Jump to content

Abbey Road Studios: Difference between revisions

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Luckas-bot (talk | changes)
m robot Adding: fi:Abbey Road Studios
No edit summary
 
(13 intermediate revisions by 12 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:Abbey_Road_Studios_London.jpg|thumb|320px|The outside of '''EMI''''s '''Abbey Road Studios''', London, England]]
[[File:Abbey Road Studios London.jpg|thumb|320px|The outside of '''EMI''''s '''Abbey Road Studios''', London, England]]
'''Abbey Road Studios''', usually called just "Abbey Road", are the [[recording studio|recording studio]]s located inside [[EMI]]'s headquarters in [[St. John's Wood]], [[London]], [[England]].
'''Abbey Road Studios''', usually called just "Abbey Road", are the [[recording studio]]s in [[EMI]]'s headquarters in St. John's Wood, [[London]], [[England]].


Abbey Road had three different studios for most of its history. Other space was turned into a fourth studio later. Studio One is large, and used to be a {{broken wikt link|ballroom|ballroom}}. [[Symphony|Symphony orchestra]]s and very large bands and groups are recorded there. Studio Two is smaller, and works best for small [[combination|combo]]s or groups of musicians. Studio Three is much smaller, and is meant for [[soloist|soloist]]s and {{broken wikt link|duo|duos}}. Studio Four is mostly for {{broken wikt link|post-production|post-production}}, where changes are made to earlier recordings.
Abbey Road had three different studios for most of its history. Other space was turned into a fourth studio later. Studio One is large, and used to be a [[wikt:ballroom|ballroom]]. [[Symphony|Symphony orchestra]]s and very large bands and groups are recorded there. Studio Two is smaller, and works best for small [[combination|combo]]s or groups of musicians. Studio Three is much smaller, and is meant for [[soloist]]s and [[wikt:duo|duos]]. Studio Four is mostly for [[wikt:post-production|post-production]], where changes are made to earlier recordings.


==References==
The studios are famous for the many great and popular songs and [[album]]s recorded there. [[The Beatles]] are the most famous [[:recording artist|recording artist]]s to work at Abbey Road. They made the studios well-known when they talked to the [[media]], about the music they made there. The Beatles even titled their last album ''[[Abbey Road]]'', after the studio location. They mostly recorded in Studio Two, but used One and Three also.
{{The Beatles}}
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Music]]
[[Category:Recording studios]]


{{Multistub|UK|music}}
[[ca:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[cs:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[da:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[de:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[en:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[es:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[fa:ابی رود استودیوز]]
[[fr:Studios Abbey Road]]
[[ko:애비 로드 스튜디오]]
[[id:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[it:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[he:אולפני אבי רוד]]
[[lv:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[hu:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[nl:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[ja:アビー・ロード・スタジオ]]
[[no:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[nn:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[pl:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[pt:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[ru:Эбби Роуд (студия)]]
[[sk:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[fi:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[sv:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[tr:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[uk:Abbey Road Studios]]
[[zh:艾比路錄音室]]

Latest revision as of 03:46, 30 April 2024

The outside of EMI's Abbey Road Studios, London, England

Abbey Road Studios, usually called just "Abbey Road", are the recording studios in EMI's headquarters in St. John's Wood, London, England.

Abbey Road had three different studios for most of its history. Other space was turned into a fourth studio later. Studio One is large, and used to be a ballroom. Symphony orchestras and very large bands and groups are recorded there. Studio Two is smaller, and works best for small combos or groups of musicians. Studio Three is much smaller, and is meant for soloists and duos. Studio Four is mostly for post-production, where changes are made to earlier recordings.

References

[change | change source]