London Bridge Studio
Genre | Rock, Grunge, Post-grunge |
---|---|
Founder | Rick Parashar, Raj Parashar |
Number of locations | Seattle, Washington |
Services | Recording studio |
Owner | Geoff Ott, Jonathan Plum, Eric Lilavois |
Website | London Bridge Studio Official Site |
London Bridge Studio is a Seattle recording studio that has hosted and recorded many influential artists, producers and engineers since 1985. Founded by brothers Rick Parashar and Raj Parashar as a private studio space, the studio surged to fame with the release of a number of hit grunge albums in the late 1980s, including Soundgarden's Louder Than Love (1989) and Alice in Chains' Facelift (1990).
History
Founded by brothers Rick Parashar and Raj Parashar as a private studio space in 1985. The space was designed by notable studio designer Geoff Turner (Little Mountain Studios, Pinewood Studios) and features 5,000 square feet (460 m2) of tall ceilings, hardwood floors, brick walls and live acoustics.[1] Layout of the studio includes live rooms, a control room, overdub suites, and a lounge with full kitchen.
Seattle's surge to musical prominence in the late 80's and 90's stemmed in large part from albums recorded at London Bridge Studio. Influential bands of that era such as Eternal Daze, Mother Love Bone, Temple of the Dog and Alice in Chains all recorded classic Seattle records here. Soundgarden's Louder Than Love (1989), Alice In Chains's Dirt (1992) and Pearl Jam's Ten (1991), all brought the studio national attention. Throughout the next ten years bands such as Blind Melon, Nickelback, Candlebox, Unwritten Law, Default, and 3 Doors Down all recorded at London Bridge.
In September 2005 Geoff Ott and Jonathan Plum purchased London Bridge from Rick and Raj Parashar[2]and have since opened the studio up to the local and national music community for recording.[3] In 2013, Producer Eric Lilavois became the third partner and co-owner of London Bridge. where they have been recording with Macklemore, Megs McLean and so much more
In addition to traditional bands and recording artists, London Bridge Studio has also branched out into video game and television audio.[4]
Recorded albums and artists
- Alice N' Chains - Demo #1 (1987)
- Eternal Daze – Escapade (1987)
- Mother Love Bone - Shine EP (1989)
- Soundgarden – Louder Than Love (1989)
- Mother Love Bone – Apple (1990)
- Alice in Chains – Facelift (1990)
- Temple of the Dog – Temple of the Dog (1991)
- Pearl Jam – Ten (1991)
- Alice in Chains – Sap (1992)
- Singles: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (1992)
- Blind Melon – Blind Melon (1992)
- Alice in Chains – Dirt (1992)
- Candlebox – Candlebox (1993)
- Hammerbox – Numb (1993)
- Alice in Chains – Jar of Flies (1994)
- Zakk Wylde – Pride & Glory (1994)
- Sven Gali (1994)
- Redbelly (1994)
- Litfiba – Spirito (1994)
- Into Another (1995)
- Candlebox – Lucy (1995)
- Chimestone
- Working Class Hero: A Tribute to John Lennon (1995)
- Super 8 – Super 8 (1996)
- Mollies Revenge - Every Dirty Word (1997)
- Unwritten Law – Unwritten Law (1998)
- Queensrÿche – Q2K (1999)
- U.P.O. – No Pleasantries (2000)
- Nickelback – Silver Side Up (2001)
- Stereomud – Perfect Self (2001)
- Anyone – Anyone (2001)
- Epidemic – Epidemic (2002)
- 3 Doors Down – Away from the Sun (2002)
- Melissa Etheridge (2004)
- Longview (2005)
- Alex Lloyd (2005)
- Wolves in the Throne Room - Two Hunters (2007)
- 3 Inches of Blood (2007)
- Blake Lewis (2007)
- Ruth (2007)
- MxPx (2007)
- OneRepublic (2007)
- Anberlin (2007)
- Local H (2007)
- 10 Years (2008)
- Ivoryline (2008)
- The Myriad (2008)
- Brandi Carlile (2008)
- The Moog – Razzmatazz Orfeum (2009)
- Queensrÿche - American Soldier (album) (2009)
- A Hope Not Forgotten (2010)
- Queensrÿche - Dedicated to Chaos (2011)
- The Jane Austen Argument - "Somewhere Under The Rainbow" (2012)
- Candlebox – Love Stories & Other Musings (2012)
- Queensrÿche - Queensrÿche (album) (2013)
- Megs McLean- It's My Truck (single)(2015)
References
External links
- London Bridge Studio Official Site
- Seattle Times Article Recording Studio Revived
- Seattle Times Article Hark, what's that trumpet flare? It's football time!