From Deseret News archives:

Capitol Studios fear construction's bad vibes

Published: Saturday, July 5, 2008 12:10 a.m. MDT
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Jordon maintains that his company is only looking to do loud excavation and demolition from 7 to 10 a.m. He also says there would be an emphasis on "open and constant communication" with Capitol, including an on-site attendant every day. Discussions continue regarding compensation to Capitol if recording sessions are affected, he said.

The full council is set to give a final vote on the proposal Tuesday in a session that could attract the many music industry insiders who oppose the project — from engineers to The Recording Academy.

"Those echo chambers at Capitol should not ever be lost. That sound cannot be reproduced," said engineer Geoff Emerick, who recorded the Beatles' "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" and "Revolver."

Musician and producer Jon Brion, who has recorded Kanye West and Fiona Apple, said he was upset over the issue.

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"There are very few specially built studios left, and the chambers are the thing that make it special," he said. "This is a rarified world, but we already lose too many things culturally. Should we listen to the people who have never recorded music, who say, 'What's the big deal about putting up a parking lot?,' versus the engineers who are the canaries in the coal mine? This was the BEST thing of that era. People traveled here then, and still do." Sinatra recorded his seminal 1958 album "Only the Lonely" in the studios, using the echo chambers' reverb to enhance his voice. Other famed musicians who have recorded there since the tower's 1956 opening include Dean Martin, Natalie Cole, Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, Diana Krall and James Taylor. Green Day recorded most of its Grammy-winning 2004 album "American Idiot" there.

The Oscar, Emmy and Grammy orchestras also use the studios, which can hold up to 75 musicians, as do the television shows "American Idol" and "Lost." Today, about 90 percent of the artists who record there rent the facilities independently and are not connected with Capitol/EMI.

"To steal a quote from (Beatles engineer) Phil Ramone, 'People just play better here,' " said Greg Parkin, Capitol Studios and Mastering's senior director of operations.

Buried more than 25 feet below the Capitol tower's parking lot, the studios' trapezoidal-shaped echo chambers, built out of 10-inch thick concrete walls, were co-designed by famed sound innovator Les Paul, who pioneered the electric guitar and helped develop multitrack recording. Artists sing or play into microphones in the studios and the sound is piped through wires in the walls down through a corridor and into the chambers, Parkin said. Speakers in the chambers bounce the sound to microphones on the other side, which pick up the music in stereo and then funnel it back to a mixing console in the studios. This provides a smooth delay of sound, or reverb, which can last up to five seconds. Underground isolation is necessary to establish purity of the sound.

"Loud noises are our enemy, that's just the nature of the business," Parkin said. "When you're doing a very delicate string date, any interference can be a problem."

He added that the chambers have never been replicated digitally — and that's why artists still travel to Capitol from around the world.

"The Capitol Studios are part of Hollywood's history, part of the Beach Boys' history and part of my own history," Brian Wilson said in a letter to the Los Angeles City Council. "I can't emphasize enough how important it is that you do everything in your power to protect that history for generations of recording artists to come."

Recent comments

Second Street Ventures has'nt hired sound engineers to do any...

Joes45acp | July 5, 2008 at 2:04 p.m.

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Ric Francis, Associated Press

Capitol Studios remain a working homage to high-quality sound.

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