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Morgan Studios

Coordinates:51°32′50.05″N0°14′0.42″W / 51.5472361°N 0.2334500°W /51.5472361; -0.2334500
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former recording studio in London, England

Morgan Sound Studios
IndustryRecording studio
Founded1967; 59 years ago (1967) inWillesden, London, England
Defunct1984 (1984); 41 years ago
Successor
Headquarters,
England

Morgan Studios (founded as Morgan Sound Studios) was an independentrecording studio inWillesden in northwest London. Founded in 1967, the studio was the location for recordings by notable artists and bands such asThe Cure,Jethro Tull,the Kinks,Paul McCartney,Yes,Black Sabbath,Pink Floyd,Donovan,Joan Armatrading,Cat Stevens,Rod Stewart,UFO and many more. Morgan sold its studios in the early 1980s, with some of its studios succeeded byBattery Studios.

History

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Morgan Sound Studios was founded in 1967 byBarry Morgan, Monty Babson, Jerry Allen, andLeon Calvert, who were operating a jazz record label atLansdowne Studios and wanting dedicated office space for their label. Upon securing a location at 169–171 High Road, in theWillesden area of northwest London, the musicians decided to also build a recording studio. They hired ex-Olympic StudiosengineerTerry Brown to manage the studio, who appointed another Olympic Studios alumnus,Andy Johns as chief engineer.Roy Thomas Baker, who would later achieve fame as an engineer and producer atTrident Studios, also worked at Morgan in its early years as an assistant engineer.[1]

Studio manager Terry Brown knew that Clive Green was designing a newmixing console for Lansdowne Studios, and he asked if he could buy the design. Green instead chose to build the console himself, resulting in the founding of mixing console manufacturerCadac Electronics. The first Cadac console - a custom hand-wired 8-channel split-console desk with transformerless balanced inputs and outputs - was installed at Morgan Studios. Morgan Studios initially operated with a modestly-sized 20 foot x 20 foot live room and a 17 foot x 10 foot control room with aScully 1-inch 8-track recorder as well asAmpex 2-track and 4-rack recorders.[1] The studios also had aSteinway grand piano and aHammond organ.

In 1969, a new, larger Studio 1 was built upstairs, with the original studio being re-named Studio 2. The new studio was outfitted with a modular 24x16 Cadac mixing console, a 16-track 3M recorder, and a 2-trackStuder A80.[1] The same year, four of the studios' employees, including founder Barry Morgan, keyboardistRoger Coulam, guitaristAlan Parker, and bassistHerbie Flowers joined forces with vocalistsRoger Cook andMadeline Bell to form the British pop groupBlue Mink.[2]

In 1972, Morgan opened a significantly larger Studio 3 on the ground floor of a building across the street, outfitting it with a 24x24 Cadac console and a 3M M79 24-track recorder.

In 1974, Morgan purchased another property around the corner to open Studio 4, Morgan's largest studio space yet. Outfitted with a 28x24 Cadac mixing console, Studio 4 also had the distinction of being the recipient of the first Ampex 24-track tape recorder in England (although it was later replaced by a Studer A80).

Each of Morgan's control rooms had 3EMTplate reverbs, 2 Pye limiters, and 2UREI limiters. Morgan's studios also utilizedNeumann U47 and U67 microphones.[1]

Successors

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In 1980, Morgan Studios 3 and 4 were sold to theZomba Group and becameBattery Studios. In 1982, Morgan Studios 1 and 2 were sold toRobin Millar and renamed Power Plant Studios, which closed 6 years later.[3][4]

Recordings

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This list isincomplete; you can help byadding missing items.(June 2013)

Albums

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1960s

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1970s

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1980s

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Singles

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See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefghijklmnMassey, Howard (2015).The Great British Recording Studios. Lanham, Maryland, US: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 248–251.ISBN 978-1-4584-2197-5.
  2. ^"Biography by Dave Thompson".AllMusic. Retrieved10 February 2009.
  3. ^Harris, Tony (2011)."Morgan Studios". Philsbook.com. Archived fromthe original on 1 June 2013. Retrieved19 June 2013.
  4. ^Robertshaw, Nick (15 March 1986)."Sade's Producer is Trying to 'Stay Hungry'".Billboard. Billboard. Retrieved8 August 2022.
  5. ^"C.V. Moto – Lampefeber (Vinyl, LP, Album) at Discogs". Discogs.com. 27 September 1980. Retrieved4 December 2012.
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51°32′50.05″N0°14′0.42″W / 51.5472361°N 0.2334500°W /51.5472361; -0.2334500

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