Pathway_Studios

Pathway Studios

Pathway Studios

8-track studio in North London


51.549°N 0.091°W / 51.549; -0.091

Pathway Studios was an independent recording studio in North London. Founded in 1970, the studio became an early favorite of Stiff Records' Dave Robinson and Jake Riviera,[1] and was the location for early recordings by The Damned, Madness, Elvis Costello, Squeeze, Lene Lovich, John Foxx, and the Police.

History

The 8-track studio, located at 2a Grosvenor Avenue in the North London Borough of Islington, was founded by producers Peter Ker and Mike Finesilver, who funded the majority of the construction with their co-writing royalties from the hit song, "Fire".[1] Pathway had a single 25 foot x 25 foot studio with a very small control room.

Tim Crowther described it thus:

"The studio was very small, about 8 x 8 metres with a 2 x 2m control booth in the corner and an upright piano next to it. You could just squeeze three people into the control booth! The tape deck was a Brenell 1-inch 8 track. The monitors and desk were custom made, and they had a pair of Auratones as well, fed from Quad power amps. The desk was quite small, pushed hard against the front wall with the custom monitors hung above and the Auratones on the meter bridge. Outboard was very basic: a Bel delay line, an Alesis digital reverb and Drawmer gates, but they had a nice plate reverb in a cupboard in the office upstairs. I can't recall all the mics but they were the industry standard stuff. We got big warm sounding mixes and despite the cramped conditions the mixing process seemed effortless compared to the difficult digital learning curve I have been on in the last two years."[citation needed]

Mark Bedford of Madness recalls[2] that "It was a really thin building - you couldn't really call it a house - on Grosvenor Avenue, close to Stoke Newington. The studio and control room were on the ground floor, then these rickety old stairs led to the office up top. The studio had that old-fashioned aerated board with the holes on the walls, so it was very fifties." Lee Thompson of Madness recalls[2] that "It was just down a cobbled back alley. Unassuming, nothing flash, nothing big; just an oversized garage with a couple of speakers and soundproofed rooms. It was very rough and ready."

Working at Pathway as Stiff Records' in-house producer beginning in 1976, Nick Lowe produced such notable recordings as The Damned's debut single "New Rose", the first UK punk rock band single, released in October of that year,[3] as well as their follow-up debut studio album, Damned Damned Damned. Other artists who made early recordings with Lowe at Pathway Studios included Madness, Elvis Costello, Squeeze, The Count Bishops with Mike Spenser, The Cannibals and John Foxx.

On 12 February 1977, just a couple of weeks before the band's debut live performance, the Police recorded their debut single, "Fall Out" at Pathway with a budget of £150.[4] In July of the same year, Dire Straits recorded the demo of "Sultans of Swing", with the song's subsequent popularity leading to the band signing a recording contract with Phonogram Records two months later. Also in 1977, Sham 69 recorded their first single "I Don't Wanna", produced by John Cale.

John Cleese used Pathway to record voiceovers for his business training films,[1] and in 1981 the studio was featured in the Madness drama-documentary Take It or Leave It.[5]

Pathway Studios closed in the early 2000s, with the building later converted into two small apartments.[1]

Notable recordings

Singles

Albums

Film


References

  1. Massey, Howard (2015). The Great British Recording Studios. Lanham, Maryland, US: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 266–268. ISBN 978-1-4584-2197-5.
  2. Before we was we: the making of Madness by Madness
  3. Griffin, Jeff, "The Damned Archived November 7, 2020, at the Wayback Machine", BBC.co.uk. Retrieved on November 19, 2006.
  4. Sutcliffe, Phil & Fielder, Hugh (1981). L'Historia Bandido. London and New York: Proteus Books. ISBN 0-906071-66-6. Page 41.
  5. Reed, John (30 August 2014). House of Fun: The Story of Madness. Omnibus Press. ISBN 9781783233342. Retrieved 10 November 2017 via Google Books.
  6. "CLASSIC TRACKS: Madness 'Our House' -". Soundonsound.com. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  7. "Lies & Inventions". Elviscostello.com. Retrieved 10 November 2017.

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