to Capitol dozens of times and I’m always impressed. Focuses on dates from start to end of World War Two. But the one studio that may be the most iconic of all is Capitol Studios, built into the basement of the historic round Capitol Records building in the middle of Hollywood. Label Analysis of Capitol Records including pressing plant stamps.

#CAPITOL RECORDS MOVIE#
United Recording (formerly Oceanway), East West (formerly Cello), The Record Plant, and Henson Studios (formerly A&M) are just a few that remain busy serving high-end music clients, movie soundtracks, and just about any other type of recording you can think of.

Capitol declined, so EMI made a five-year agreement with Vee-Jay Records, an independent label based in Chicago this was part of a deal for the rights to EMI artist Frank Ifield. Los Angeles is lucky in that there’s a number of iconic recording studios that were built decades ago that still exist and thrive today. EMI offered US distribution of the Beatles records to their American subsidiary Capitol Records in 1962.
