[From Los Angeles Times] Rock 'n' Rap Mecca
SHERMAN OAKS The quest for perfection eventually led Sides to start his own recording studio. He began with jazz and rhythm and blues artists, but today his client roster is firmly rooted in pop music. Madonna, Shania Twain, the Goo Goo Dolls, Brandy, Aerosmith, Ice Cube, Mariah Carey, Eric Clapton, Snoop Dogg, Stevie Wonder, Joni Mitchell, Eminem and others have all recorded or mixed tracks at his Record One studio on Ventura Boulevard. "It's a hobby that's turned into something way more than a hobby," said Sides, 48. The Record One studio, built by a shopping center developer in 1976 and purchased by Sides in 1983, sits on a stretch of Ventura that appears more like a block of Sunset Boulevard transplanted over the hill. Niche boutiques, trendy restaurants and even music industry shops such as the Guitar Center flank the studio. But it's inside, in a den of anonymity, where magic is made. Beyond the automated gates and surveillance cameras (prompted by concerns about violent confrontations elsewhere between rap artists), the two studios in the windowless ecru-colored building have earned a reputation in the industry for producing warm, flawless sound. "Sometimes an artist can just walk in, do a song so right, and it just gives you chills," Sides said. "Then, it's just a matter of capturing that perfect moment on tape." In 1992, that moment lasted four minutes and 31 seconds, the duration of Whitney Houston's cover of "I Will Always Love You" from "The Bodyguard" soundtrack. Songs are usually mixed and remixed to remove flaws and produce a clearer blend of sounds. Sides said the record-setting song released to the public was the "rough mix"--an unrefined version the public almost never hears--recorded at Record One. Michael Jackson once booked the studio for almost a solid year, and Dr. Dre set up camp in the studio for two years when he launched his Aftermath label and began recording artists such as Eminem. In fact, Dre and Jackson met at Record One, and sealed a deal for Dre to buy a Chatsworth ranch house Jackson had in escrow before the Northridge earthquake. So why haven't you seen stretch Benzes pulling into the studio on the boulevard, or a crowd of paparazzi out front? Part of the location's stock in trade is its anonymity and its distance from well-known Hollywood and West Side studios that have become hangouts for artists and gawkers, according to guitarist and songwriter Randy Jacobs. "You can walk around and get out of the city," Jacobs said while in the studio last month mixing the follow-up to Virgin Records' compilation, "I-10 Chronicles." "For me the area is a good place, too, because I can step out and go to Stanley's [restaurant] and because a lot of studio musicians live in the area." The studio in turn draws music industry types who
live in the south Valley. For example, premier mixer Mike Shipley, who often sits at the
control board, is reportly shopping for a home near Ventura Boulevard, where he does most
of his work. And for those who can afford to blow off more time at $2,500 an hour, there are "the city's best pinball machine," a pingpong table and a weight room. "Dollar for dollar, the pingpong table has to be giving me the best return investment," Sides said. "I've had bands blow $100,000 playing pingpong tournaments." Artists tend to make the place more like home as they spend more time there. Dre took out the exercise gear to make room for more studio equipment. Shipley's son's Batmobile model sits on the mixing board. Who knows who put the Nerf basketball goal on the wall. Among the $2 million worth of things way too technical to mention in both Record One studios is the collection of 1950s-era vintage microphones that Sides swears sound better than anything made today. The $30,000 mikes are a choice with artists such as Clapton and BBMak, who were at Record One working on their latest projects recently. Amid the luxury and high-tech surface of the rooms,
some people are putting in long hours. Sides describes Dre, Jackson and young production
phenom Rodney Jerkins as workaholics. NEWSFILE: 6 SEPTEMBER 2000 |
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