Cherokee Studios
Cherokee Studios is a recording studio facility in Hollywood, Los Angeles, founded in 1972 by members of 1960s pop band the Robbs. Cherokee has been the location of many notable recordings by such artists as Pat Benatar, David Bowie, the Cars, Devo, Dokken, Melissa Etheridge, Foreigner, Guns N' Roses, Hall and Oates, Michael Jackson, Journey, John Mellencamp, Mötley Crüe, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Queens of the Stone Age, Bonnie Raitt, the Replacements, Steely Dan, Rod Stewart, Toto, Van Halen, X, and "Weird Al" Yankovic.
At the peak of its success, Cherokee operated eight studios in two locations. In his autobiography, Beatles producer George Martin dubbed Cherokee Studios the best studio in America.
History
Background
The studio was founded by members of the Robbs, an American pop band from Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, centered on three brothers who all adopted pseudonyms: Robert Donaldson, George Donaldson, David Donaldson, and family friend Craig Krampf. Dick Clark discovered the band in 1962 when they were the opening act at the "Summer Caravan of Stars" in Wisconsin and invited them to continue on with the "Caravan" tour as essentially the house band. At the 1964 "Young World's Fair" in Chicago, the band won Clark's "Battle of the Bands". The band was signed to Mercury Records in 1966, and moved to California to appear as regular performers on Clark's show Where the Action Is.By 1969 the band, now signed to ABC/Dunhill, had changed their sound to a more country rock orientation and changed its name to Cherokee. ABC/Dunhill's studios were booked solid at the time, and the studio's chief technical engineer, Roger Nichols, was spending a lot of time at the band's ranch in rural Chatsworth. Nichols suggested the band buy some recording gear and set it up in the barn. Eventually, the band evolved from recording their own music to producing and engineering for other artists, including longtime friend Del Shannon and Steely Dan, who recorded overdubs for and mixed their 1974 album Pretzel Logic at "Cherokee's Ranch". The studio was even the location of the first demo recording by the Van Halen lineup of David Lee Roth, Eddie Van Halen, Alex Van Halen, and Michael Anthony. After being threatened to be evicted for running an "illegal home studio", the studio's owners began looking for a bigger facility.
Fairfax Avenue
In January 1975, Cherokee purchased the former location of MGM Studios at 751 N. Fairfax Avenue in Hollywood, including its large 35 x 58 foot live room and five isolation booths. The brothers approached Trident Studios to build a custom 80-input A-Range mixing console - one of the first in the United States. Focused on making the recording studio a creative space designed for musicians and engineers, Cherokee's new studio featured five live rooms, 24-track mixing consoles, 24-hour session times, and a lounge bar, and quickly became one of the city's busiest studios, attracting notable artists such as David Bowie, Frank Sinatra, and Rod Stewart.Cherokee's Fairfax Avenue location closed on August 31, 2007, with the last album recorded at that location being the Robert Bradley's Blackwater Surprise album Out of the Wilderness. The studio closed to make way for a new building. Under the direction of a leading green developer, the site was to become the Lofts @ Cherokee Studios – a Green LEED Platinum Live/Work complex offering professional recording studios in select units designed by Cherokee owner Bruce Robb, but those plans did not come to fruition. The original developers went into foreclosure in 2008. New owners purchased the property and have had no contact or relationship with Bruce Robb and or Cherokee Studios.
Melrose Avenue
In late August 2011, Cherokee Studio's website announced "New Studio Coming to Hollywood", and in 2020 Cherokee Studios opened a recording studio on Melrose Avenue across the street from Paramount Film Studios. Built in collaboration with George Augsberger and Bruce Robb, the new studio features Cherokee Studio's original Trident A-Range 48-channel, 24-bus, 24 monitor channel mixing console, as well as a large tracking space that can hold up to 40 string players comfortably. Of the new studio and location, it has been said the new location is a continuation of the Cherokee tradition while going above and beyond.Prominent clients
;Under MGM RecordsActs that recorded at M.G.M. Recording Studios include: Count Basie, Ella Fitzgerald,, Sondheimguide.com Judy Garland, Oscar Peterson, Lou Rawls, the Sylvers, Elvis Presley and the Nelson Riddle Orchestra.