Equipment

Equipment

SSL J 9000 80 inputs w/ Ultimation
Pro Tools HD3 Accel, with 64 outputs
Augspurger TAD Monitor System
Yamaha NS-10 Monitors
Studer A-820 24-Track
Yamaha C-7 Grand Piano
Hammond B-3 Organ with Leslie
EMT 140 Stereo Plate (2)
AMS RMX-16 Reverb
AMS DMX 1580S Delay
GML 8200 Stereo Parametric
Summit EQP-200B EQ
Summit DCL-200 Stereo Compressor
API 550A Eqs (2)
API 554 EQ
API 560 EQ
Avalon 2044 Stereo Compressor
Neve 1073 EQ (4)
Avalon 2055 Stereo Parametric
Lexicon 480L
Lexicon PCM80
Lexicon PCM70 Reverb
Lexicon PCM 42 Delays (2)
Empirical Labs Distressor (2)
Yamaha SPX-90II (2)
Yamaha Rev 5
Yamaha Rev 7 (2)
Yamaha SPX-990 (2)
TC Electronics 2290 Delay (2)
Roland SDE-3000 Delay (2)
Roland SDE-2500 Delay (2)
Drawmer DS-201 Gates (2)
DBX 902 De-Essers (4)
DBX903 Compressors (2)
DBX 160 VU (2)
DBX 165A Compressor/Limiter
DBX 160X (2)
Eventide DSP 4000 Harmonizer
Eventide H3000 Harmonizer
Teletronix LA-2A Compressor (2)
Tube-Tech PE-1B EQ
Tube-Tech CL-1B Compressor
Urei LA-4 Compressor
Urei LA-3A Compressor (2)
Urei 556 Pass Filter
Urei 1176LN Compressor (2)
Urei 1178 Stereo Compressor
Apogee Rosetta A/D Convertor
Panasonic 3800 DAT Machine (2)

Microphones

Telefunken 251 tube
Neumann U-47 tube
Neumann U-47 fet
Neumann U-67 tube
Neumann U-87
Neumann TLM-170
Neumann KM-84
Sony 800G Tube
Sony C-38
AKG C-24 tube
AKG C-12 tube
AKG 414
AKG 451
AKG D112
AKG SE 300B
AKG "The Tube"
AKG 460
Audio Technica Pro 37R
Audio Technica ATM 25
Royer 121 Ribbon
B&K 4011
Coles 4038 Ribbon
Sennheiser 421
Shure Beta 56
Shure SM-57
Shure SM-58
Shure SM-81
Shure 520 Bullet
Electrovoice RE-20
Crown PZM plate

Floating Equipment

Neve 1081 Mic pre/EQ
Neve 1073 Mic pre/EQ
Neve 1064 Mic pre/EQ
Neve 3104 Mic pre/EQ
Neve 1081 Mic pre/EQ
Neve 2254 compressor
API 3124 4 ch. Mic pre
EMT 251 Reverb
Focusrite ISA 110 Mic pre/EQ
Avalon M22 stereo mic pre
SSL XLogic channel strips
two channel SPL Transient Designer
Manley Labs Massive Passive EQ
Joe Meek VC-2 Mic pre/Compressor
Fender Rhoads electric piano
Private Q personal Headphone mixing
System

About Studio C

Paramount Recording Studios was built in the late 1960’s by the Brolin family.  Encouraged by his brother, the well-known actor James Brolin, Brian Brolin opened the studio after gaining some renown of his own from his recording work with his former classmate Ritchie Valens.  The Paramount Building was the original site of the famous “Bic Click” pen manufacturing plant, and next door was the original SIR Rehearsal and Rental location that got its start during a Jimi Hendrix session that was booked at Paramount.  At the time James Brolin was under contract to Paramount Pictures and he named the new studio after his employer as a way of poking fun at such a large corporation.

The studio gained momentum with the mid-70’s construction of the now famous Studio C, a classic Hidley-designed control room with a very spacious tracking room consisting of multiple rock, parquet wood, and glass surfaces, along with a 20-foot ceiling.  Notably, the finish carpenter was James’ young friend, then unknown actor Harrison Ford.  Job well done!  One of the first runners that were hired was another young actor pal of James’ named Edward James Olmos.  He was also instrumental in making Paramount one of the busiest television music facilities at the time as hit TV series such as Happy Days, Benson, the Osmond Brothers Show, and the Partridge Family all recorded live session dates in Studio C for their shows.

In that decade, Brian engineered for Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, Aerosmith, Bob Dylan, and individually with each of the Beatles.  Motown had moved west around that time and so legends like Diana Ross, Smokey Robinson, and Marvin Gaye graced the halls.  The Jackson 5 recorded ABC 1, 2, 3  at Paramount.  Sly and the Family Stone, Frank Zappa, and Johnny Guitar Watson each recorded multiple gold and platinum records at the facility.   Albums were recorded and mixed over much longer periods and thus many of these folks practically lived at Paramount.

The 80’s rolled around and the studios were visited by the likes of the Talking Heads, the Go-Go’s, Devo, the Police, the B-52’s, N.W.A., Kurtis Blow, Club Nouveau, Guns and Roses, the Bangles, and the Black Crowes.  Upgrades continued in all rooms as Amek, Harrison, and Soundcraft consoles were upgraded to Neve and SSL.  24-track tape machines were upgraded from Ampex, Stevens, and 3M to top-of-the-line Studer 820’s and 827’s.

In rolled the 90’s with a wide mix of styles: grunge, new-jack swing, and hardcore rap along with traditional R&B, pop, and rock in various hybrids.  In those days, we worked with many clients including Sugar Ray, Ice Cube, Los Lobos, Boyz II Men, Montel Jordan, Sheryl Crow, Brandy, the Cult, Tupac, Backstreet Boys, Ice T, Macy Gray, House of Pain, and Celine Dion.  In a lot of ways this decade was the last hurrah (hopefully short-lived) of a music industry in which the artists still ruled—until the Napster-led file-sharing era began toward the end of the decade.  The studio kept up with the changing times with the addition of the exotic Focusrite console in Studio C (later upgraded to the SSL 9000J) and the newly developed Pro Tools Mix systems that we installed in all rooms, though to this day the Paramount Group maintains analog Studer 2” and 1/2” tape machines in every single one of our studios.

Now, we are in the new millennium along with all the technological and music business model adaptation that arrived with it.  Budgets are tighter, and the recording industry has contracted, but our studios have thrived with the proper mix of ingredients: a level of technical, engineering and support staff unmatched in the new era; classy, comfortable (but not over-the-top) creative spaces, surroundings, and amenities; and, not least, experienced leadership assuring the continuity of these ingredients and engendering client loyalty rarely seen anymore.

Paramount now consists of 8 studios: one large tracking/mixing studio with an 80 channel SSL 9000J with Ultimation, a mixing/overdub studio with a 56 channel SSL 6000E/G, a mixing/overdub studio with a 40 channel SSL 4000E/G, a mastering studio, and 4 pre-production studios for in-house producers to use.

The stars have continued to shine at Paramount in the new millennium with new clients like Justin Timberlake, the Black Eyed Peas (though Will.I.Am goes way back as a friend of owners Adam Beilenson and Mike Kerns, dating to his time as the artist Will-1X on Easy E’s Ruthless Records), Flaming Lips, Mos Def, Josh Groban, Snoop Dogg, the Wallflowers, Pink, Hanson, Timbaland, Korn, Hilary Duff, the Goo Goo Dolls, Nelly Furtado, 311, Alice in Chains, the Deftones, Weezer, John Mayer, Dr. Dre, Fall Out Boy, and Linkin Park.

It is an era dominated by producers: they have a larger share of power, budgets and artist development.  Technology has advanced apace, but the busy studios of the Paramount Group are proof that the age-old tradition of live recording and overdubbing, mixing and mastering in the shrinking number of world-class commercial studios is still the preferred route of industry professionals.

Rates

Studio C 24/48 Track

$2,000/day

Studio Images

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Recent Sessions In Paramount Studio C


Coming Soon!

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