History of CBS Records 30th Street Studio NYC (many pictures)

Discussion in 'Music Corner' started by DMortensen, Oct 21, 2014.

  1. Perisphere

    Perisphere Forum Resident

    Wow....didn't know they had or used a Western Electric 640AA calibration mike for recording!
     
  2. lukpac

    lukpac Senior Member

    Location:
    Milwaukee, WI
    It doesn't appear that it was designed specifically for calibration:

    http://www.coutant.org/we640aa/index.html

    "...the 640AA Microphone provides a means for ultra-faithful program pick-up especially in auditoriums or in large studios which have proper acoustical characteristics for use of the remote single microphone pick-up technique."

    Perhaps they used that before Neumanns were available or common.
     
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  3. Geoff

    Geoff Senior Member

    Location:
    Roundnabout
    Just wanted to say thanks for this amazing thread. 30th St closed around the time I was born, so I've come to learn about these amazing recordings later, and even at this remove, the place just seems to have had an aura that fascinates. Really looking forward to future posts here. Thank you!
     
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  4. DMortensen

    DMortensen Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Seattle, WA USA
    Hello again,

    Here are pictures that were taken around the ones that Matt thought might have been "Kiss Me Kate" from 1949. It's possible that this is more than one session and that they are not related to KMK. The way I took the pictures and the way the contact sheets were arranged may not have resulted in contiguous pictures from the same session.

    Except for Goddard in several, I don't know who any of the people are, so your ID's and comments are appreciated.

    Again, all pictures here and in the next couple posts are from MSS 52, The Frederick and Rose Plaut Papers in the Irving S. Gilmore Music Library of Yale University.

    [​IMG]

    This seems to be the only other outdoor one from that session:

    [​IMG]

    This is Goddard in the middle:

    [​IMG]

    Here are some people in the control room to the side of the producer's area:

    [​IMG]

    This one is blurry, so I'm reducing the size. This lady looks like she is somebody and is fun to be around:

    [​IMG]

    More in the next post.
     
  5. DMortensen

    DMortensen Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Seattle, WA USA
    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    Since these pictures are all about her, you'd think I'd know who she is. Do you?
     
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  6. DMortensen

    DMortensen Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Seattle, WA USA
    And last for this segment:

    [​IMG]

    Here's someone completely different:

    [​IMG]

    This lady and probably Goddard again:

    [​IMG]

    And finally, the fellow on the right was in the first pic of this segment. He looks a little like Bonnie Raitt's father John, but I don't think it is (I could be wrong). The man on the left looks like Goddard to me:

    [​IMG]

    And that's all the pictures that might be from "Kiss Me Kate".

    Next we'll get back to CRI and WLIB occupying the same space at the same time, and when did those steeples disappear?
     
  7. DMortensen

    DMortensen Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Seattle, WA USA
    Era 2. 1945-ish to 1952-ish: Pre-CBS and early CBS studio days pt. 6

    Back to the transition from WLIB to CBS/CRI:

    This is the Certificate of Occupancy issued on August 8, 1949, by the New York City Department of Buildings (which is what it's called now, and whose website has this and a few other records from that time). I don't know why there is a miniature image first.

    [​IMG]



    We'll look at the top half first and I'll try to interpret it:



    [​IMG]

    First, notice that there is no owner named in it. Since we think CBS/CRI bought the building in 1949, I assume they applied for it but I don't know that for sure. As a layperson, though, I believe that Certificates of Occupancy are issued following construction or remodeling and that whoever did the remodeling would apply for them, so let's see if we can figure out who did the remodeling as we look this over.

    Second, notice that it says "THIS CERTIFIES that the altered (emphasis added) building....", which means that it is being issued in response to the alterations. Yes?

    Next, notice that it gives the Alteration Permit Number 1624-1946, which was the 1624th permit issued in 1946 in NYC. If it was issued in 1946, wouldn't it have had to have been issued to WLIB, who had announced in January 1947 that they would move into their new studios in February 1947 (with the actual date being some months later but still in 1947)? Hmmmm.

    Then it says that the building is 3 stories for an overall height of 47 feet. So there is no way that the interior of the studio was 100 feet tall. Realistically, though, the ceiling was way up there and it might as well have been 100 feet, although in reality it had to be less than 47 feet (interior plus roof thickness = 47 feet overall).

    Whenever it was started, it was completed on August 17, 1949. Does this mean that the paperwork was completed for the remodel that started in 1946 and was occupied without this CoO by WLIB from mid-1947? Or was there another remodel that necessitated this new CoO?

    It does then say "(something unintelligible) Height Zone at issuance of permit 2779-1947, 2746-1946", which seems to indicate there were two sub-permits (maybe) that were also part of the alterations. Someone more adept than me needs to interpret this.

    Let's now look at the lower half of the CoO:

    [​IMG]

    This is a breakdown of the building and its uses and occupancy capacities by floor.

    The cellar is on the ground and contains the furnace/boiler room and storage (and later a reverb chamber).

    The first story, which I would think is at street level, has broadcasting studios (note the plural) and has an occupant capacity of 35 people. Male and female are differentiated for bathroom purposes, I believe. Isn't this where the huge recording studio will be located later? How does this translate?

    The second story is a photographic studio (note the singular) to be used with safety film only, and has the largest capacity in the building at 150 people, evenly divided male and female.

    The third story is offices, with an occupant capacity of 35 people.

    No matter how many times I look at this, I can't reconcile it with the building we later know has the big room on the ground floor, and a sign with an occupancy limit (as Matt showed us) of 350 people.

    Any thoughts?

    Moving on, the NYC DOB has lists of all permits and actions taken regarding properties under its jurisdiction, and these next two (and final for today) pictures are from their website:

    [​IMG]

    In this first one, at the top we see the alteration permit number (1624-[19]46) which was referenced first in the C0O, but then there is another alteration permit number that is unfamiliar (617-[19]47). This is confusing.

    As an aside, the next alteration permit number (107-58P) might give us a clue as to the timing of the transition from old control room to new, but we'll look at that later.

    Another aside: in 1982 there was a permit for a new building, but the demolition permit for the old one wasn't issued until 1983. And no, I don't know why there is no month and date on many of these permits.

    [​IMG]

    The second page shows other kinds of permits issued over the years, but in order to see them or any on the first page you have to go to the DOB Manhattan office archives in person. (Note that I've cut off this page because the rest of it relates to the current building on site, which is out of our interest.)

    It might also be interesting to see the Special Reports and the Unsafe Building paperwork, but that won't be today.

    Recapping what we think we know:

    1944: NY Post buys WLIB

    1946: Alteration permit ALT1624-1946 issued
    Permit (for what?) PER 2746-46ALT issued


    1947: Permits issued:
    Alteration Permit ALT 617-47;
    Building Notice BN 3218-47SHED
    BN 390-47SHED
    Electric Sign App ESA 594-20
    Oil Burner App FO 617-47
    Unsafe Building UB 549-47
    WLIB moves in, February or July

    1948: Public Assembly permit PA 162-48
    Plumbing Repair Slip PRS 186-48
    Special Report SR 734-48

    1949: Certificate of Occupancy Issued
    CBS/CRI moves in?
    Pictures of CRI session with 1949 car in it, possible Kiss Me Kate 1949 session, simultaneous CRI and WLIB signs on building.

    No other permits or Special Reports (whatever that is) until 1955.

    It seems clear that the major building remodel work was completed by sometime in 1947, and that it was probably done by WLIB/New York Post.

    Unless CBS was involved much earlier than we think.

    That's it for today.
     
  8. chervokas

    chervokas Senior Member

    Just a guess, but if it's circa '49 and that's John Raitt, maybe it's a Pajama Game cast recording and the woman is Janis Page?
     
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  9. chervokas

    chervokas Senior Member

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  10. lukpac

    lukpac Senior Member

    Location:
    Milwaukee, WI
    Indeed.

    Also, that site likely will hold the key to a lot of details. All one has to do is enter a year in the search and sessions from that year come up. The good news is there are a lot of photos. The bad news is it's a lot to go through :)

    Here we go. A shot from the Mr. President session in 1962:

    [​IMG]
    Goddard Lieberson, Anita Gillette and Irving Berlin
    Photo Credit: Don Hunstein

    Note that's the new/relocated/expanded control room. Previously we were thinking maybe 1964. But it definitely dates back to 1962.

    Here's one from late 1960, On The Town:

    [​IMG]
    Adolph Green, Goddard Lieberson and Leonard Bernstein (Photo: Don Hunstein)

    Old control room.

    Some place definitely *not* 30th St for Let It Ride in 1961:

    [​IMG]
    Paula Stewart and record producer George Avakian
    Photo Credit: John Ross

    Old control room in mid to late 1961 for Kean:

    [​IMG]
    Music director Pembroke Davenport and Alfred Drake
    Photo Credit: Don Hunstein

    Anything Goes from early to mid-1962 appears to have been recorded at Studio A:

    [​IMG]
    Eileen Rodgers, Hal Linden and Mickey Deems (Photo: Don Hunstein)

    I have to wonder if 30th St was unavailable due to the control room reconstruction then. I noticed at least one other session from 1962 that appeared to be at Studio A.

    I'll see if I can find anything more from 1962. It would appear the new control room was built that year.
     
  11. W.B.

    W.B. The Collector's Collector

    Location:
    New York, NY, USA
    30th Street was also used for some other sessions on other labels. Wonder, for example, if from these collections any photos exist of sessions for Decca artist Brenda Lee's late 1968 single "Johnny One Time" and for the tracks that comprised the subsequent album of the same name (produced by Mike Berniker, arranged and conducted by Marty Manning - names hardly associated with Nashville in whose Quonset Hut - by '68 a sister to 30th Street - she recorded her biggest hits from early in the decade). And that's not counting Paul & Linda McCartney's Ram.

    However, may I say these photos and documents are a welcome revelation, in any case.
     
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  12. crispi

    crispi Vinyl Archaeologist

    Location:
    Berlin
    Those photos look so nice, great image quality! Boy, are we lucky that there weren't any smartphone cameras available yet in the '60s and that those who wished to take photographs actually needed to learn something about the craft :D
     
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  13. lukpac

    lukpac Senior Member

    Location:
    Milwaukee, WI
    It's certainly wonderful Don Hunstein and Fred Plaut were around taking pictures, but the better smartphones today have great cameras, and more photos is never a problem...
     
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  14. crispi

    crispi Vinyl Archaeologist

    Location:
    Berlin
    I certainly agree that the smartphone cameras today are quite good. (Wouldn't it have been great to have some more impromptu videos of those sessions?) The problem is with those who use them and who think that the camera will do all the work for them (it won't). Anytime I see old photographs I marvel at the quality.
     
  15. ronm

    ronm audiofreak

    Location:
    southern colo.
    Looks like a wonderful place to be.I just love the whole 50s -60s era.I just checked our library has the book and I put it on hold.
     
  16. MLutthans

    MLutthans That's my spaghetti, Chewbacca! Staff

    Stating the obvious???
    Looks like the previous bunch of photos and the Janis Paige photos are unrelated, no?
    The Paige photos are definitely from THE PAJAMA GAME, 1954 recording. The short-haired woman in those photos is Carol Haney.
    http://www.masterworksbroadway.com/photo-galleries/photos/13187

    I think we've accidentally jumped to "Era III."
     
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  17. lukpac

    lukpac Senior Member

    Location:
    Milwaukee, WI
    The ones I posted had nothing to do with the 1954 photos. Just was looking on the Masterworks site trying to determine a date for the new control room.
     
  18. MLutthans

    MLutthans That's my spaghetti, Chewbacca! Staff

    Right. My comment was about the 1949 (?) photos not being related to the other photos that Dan posted, which are from 1954.
     
  19. MLutthans

    MLutthans That's my spaghetti, Chewbacca! Staff

    From Dan's outdoor photo:
    Screen shot 2014-11-10 at 8.38.17 AM.png

    Ella Logan, Finian's Rainbow, 1947:
    Screen shot 2014-11-10 at 8.38.02 AM.png
     
  20. MLutthans

    MLutthans That's my spaghetti, Chewbacca! Staff

    I suspect that the photos that I earlier thought were from KISS ME KATE in 1949 are actually from FINIAN'S RAINBOW, 1947. That shot of Ella Logan above? I think these are all Ella Logan, not Ms. Morison as previously suggested:
    [​IMG] [​IMG] [​IMG] Screen shot 2014-11-10 at 8.53.11 AM.png

    Also, sorry to era-jump, but look at the woman on the right:
    Screen shot 2014-11-10 at 8.48.23 AM.png
    (and note that her dress likely has sleeves; it is Janis Paige's dress (on the left) that is clearly sleeveless).
    Now, look at the woman at the right, here:
    Screen shot 2014-11-10 at 8.48.51 AM.png .
    Same woman? If so, the photo below is from the 1954 sessions, as well:
    [​IMG]
     
  21. lukpac

    lukpac Senior Member

    Location:
    Milwaukee, WI
    Is it possible that car seen is an earlier model then? Dan thought it was a 1949 model.
     
  22. MLutthans

    MLutthans That's my spaghetti, Chewbacca! Staff

    Ah, good point. Looks like the 1947/48 models did not have those three distinctive circles on the fender area, but I'll leave that to somebody else to confirm, as I'm not the resident car nut.
     
  23. ABull

    ABull Forum Resident

    Thanks so much for this fascinating thread :)
     
  24. BZync

    BZync Senior Member

    Location:
    Los Angeles
    Thank you DMortensen for a very thoughtful & fascinating thread. Great stuff.

    I wanted to comment on the outdoor photos. On two occasions you mentioned that hanging out on the sidewalk between sessions was a new thing. I wanted to discuss that as I am not sure that this is the case.

    "It appears that they are taking a break on the sidewalk and enjoying a nice sunny day, and you have to assume that this activity was normal, although likely relatively new when this picture was taken. Why else would Fred take a picture of it?"

    I had the great fortune to briefly work in a recording studio on 39th Street in NY - a ten minute walk from 30th & Third. I would think that it would be fairly typical on a day with decent weather to take breaks out of doors. Certainly many working people do that in NY to this day. When you are working in a recording studio you are essentially trapped indoors, typically without any windows. So, I guess I don't understand why this would be considered a new or novel activity.

    "Adding to the suspicion that this gathering is a new activity, there is what looks like a young mom and son in the second floor window of 204 looking out at the throng on the sidewalk."

    I don't think this is evidence of a novel situation. Granted, I wasn't born yet when these photos were shot, but in working/middle class neighborhoods is is very common for residents to hang out of windows and on stoops to people watch. Certainly when I was a child many of the moms would hang out in the windows. Also, I can't be sure, but I think Murray Hill was not a wealthy neighborhood back when these photos were taken, so I don't think the mom in the window would have typically recognized Broadway actors & actresses. Movie & television stars - yes. Broadway has always been a little pricey to the working class in NY (I speak as a kid who grew up in the Bronx), so the stars of theater weren't on the radar.

    Forgive me if I have misinterpreted your writing. Just my two cents for whatever it is worth.
     
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  25. lukpac

    lukpac Senior Member

    Location:
    Milwaukee, WI
    I'm not Dan, but I thought he meant it was a new activity for the studio, not that gathering outside was a "new thing" in a general sense.
     

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