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Electrical Audio

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Studio A in 2011, with adobe brick walls and vintage keyboards

Electrical Audio is a recording facility founded in Chicago, Illinois by musician and recording engineer Steve Albini in 1997.[1] Hundreds of independent music projects have been recorded there. Unlike most producers, Albini refused to take any royalties from musicians who record at the studio.[2]

Founded during an era of increasing popularity for digital recording, Electrical Audio was unusual for using only analog recording technology, including mixing consoles, tape recorders and many outboard sound effects.[citation needed] The rooms are also designed to offer natural reverberation rather than adding the quality in post-production.[citation needed]

In a 2007 post on the studio's message board,[3] the studio's technician Greg Norman revealed that the studio had acquired a Pro Tools rig for computer-aided recording and editing, saying it had become "as important to have as a piano". Norman also went on to write that Albini, who disliked digital recording, "won't be recording with [Pro Tools]. So don't ask him about it."[4]

Studio layout

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The facility was built by gutting an existing building and customizing the space to Albini's specifications, including walls made of adobe bricks shipped from New Mexico.[5] Electrical Audio comprises two separate studios, A and B.

Studio A

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Studio A is the larger of the two studios and has three separate performance rooms. Center Field is the largest at 1,200 square feet (110 m2), Alcatraz is a 'dry environment' room and Kentucky is a brighter live room with improved low frequency linearity. The control room runs a 48 channel Neotek Elite console and can accommodate up to 132 inputs.[1]

Studio B

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Studio B is the smaller of the two studios with an 800 square feet (74 m2) live room and a 300 square feet (28 m2) isolation room. The control room runs a 36 input Neotek Series II console.[1]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Electrical Audio is a recording studio complex in Chicago, Illinois, founded in 1997 by recording engineer and musician Steve Albini.[1][2] The facility, which Albini owned and operated until his death on May 7, 2024, consists of two studios specializing in analog tape recording and live tracking to achieve raw, unprocessed sounds popular among independent and alternative artists.[3][4][2] It has hosted hundreds of projects across genres such as rock, punk, metal, experimental, jazz, and classical, including works by artists like Neurosis, Mogwai, The Breeders, Shellac, Tortoise, and Godspeed You! Black Emperor.[5] Albini's approach of declining royalties and offering affordable, high-fidelity sessions established the studio as a key venue for indie musicians.[2][1] As of November 2025, Electrical Audio continues to operate under staff management, maintaining its place in Chicago's music scene with ongoing bookings and events.[1][6]

History

Founding and early years

Steve Albini, a influential figure in the post-hardcore and noise rock scenes, founded the band Big Black in 1981 while attending Northwestern University and fronted it until its disbandment in 1987, during which he began developing his skills as a recording engineer by capturing the band's raw, abrasive sound on rudimentary setups.[7] Following Big Black's end, Albini formed Rapeman in 1987, another short-lived but provocative project that lasted until 1989, further honing his engineering expertise through self-recorded sessions that emphasized DIY independence and sonic intensity.[7] Throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, he freelanced as an engineer for various Chicago-based and international bands, often working in temporary or subpar commercial spaces that highlighted the need for a dedicated, artist-controlled environment.[8] In 1986, Albini purchased a bungalow on North Francisco Avenue in Chicago's Avondale neighborhood and transformed it into an eight-track home studio, initially using the attic as a control room and the basement for live tracking, which allowed him to record Big Black's final album Songs About Fucking there.[8] This makeshift facility hosted early sessions for emerging independent acts, including Don Caballero, Zeni Geva, Craw, and Dazzling Killmen, but suffered from significant limitations such as a low, fabric-deadened ceiling in the basement live room, exposed insulation in the isolation space, and cramped retrofitted acoustics that compromised sound quality and workflow.[9] As his reputation grew through these intimate, low-budget productions, the home studio's constraints became increasingly apparent, prompting Albini to seek a larger, purpose-built space to better accommodate the creative needs of non-commercial musicians.[8] Motivated by a commitment to providing an egalitarian recording hub free from major label influences and commercial pressures, Albini decided in 1995 to establish a professional facility, purchasing the vacant building at 2621 West Belmont Avenue—a former screen printing shop and possibly an earlier dairy barn or Bally pinball manufacturing site—for under $250,000 in a then-underdeveloped industrial area of Chicago.[10][9] The initial setup involved transferring his accumulated gear from the Francisco Avenue studio, including consoles and tape machines, while assembling a crew of tradesmen, aspiring engineers, and friends to begin renovations, though the project faced challenges in adapting the outdated structure to modern recording demands without compromising Albini's analog-focused philosophy.[9][8]

Construction and opening

In 1995, Steve Albini purchased the property at 2621 W. Belmont Avenue in Chicago's Avondale neighborhood, a former screen printing shop that may have previously served as a Bally pinball manufacturing site or dairy barn, to establish a dedicated professional recording facility.[9] This acquisition marked a shift from his prior home studio operations at a Francisco Avenue residence, where he had been engineering sessions with limited space.[9] Initial renovations began immediately, involving a construction team that gutted the industrial building, removed interior floors and walls, and raised the ceiling height in what would become Studio B's live room to accommodate larger ensemble recordings.[8] These efforts transformed the utilitarian space into a viable audio environment, with foundations dug and adobe bricks laid for the future expansion of Studio A.[9] Studio B was completed in 1997, featuring the installation of a Neotek Elite console transferred and upgraded from Albini's home setup.[9] The space was outfitted with additional gear moved from the Francisco house, including tape machines and microphones, to enable immediate professional use.[9] The first recording session took place on April 4, 1997, with the band Mt. Shasta, capturing multitrack recordings that tested the studio's nascent capabilities.[9] This milestone session highlighted the practical transition from home-based production to a more robust facility, though early operations encountered minor technical issues such as electromagnetic interference.[9] Studio A opened in 1998 as a larger, acoustically refined room designed for complex, multi-instrumental sessions, offering double the tracking capacity of Studio B along with an additional isolation booth.[9] Equipped with a new Neotek Elite console and custom tape machines, it was optimized for natural sound capture through careful room design and material choices that minimized unwanted reflections.[9] Delays in construction and equipment procurement pushed back its debut, but the studio quickly became the flagship space for diverse recording projects.[8] The initial staff, drawn from the construction crew, handled setup and testing to ensure operational readiness.[9]

Operations and legacy

Following its opening in the late 1990s, Electrical Audio maintained a strong emphasis on analog recording as its core philosophy, but introduced digital tools such as Pro Tools in the early 2000s to support editing and post-production tasks while preserving analog primacy for tracking and mixing.[9] These systems, initially rented and later permanently installed through industry partnerships, allowed for hybrid workflows that accommodated modern demands without compromising the studio's vintage sound ethos.[11] The studio's operations continued robustly under founder Steve Albini until his sudden death from a heart attack on May 7, 2024.[12] In the wake of his passing, the facility has been sustained by its dedicated staff, including longtime engineer Greg Norman, who has committed to upholding Albini's original vision of authentic, artist-centered recording.[13] With bookings extending through the end of 2024, the team is exploring supplementary activities like live events to ensure financial viability while maintaining uninterrupted creative output.[1] Electrical Audio has solidified its role as a vital hub for independent rock, punk, and experimental music scenes, hosting thousands of recording sessions since its inception and attracting artists seeking unpolished, live-in-the-room captures.[9] By 2024, the studio's schedule reflected sustained demand, often booked months in advance, underscoring its enduring appeal to musicians prioritizing sonic integrity over commercial polish.[13] In November 2024, the City of Chicago honored Albini by naming a portion of West Belmont Avenue "Steve Albini Way" near the studio.[14] In May 2025, Albini's estate held a sale of items from his personal archives to commemorate the first anniversary of his death.[15] The studio continued operations, releasing the EApreQ500—a 500-series version of its classic preamplifier—in April 2025, and opening its doors to the public for the first time during Open House Chicago in October 2025.[16][17] The studio's legacy centers on fostering artist autonomy through accessible practices, including competitively low daily rates—such as $750 for Studio A and $550 for Studio B as of 2025—and a no-royalties policy for engineers, ensuring creators retain full control and financial benefits from their work.[18] Albini's model of flat fees over backend points, exemplified by his $100,000 upfront payment for engineering Nirvana's In Utero rather than seeking royalties, reinforced this commitment and influenced industry norms for independent production.[13] This approach not only democratized high-end recording but also preserved Electrical Audio as a cultural touchstone for raw, collaborative music-making.[9]

Recording philosophy

Steve Albini's approach

Steve Albini's recording philosophy at Electrical Audio centered on capturing the authentic, raw energy of bands performing live in the studio, emphasizing minimal intervention to preserve the performance's natural dynamics and interplay. He advocated for recording entire bands simultaneously in the room whenever possible, avoiding overdubs, auto-tune, or other digital enhancements that could alter the organic sound. This approach stemmed from his belief that the best recordings reflect the band's live rehearsal and stage energy, with the engineer's role limited to facilitating that capture rather than reshaping it.[19][20] Central to Albini's method was an artist-led process, where he positioned himself as a technical facilitator rather than a creative producer, ensuring bands retained full control over their vision without overrides or imposed aesthetics. He charged flat fees for his services—no royalties or points on sales—to avoid financial incentives that might influence artistic decisions, a principle he outlined explicitly in proposals to potential clients. This structure allowed sessions to prioritize the band's intent, with Albini focusing on setup, monitoring, and problem-solving to enable efficient, uncompromised performances.[21][22] In terms of techniques, Albini employed close-miking for drums to achieve a punchy, natural attack that integrated seamlessly with the kit's overall sound, positioning microphones just inches from the sources to minimize bleed while capturing accurate transients. He selectively incorporated room ambience through distant or boundary microphones to add depth without overwhelming the direct sound, balancing isolation and space based on the room's acoustics and the band's style. These methods ensured a lifelike representation of the instruments as heard in the performance space.[19][23] Albini critiqued digital compression and the broader "loudness wars" in the industry, arguing that excessive processing squashed dynamic range and fatigued listeners, opting instead for minimal compression—typically only 4-6 dB on vocals—to maintain the music's natural ebb and flow. His mixes preserved wide dynamics, allowing quiet passages and explosive peaks to coexist as in live settings, countering trends toward uniform loudness. This commitment to sonic integrity influenced Electrical Audio's operations, favoring approaches that highlighted musical expression over commercial polishing.[19][24]

Analog and equipment focus

Electrical Audio's commitment to analog recording stems from a deliberate choice to prioritize 2-inch analog tape for its superior warmth and transient accuracy compared to digital formats, which Steve Albini has described as lacking a "fundamental element of permanence" that encourages over-processing in digital workflows.[8] This preference manifests in the studio's use of refurbished Studer A820 multitrack machines for capturing performances on 2-inch tape, ensuring tonal stability and clarity, particularly at 30 ips speeds where bass response remains firm without the softness sometimes associated with other machines.[8] Complementing these are multiple Ampex ATR-102 stereo masters, with four units available across the studios for 1/2-inch tape mixdowns, valued for their precise reproduction that preserves the dynamic nuances of live tracking.[25][8] The studio rejects software plugins in favor of hardware processors to maintain signal integrity during compression, EQ, and reverb applications, as hardware delivers subtler and more focused results without the digital artifacts that can compromise the original sound.[4][8] This approach aligns with Albini's broader engineering philosophy of minimal intervention to capture authentic performances, emphasizing outboard gear that integrates seamlessly into the analog chain.[8] Since its opening in 1997 as an all-analog facility, Electrical Audio has evolved into a hybrid setup incorporating digital tools like Pro Tools HDX for editing and overdubs, yet it consistently prioritizes tape for initial tracking and final mixdown to retain the organic qualities of analog capture.[26][8] This transition began with Studio B and extended to Studio A, allowing flexibility while upholding tape as the cornerstone.[8] Central to the studio's operations is a curated selection of vintage equipment, meticulously modified for modern reliability—such as the refurbished Studer A820s and Ampex ATR-102s—to avoid downtime without altering their inherent sonic character.[4][8] This philosophy extends to all gear choices, focusing on items that support uncolored sound reproduction and eschewing unnecessary processing to let the music's integrity shine through.[8]

Facilities

Studio A

Studio A at Electrical Audio is the facility's larger and more versatile recording space, comprising three interconnected performance rooms tailored to accommodate a range of acoustic needs for diverse ensembles. The primary room, Center Field, spans approximately 1,200 square feet with oak floors, adobe brick walls, and a long natural decay time, making it ideal for capturing room ambience in full-band acoustic sessions, jazz, bluegrass, choral recordings, strings, or orchestras.[27][28] Adjacent to it, Kentucky serves as a medium-sized room with bright, reflective acoustics suited for lively drums, brass sections, and close-miked ambient instruments.[27] The smallest space, Alcatraz, features dead acoustics optimized for dry, isolated recordings such as crisp drum tracks or individual vocals and instruments.[27] The control room is designed for precise monitoring, incorporating a floating-isolated floor system and a vented perimeter to achieve a flat frequency response with minimal reflected energy and enhanced low-frequency accuracy.[27] It houses multiple speaker sets, including soffit-mounted 3-way Westlake BBSM-12s for main monitoring and B&W Matrix 805s for nearfield listening, with additional options like Yamaha NS-10Ms available upon request.[27] The room also includes sturdy furniture, a rear sofa with separate nearfield monitors, a kitchenette, two bathrooms, and a private entrance for self-sufficiency during sessions.[27] This layout supports complex productions, such as large ensembles or string sections, through extensive tie-lines that enable up to 132 microphone and instrument inputs, 48 additional lines for outboard processing, and connections for multiple multitrack machines across the rooms.[27] Unique to Studio A are two grand pianos—a 1920s Steinway Model H and a Baldwin SF-10—along with a spinet tack piano and a Hammond B3 organ equipped with Leslie cabinets, enhancing its capability for orchestral and vintage keyboard recordings.[27] Microphones are shared with Studio B to maintain a centralized collection of vintage and modern models.[11]

Studio B

Studio B, the original recording space at Electrical Audio, serves as an intimate yet versatile environment designed for efficient band tracking and mixing. Completed in 1997, it was the first operational room in the facility, incorporating equipment from founder Steve Albini's prior home studio to enable immediate productivity. The layout includes a primary live room of approximately 800 square feet featuring a 30-foot-high canted diffusion ceiling that breaks up standing waves and flutter echoes, promoting a natural reverberant decay ideal for capturing drums and vocals with ambient character.[29][9] Adjacent to this is a 300-square-foot dead room with very dry acoustics and a sliding glass wall connecting it to the live room for flexible isolation during tracking. A small isolation booth accommodates a single performer or amplifier, while the 300-square-foot control room is optimized for quick setups, providing direct access to the live room's Yamaha C7 7.5-foot grand piano for seamless integration into sessions.[29] The acoustics of Studio B emphasize live room ambience, making it particularly suited for rock, punk, and smaller ensemble recordings where the natural reverb enhances the organic feel of instruments like guitars and percussion. The live room's design supports full-band tracking with a sense of space and depth, while the dead room allows for precise isolation of sources such as amps or acoustic instruments without unwanted bleed. This configuration prioritizes the capture of unprocessed room sound, aligning with the studio's analog-focused philosophy and enabling bands to achieve cohesive performances in a compact footprint. In contrast, expansions like Studio A provide larger, more varied acoustic options for broader projects.[29] Historically, Studio B hosted Electrical Audio's inaugural session on April 4, 1997, featuring members of the Skin Graft Records band Mt. Shasta, marking the beginning of the facility's legacy in supporting independent and experimental music. This early use underscored its role as the foundational space, handling diverse projects from its opening until the addition of Studio A in 1998 expanded the studio's capacity. Over the years, the room has remained a go-to for cost-effective, high-quality recordings, maintaining its reputation for delivering raw, room-driven tones essential to genres rooted in live energy.[9][29]

Equipment

Consoles and tape machines

Electrical Audio's recording facilities rely on high-quality analog mixing consoles and tape machines to support its commitment to transparent, low-distortion audio capture and mixing. These tools enable engineers to maintain the studio's analog philosophy, prioritizing natural sound reproduction over digital processing.[30] In Studio A, the primary console is a custom-built 1998 Neotek Elite, featuring 56 channels (48 mono and 8 stereo, accommodating up to 96 inputs) with Flying Faders automation for precise mix control and simplified solo-in-place functionality. This console includes low-noise preamps, direct outputs on each channel, and dual line inputs, contributing to its reputation for transparency and flexibility in handling complex sessions. It was custom-modified by Martinsound to integrate features like an oscilloscope for monitoring output and a talkback system with privacy lights.[30][27] Studio B employs a modified Neotek Series II console with 36 channels and 8 buses, refurbished in 2012 by Mike Stoica of Sytek Audio Systems. Upgrades included new capacitors, gold-plated connections and switches for enhanced clarity, and retention of the original clean audio circuits with 4-band parametric EQ on each channel. It supports solo-in-place via muting relays and includes 10 programmable mute groups with thumbwheel controls, ensuring quiet, accurate performance suitable for intimate tracking and mixing.[30][29] Both studios share access to Studer A820 multitrack tape machines, which are 24-track recorders using 2-inch tape primarily for tracking sessions, with two units in Studio A and one in Studio B (plus spares for parts). These machines incorporate Dolby SR and A noise reduction, microprocessor-aided alignment, and bargraph metering for reliable operation. For mixing and mastering, the studios utilize Ampex ATR-102 2-track recorders on 1/2-inch tape, with two in Studio A and one in Studio B; each has been completely rebuilt by ATR Services and fitted with heads from Flux Magnetics for optimal fidelity.[31][27][29] Maintenance practices at Electrical Audio involve calibrating all tape machines before each session to minimize distortion, maintain precise tape speed, and ensure consistent performance across recordings. This routine upkeep, including alignment checks, underscores the studio's dedication to analog equipment reliability.[31]

Microphones and outboard gear

Electrical Audio maintains a shared inventory of over 100 microphones accessible to both Studio A and Studio B, enabling flexible tracking setups across the facilities. This collection emphasizes a mix of dynamic, ribbon, and condenser models suited for vocals, instruments, and ambient capture, with representative examples including the Shure SM57 and SM58 for close-miking drums and guitars, the Royer R-122 ribbon microphones (two units) for warm, detailed reproduction on acoustic sources, the AKG C12 tube condenser for versatile overhead and vocal applications, and vintage options like the Neumann U48 (a figure-8 variant akin to the U47) and Telefunken ELA M 251 for rich, characterful recordings on lead vocals and instruments.[32][33][34][35][36] The outboard gear complements this with focused preamplification, dynamics control, equalization, and reverb options, prioritizing transparency and reliability in analog signal paths. Key preamps include six modified 1960s Ampex 351 tube units—four installed in Studio B and two in Studio A—reconditioned for low noise and high headroom to handle diverse input levels without coloration. Compressors feature classics like the Urei 1176 LN (two units, non-inverting models for stereo linking) and Teletronix LA-2A optical units for smooth leveling on vocals and buses, while EQs encompass the Pultec EQP1A3 (one unit, with API 2520 makeup amplification) for musical low- and high-frequency shaping, alongside API parametric models for precise adjustments. Reverb is provided via Ecoplate plate reverb systems (two units), delivering natural plate decay for spacious mixes.[37][38][39][40] Studio-specific configurations include additional line inputs and effect returns integrated directly with each room's console for seamless routing of outboard processors, enhancing workflow during multitrack sessions. Pedals and guitar amplifiers are also shared across studios, supporting direct tracking of electric instruments with minimal additional rental needs.[41][42] Procurement emphasizes gear that is audibly transparent, serviceable, and modifiable, with Electrical Audio often reworking vintage units like the Ampex preamps to meet modern standards; clients can rent supplementary items if the house stock requires expansion.[33][37]

Notable recordings

Key albums from the 1990s and 2000s

During the late 1990s, Electrical Audio quickly established itself as a hub for indie rock and experimental recordings, with key sessions capturing the era's raw, unpolished aesthetics. Low's Secret Name (1999), also engineered by Albini, showcased post-rock minimalism through sparse arrangements and subtle room ambience, recorded in Studio B to highlight the band's slowcore textures without digital intervention.[43] Silkworm's Blueblood (1998) was mixed at the studio during an extended session, enhancing its gritty indie rock edge with live drum captures that emphasized band interplay.[44] In the 2000s, Electrical Audio solidified its reputation for handling diverse punk, post-metal, and folk-inflected projects, hosting hundreds of sessions that drew experimental acts seeking authentic sonics aligned with Albini's philosophy of minimal processing and live tracking. Silkworm's Lifestyle (2000), recorded in Studio A, delivered punchy, narrative-driven indie rock with clear vocal presence and aggressive guitar tones, reflecting the band's evolution in a space optimized for full-band performances.[45] Neurosis' A Sun That Never Sets (2001), another Albini production, utilized extensive room miking techniques—placing distant microphones to capture drum and guitar decay in the studio's live rooms—to amplify the album's brooding post-metal heaviness and atmospheric immersion.[46] Nina Nastasia's The Blackened Air (2002) benefited from the studio's quiet isolation for its stark folk narratives, with acoustic guitar and vocals tracked to tape for organic warmth.[47] Flogging Molly's Drunken Lullabies (2002) infused Celtic punk energy through high-energy live takes, leveraging Electrical Audio's console for vibrant fiddle and banjo separation amid rowdy rhythms.[48] These recordings, among hundreds during the studio's formative decades from 1997 onward, underscored Electrical Audio's role in fostering punk and experimental scenes by prioritizing analog fidelity and spatial depth over polished production.[9]

Projects from the 2010s and beyond

In the 2010s, Electrical Audio continued to attract experimental and heavy music acts seeking Albini's analog recording expertise, adapting to genres like post-rock and drone metal. Japanese post-rock band Mono recorded their tenth studio album, Nowhere Now Here, at the studio in 2018, with Steve Albini handling production to capture the band's expansive, instrumental soundscapes. Similarly, drone metal duo Sunn O))) tracked their eighth album, Life Metal, at Electrical Audio in July 2018, emphasizing a fully analog process from amplifiers to tape to achieve immense sonic depth and breadth. These sessions highlighted the studio's role in preserving raw, immersive recordings amid the decade's shift toward digital production trends.[49][50][51][52] Entering the 2020s, Electrical Audio hosted projects that further demonstrated its versatility across folk-punk, post-rock, and post-hardcore, even as the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the industry. Laura Jane Grace, formerly of Against Me!, recorded her debut solo album Stay Alive at the studio from July 6 to 9, 2020, in a swift four-day session with Albini, resulting in a sparse, acoustic-driven folk-punk record that embodied themes of resilience. Mono returned for their eleventh album, Pilgrimage of the Soul, recorded and mixed at Electrical Audio in August 2020 during pandemic restrictions, yielding a reflective work blending orchestral elements with the band's signature intensity. In 2023, post-hardcore band Code Orange engineered their album The Above at the studio with Albini, opting for live room tracking to prioritize raw energy and marking a pivotal evolution in their sound. These recordings underscored the studio's appeal for artists pursuing authentic, high-fidelity captures in heavier and more introspective genres.[53][54][55][56][57][58] Following Steve Albini's death in May 2024, Electrical Audio has sustained operations under its staff engineers, maintaining its analog-focused ethos while navigating digital-era challenges. The studio remains active with ongoing sessions, tape transfers, and equipment innovations like the EApreQ500 preamp module, ensuring continuity for bands valuing its vintage gear and acoustics. This post-Albini phase has preserved the facility's reputation for versatile, high-impact recordings in drone metal, post-hardcore, and beyond, adapting to contemporary demands without compromising its foundational principles.[9][1][13][59]

References

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