Ye Olde Pye – By Fran Ashcroft

Ye Olde Pye
By Fran Ashcroft

By the time I worked at the classic Pye studios in the mid 70s and 80s, the 60s gear had gone – except for the great mics (U47s, 67s, 87s mainly) – and huge Tannoy monitors…though the Marble Arch facility still had a uniformed doorman! But it lagged behind the state of the art of the day, and wasn’t doing well – even at a knockdown £15 per hour.

Studio 1 was the big live room, not unlike Abbey Road #2, but more reflective. No iso booths, just screens. All the outboard fitted onto one small trolley, wheeled between #1 and #2 studios. And not much notewotrhy in it – an Eventide harmonizer, whooppee! Reverb was stereo plate and tape delay. The only upgrade that really took place over the years was the installation of the Studer 24 tracks, Neve desks, some NICAM automation and a complete and misguided overhaul of #2 by Westlake, who ruined it. The only session I ever did in that particular room was abandoned; it was so dead and hermetically sealed, everyone ran out with raging headaches after 45 minutes.

Studio 2 had been the Pop room, where the majority of the Kinks classics were recorded; in fact many  60s greats, from the Stones to Small Faces used studio 2. It housed a simple Ampex 4 track, along with echo chambers, and of course their own hand built gear – Pye compressors etc.

But for me it was the huge Studio 1. Much of the recording done there in its later days were budget “The Sound Of…” and “Tops of the Pops” albums, done in a few hours with staunchly unionised session musos. They couldn’t tempt rock bands in very much as the gear was dated, and there was no marketing at all to my knowledge!

However, there was still a popular cutting room run by the great Malcolm Davies – mastering engineer for most of the Beatles releases and mentor to Geoff Emerick and Glyn Johns, no less. That was a man who really knew his stuff.

A relaunched Pye (latterly known as PRT) would have made a great vintage style studio – and I proposed that to the owners in the mid 80s. But lucrative profits from the late 80s property boom sealed the fate of the central London studio, and the building was sold. Now it’s a casino.

Now there’s an idea for struggling studio owners!

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Comments

  1. recordpr says:

    Great stuff Fran! Good to see your Malcolm Davies mention. He later moved to the PWL mastering studio (Transformation) but the last time I saw him was on the TV on the Chris Evans C4 program a good few years back.

    Also, my memory may be going but wasn’t Pye to become Nova Studios for a while before it’s closure? They had a Soundcraft in there then I think.

    :-)

    Mike

  2. Fran Ashcroft says:

    To my understanding, Pye had a flood that prompted the closure, and the entire company was sold shortly thereafter, along with Maison Rouge, which they’d acquired along the way. I thought Nova was close by, but a different studio entirely… Joe Brown owned it? Seem to remember doing a session there and the room was so dead the band couldn’t play in sync with each other without headphones!

  3. Ian Shepherd says:

    Great post !

    There’s some amazing stuff in the Pye back catalogue – I’ve seem to have re-mastered a good deal of it over the years, for some reason. Including a whole slew of those Top Of The Pops discs, Fran – whatever the budget restrictions were, they came out sounding *great* !

    The first album I recorded for Kenny Ball (over 15 years ago now…!) he said I’d got him the best sound since he’d worked at Pye – it’s still one of my favourite ever compliments :-D

    Ian

  4. recordpr says:

    Fran, I think you may be right. :)

  5. Fran Ashcroft says:

    Ian – what fun remastering TOTP albums! I know Elton John was on some of those early ones. One take wonders!

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