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Ocean Way Recording
Ocean Way Recording
from Wikipedia

Ocean Way Recording was a series of recording studios established by recording engineer and producer Allen Sides with locations in Los Angeles, Nashville, and Saint Barthélemy. Ocean Way Recording no longer operates recording facilities, but Ocean Way Nashville continues to operate under the ownership of Belmont University.

Key Information

History

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Background

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In 1972, Ocean Way founder Allen Sides opened a studio he had built in a 3 1/2-car garage on Ocean Way in Santa Monica, California, for the purpose of demonstrating tri-amplified loudspeakers of his own design. In 1977, Sides, who had worked as a runner at United Western Recorders in the late 1960s, purchased enough equipment from Bill Putnam's company UREI to completely fill the garage space for just $6,000, attracting the attention of Putnam. Sides and Putnam became friends and business partners, and Putnam offered Sides exclusive rights to sell UREI and United Western Studios' surplus equipment, providing Sides and his studio with a wide variety of studio equipment.[1]

Ocean Way Hollywood

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In 1976, after the lease on Sides' garage studio was abruptly canceled, Putnam provided space at United Western Recorders, leasing United Studio B to Sides. Six years later, Sides lease at United Western expanded to include United Studio A. When Putnam sold his companies to Harman in 1984, Harman sold the Western building and its contents to Sides, who later also acquired the United building.

Sides renamed the United Western Studios complex Ocean Way Recording after the location of his former garage studio.[2] Ocean Way Studios operated the two-building complex from 1985 until 1999, when the former Western Studios building at 6000 Sunset Boulevard was partitioned, sold, and renamed Cello Studios.[3] In 2006, the studio again changed ownership, and has since been in operation as EastWest Studios.

Ocean Way Studios continued operations in the building at 6050 Sunset Boulevard until 2013, when it was sold to Hudson Pacific Properties. Since 2015 it has been known as United Recording Studios.[4]

Ocean Way Nashville

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In 1995, Sides and Gary Belz purchased the 1911 Church of the Advent, a 100-year old Brownstone church building in Nashville's Music Row district, converting it to open Ocean Way Nashville the following year. In 2001, Sides and Belz sold the studios to Belmont University for use by the Mike Curb College of Entertainment & Music Business (CEMB). The university continues to operate the commercial studios, while also utilizing them as hands-on classrooms to teach audio engineering. Belmont University maintains license of the Ocean Way name and Sides remains a consultant.[5][6][1]

Other Ocean Way studios

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The Ocean Way Studios Group also included Record One studios in Sherman Oaks, California, which was acquired by Sides in 1988, and another Ocean Way Studio location in Saint Barthélemy.[7]

Ocean Way Recording no longer operates recording facilities.

Other Ocean Way companies

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Sides is also the founder of Ocean Way Audio, a manufacturer of speaker systems.[1][8] Ocean Way Drums, a partnership between Sides and producer Steven Miller, produces virtual instrument software.[7]

References

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See also

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34°05′52″N 118°19′17″W / 34.09789°N 118.32131°W / 34.09789; -118.32131

Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ocean Way Recording was a premier chain of recording studios founded in 1974 by five-time Grammy-winning audio engineer and producer Allen Sides, initially operating from a garage in , before expanding to major facilities in Hollywood and Nashville. Renowned for its state-of-the-art acoustics, custom-designed equipment, and tube consoles sourced from legendary engineer Bill Putnam, the studios became a hub for elite music production, hosting artists such as , , and , and contributing to Grammy-winning albums like by that collectively sold over one billion copies worldwide. The Hollywood location, acquired and renamed from in 1988, operated until 2015 when it was sold and rebranded as United Recording Studios, which itself ceased operations in 2023; meanwhile, the Nashville studio, established in 1996 in a historic Gothic Revival church, was acquired by in 2001 and continues as an active commercial and educational facility. Sides' vision emphasized innovative studio design, including proprietary monitoring systems that influenced the industry, leading to the evolution of Ocean Way into Ocean Way Audio in the early —a company focused on products like microphones, preamps, and software emulations—along with additional ventures such as Studio and Ocean Way St. Barths. The studios' legacy includes multiple Grammy wins, such as Album of the Year for Unforgettable... with Love by , and a reputation as the " of the West Coast" for its role in shaping modern recording techniques across genres from pop and rock to orchestral scoring. In Nashville, the facility supports both professional sessions for clients like and and hands-on training for students in Belmont's College of Entertainment and Music , preserving Sides' commitment to audio excellence.

Founding and Early History

Allen Sides' Origins

Allen Sides began his professional journey in audio engineering in 1974, establishing a modest studio in a three-and-a-half-car garage on Ocean Way in . This initial setup functioned primarily as a demonstration room for his custom-built loudspeakers, where he showcased high-fidelity audio playback to musicians and industry professionals using live-to-two-track recordings rather than conducting full multitrack sessions. Ocean Way Recording originated from this garage operation that year, marking the evolution into a dedicated entity emphasizing high-fidelity recording techniques rooted in analog warmth and precision. To support expansion, Sides acquired a custom tube console from Bill Putnam's Western Recorders, a key piece of equipment that elevated the garage operation's technical prowess and enabled more sophisticated productions, including the recording of 30 to 50 albums over the ensuing years. Central to these early efforts were Sides' acoustic innovations, such as custom tri-amplified monitoring systems—incorporating components like RCA, , and Altec theater speakers with meticulously tuned crossovers—which delivered an expansive from 20 Hz to 25 kHz, derived directly from his foundational expertise in design and .

Acquisition and Expansion of Facilities

In 1988, recording engineer Allen Sides acquired from Bill Putnam, purchasing both the United Studios at 6050 (housing Studios A and B) and the adjacent Western Recorders at 6000 (containing Studios 1, 2, and 3). Sides subsequently renamed the combined complexes , marking the establishment of the studio as a major facility. During the , Ocean Way Recording expanded its operations beyond core studio services to include and mobile recording capabilities, enhancing its support for client projects. The company launched Classic Equipment Rentals to provide access to vintage and high-end gear, and introduced Ocean Way To Go, a division specializing in on-location studio setups and remote recording solutions. By the mid-, these additions complemented the seven active rooms at the sites, solidifying Ocean Way's role as a versatile production hub. A significant partnership milestone occurred in 1996 when Sides collaborated with producer Gary Belz to found Ocean Way Nashville, converting a historic 1850s Greystone church building on into a dedicated recording facility. This expansion extended Ocean Way's presence eastward, targeting the growing and scene while leveraging Sides' expertise in studio design. In 1999, Ocean Way partitioned its Sunset Boulevard complexes to streamline operations, selling the 6000 Sunset Boulevard property—formerly Western Recorders—to tech entrepreneur Rick Adams, who renamed it Cello Studios. Sides retained control of the 6050 building, allowing Ocean Way to maintain its flagship Hollywood presence amid the era's industry shifts.

Primary Studio Locations

Ocean Way Hollywood

Ocean Way Recording's flagship facility at 6050 in Hollywood, originally established as United Recording Studios in 1958 by Bill Putnam, served as the core of the company's operations after its acquisition by Allen Sides. Sides, who began leasing portions of the studio in the late 1970s, fully purchased the United building in and renamed it Ocean Way Recording, transforming it into a premier recording venue known for its historical significance and advanced technical capabilities. The site retained much of its original equipment from the United era, including vintage microphones such as U47s and AKG C12s, which were migrated and maintained to preserve the studio's signature sound. The facility featured two primary studios, A and B, each with custom acoustics designed by Putnam to optimize recording quality. Studio A encompassed a 220-square-meter live area with a unique 72-input console built by , while Studio B included a 145-square-meter main hall equipped with a custom Neve 8068/8088 console and dedicated isolation booths for drums and vocals to minimize bleed during tracking. Beyond the main studios, the complex offered three versatile tracking rooms for large ensemble sessions and lounge areas, including a rooftop garden lounge, facilitating extended productions for high-profile projects. These elements, combined with outboard gear like 550A EQs and Fairchild 670 compressors, made the Hollywood location a hub for engineering until its operational peak in the early 2010s. In 2013, Sides sold the property to Hudson Pacific Properties, a , marking the end of Ocean Way's direct management of the site. The facility continued recording activities under new ownership but was renamed United Recording Studios in 2015 to honor its origins. By 2023, facing industry challenges, Hudson Pacific laid off nearly all of the studio's 16 staff members and shifted to a rental-only model, ceasing in-house operations while keeping the spaces available for independent bookings.

Ocean Way Nashville

Ocean Way Nashville was established in 1996 by recording engineer Allen Sides and producer Gary Belz, who converted a historic 1911 Gothic Revival greystone church—the former Church of the Advent—located on Nashville's Music Row into a state-of-the-art recording facility. The studio opened featuring Studio A in the preserved sanctuary, equipped with a large 146-input Neve 8078 console, expansive live rooms with 30-foot ceilings, and multiple isolation booths designed to leverage the building's natural acoustics for full-band tracking and orchestral sessions. These architectural elements, including stained-glass windows and the church's resonant stone structure, were retained to enhance sound quality, making the space particularly suited for country, contemporary, and scoring projects in the heart of Nashville's music industry. In 2001, Sides and Belz sold the facility to , which agreed to maintain the Ocean Way name as part of the transaction, integrating it into the university's College of Entertainment and Music Business audio program. Post-acquisition, renovations in the early added further isolation rooms and upgraded equipment to support both commercial recordings and educational use, allowing students to participate in professional sessions while the studio remained available for industry rentals. This dual role has sustained its operation, blending academic training with high-profile productions in genres like country and . As of 2025, Ocean Way Nashville remains fully operational under ownership, comprising three studios that host Grammy-winning recording sessions and serve as a key venue for educational rentals and hands-on learning in audio engineering. The facility continues to emphasize its unique acoustics and versatile setup, attracting projects that benefit from the preserved church ambiance and modern enhancements for tracking, mixing, and immersive audio formats.

Additional Studios and Ventures

Record One Studio

In 1988, Allen Sides acquired Record One Studios, located in Sherman Oaks, California, integrating it into the Ocean Way Recording group to address growing demand for additional recording space at the flagship Hollywood facility. The studio, originally established in 1979 by producers Val Garay and Steve Waldman, featured two main rooms upon acquisition: Studio A and Studio B, each equipped with custom API consoles known for their clarity and dynamic range, while a custom Neve console was later installed in Studio A for high-profile projects such as Quincy Jones's Back on the Block. This expansion allowed Ocean Way to rebrand the site as an outpost, enhancing its capacity with upgrades including GML automation on the API desks and custom vocal isolation booths to support efficient multi-vocalist sessions. During its operational tenure under Ocean Way from 1988 through the early 2000s, Record One primarily handled overflow projects from the Hollywood location, specializing in rock and pop recordings that benefited from its expansive tracking areas—larger than those at the Hollywood studios—enabling full band setups and immersive live takes. Notable sessions included work by artists such as , , , and , where the studio's warm acoustics and vintage microphone collection contributed to polished, radio-ready productions. The facility's amenities, including private lounges and a gourmet kitchen, further supported extended creative sessions, solidifying its role as a versatile hub for commercial music production. By the mid-2000s, producer had become a primary user of , locking out the space for exclusive projects like Eminem's albums and his own , leading to a five-year period of limited access for other clients until a 2009 remodel and reopening. In the early 2010s, Sides sold the studio to , who reverted it to independent operation as , transforming it into a private facility focused on his productions rather than broad commercial rentals. Today, it remains a secluded creative space, distinct from Ocean Way's other ventures, with its original large-scale layout preserved for selective, high-end recording.

Ocean Way St. Barths

Ocean Way St. Barths opened in 2009 as a luxury integrated into the Eden Rock resort on the French Caribbean island of , marking Ocean Way Recording's international expansion into a destination that blended professional audio production with vacation amenities. Housed within an 18,000-square-foot beachfront villa known as Villa Rock Star, the facility featured a glass-enclosed reception area adorned with classic photographs and platinum records, a large home theater equipped as a fully miked recording stage for up to 20 seats, and a with an isolation booth offering ocean views to inspire creativity. The studio was outfitted with a vintage 40-input Neve 8068/8088 console—previously used by for his album Imagine—along with Ocean Way Audio HR-2 and Pro2a high-resolution monitors, microphones, outboard gear, and the Ocean Way Drum sample library, providing high-end isolation for tracking while allowing artists to leverage the resort's suites, dining, and beach access for retreats. During its operational years from 2009 to 2017, Ocean Way St. Barths catered primarily to high-profile artists and affluent clients seeking a secluded, tax-advantaged environment for recording projects, with Allen Sides often on-site to handle engineering and production. The studio hosted sessions for musicians such as , , Johnny Holiday, , and Usher, facilitating immersive creative sessions amid the island's celebrity-favored seclusion. This setup emphasized a retreat-like experience, where recording could pause for resort activities, distinguishing it from Ocean Way's urban facilities. The studio's operations ended abruptly in September 2017 when , a Category 5 storm, struck with devastating force, generating a 20-foot that completely submerged the beachfront villa in saltwater for nearly a month. The flood destroyed all equipment and infrastructure, rendering the facility irreparable and leading to its permanent closure. Although initial plans were discussed to rebuild on higher ground to mitigate future risks, as of 2025, these efforts remain unfulfilled, leaving the site as a casualty of the hurricane's environmental impact.

Associated Companies and Products

Ocean Way Audio

Ocean Way Audio was established in the early 2000s as a dedicated division focused on manufacturing custom monitoring speakers, building on Allen Sides' decades of experimentation with audio systems that began in his Santa Monica garage in the 1970s. This evolution stemmed from Sides' need for precise, high-fidelity speakers to enhance recordings at his Ocean Way studios, leading to the formal launch of Ocean Way Monitors in 2007 and its rebranding to Ocean Way Audio around 2012. The company's key products include the high-end studio monitors of the Ocean Way Reference Series, such as the HR4, Pro3, and HR3.5 models, which feature proprietary drivers, advanced crossovers, and horn-loaded designs for exceptional accuracy, wide dispersion, and low in professional environments. These monitors emphasize time-aligned components and materials that minimize , delivering frequency responses from as low as 20Hz to 25kHz and maximum SPL levels up to 120dB, tailored for critical listening in recording studios. Beyond monitors, Ocean Way Audio offers professional , such as custom tube and solid-state models, and software plug-ins including emulations of studio gear and microphone collections. Ocean Way Audio has pursued partnerships to integrate digital processing capabilities, notably through A/G Digital, a venture co-founded by Sides and George Massenburg in the for rentals and processing tools. Recent collaborations include work with Universal Audio on plug-ins, culminating in the release of the Ocean Way Studios Deluxe native UAD plug-in on November 4, 2025, which emulates the studios' rooms, analog equipment, and reverb chambers. Additionally, in 2025, the company demonstrated its AeroWave immersive monitoring system at InfoComm, expanding into advanced spatial audio solutions. As of November 2025, Ocean Way Audio serves as the primary business focus following the 2013 sale of the Ocean Way Hollywood recording studio, with the Nashville facility continuing operations under ownership; its products are sold to professional studios and audiophiles worldwide through authorized dealers and distributors, and its legacy is documented extensively on the official website oceanwayaudio.com.

Ocean Way Drums

Ocean Way Drums is a virtual drum instrument software developed in collaboration between recording engineer Allen Sides and producer Steven Miller, beginning in the late 2000s, with samples captured directly at Ocean Way Recording's Studio B in Hollywood. The project drew on Sides' extensive experience engineering drum sounds for artists like Frank Sinatra and Ray Charles, utilizing vintage microphones and the studio's renowned acoustics to create authentic emulations of classic rock and pop drum recordings from the 1960s through the 1990s. The flagship product, the Ocean Way Drums plugin, provides users with multi-microphone drum kits that replicate the layered, room-ambient sound of professional sessions, supporting integration into digital audio workstations (DAWs) such as via ' Kontakt Player. It features up to 24 velocity layers per articulation for nuanced dynamic response, along with customizable multi-mic setups including close, overhead, and room microphones to mix individual elements like kick, snare, toms, hi-hats, and cymbals. Room simulations incorporate the distinct reverberant characteristics of Ocean Way's Hollywood and Nashville facilities, allowing producers to select from dry, medium, or ambient presets that evoke the spaces' natural decay and imaging. Released in by Sonic Reality in editions ranging from the entry-level Silver to the comprehensive , the software quickly gained acclaim for its high-fidelity samples exceeding 40 GB in the full version, with preset mixes engineered by Sides and for immediate usability in professional mixes. Subsequent updates through the 2010s adapted it for evolving Kontakt versions, and by 2025, it remained available as the Ocean Way Drums SE series for Sonic Reality's Infinite Player, ensuring compatibility with modern DAWs and controllers. This digital product line marked a pivotal aspect of Sides' transition toward software and plugin development following the 2013 sale of Ocean Way Hollywood, enabling the preservation and of his analog-era drum recording techniques in the virtual realm.

Legacy and Impact

Notable Recordings and Artists

Ocean Way Recording's Hollywood facilities served as a hub for landmark pop and rock productions during the and early , hosting sessions for artists like , whose album Dangerous (1991) was recorded at the associated studio, contributing to its status as a multi-platinum release with over 32 million units sold worldwide. Similarly, Green Day's (2004), a rock opera that achieved 20 million copies sold, was tracked in Studio B, exemplifying the venue's role in capturing high-energy ensemble performances across isolation booths. Beck utilized the studios for (1998), a folk-infused project that earned a Grammy for Best Alternative Music Album, highlighting the space's versatility for experimental indie sounds. In Nashville, the studio became a cornerstone for country and crossover hits starting in the late 1990s, with Faith Hill's Breathe (1999) recorded there, securing Best Country Album at the 2001 Grammys and multi-platinum certification for over 8 million U.S. sales. Other key sessions included early work by and , broadening the studio's influence in contemporary country. Recent Grammy recognition includes Christone "Kingfish" Ingram's 662 (2021), winner of Best Contemporary Blues Album, recorded at Ocean Way Nashville. The facility continues to host sessions for artists such as and as of 2025. Collectively, recordings from Ocean Way facilities have surpassed 1 billion units sold globally, spanning genres from pop and rock to and , with numerous Grammy wins underscoring the studios' cultural impact during their operational peak.

Technical Contributions and Innovations

Ocean Way Recording's technical innovations significantly advanced studio acoustics and engineering practices, particularly through custom designs tailored to professional recording demands. In the Hollywood location, Studio A incorporated variable acoustics to optimize sound capture for diverse ensembles, featuring a spacious 48-foot-deep by 38-foot-wide room with a 22-foot and large isolation booths measuring 17 by 15 feet, capable of accommodating up to 60 musicians. This design, originally pioneered by Bill Putnam at the site's predecessor , allowed engineers to adjust the room's characteristics for orchestral and pop recordings, influencing subsequent studio builds by emphasizing flexibility in acoustic environments. The studio's equipment legacy centered on the restoration and integration of vintage analog gear, ensuring high-fidelity capture in an era of evolving technology. Notable among these was the use of ATR-124 multitrack tape machines, which provided exceptional and warmth for tracking sessions across Ocean Way's facilities. Additionally, custom baffles designed by founder Allen Sides enhanced isolation in tracking areas, minimizing bleed between instruments while preserving natural room ambience, a technique that became a benchmark for isolation in large-scale recording setups. Sides' approach to gear restoration extended to acquiring and refurbishing items like Fairchild limiters and UA tube compressors from historic studios, maintaining their reliability for modern productions. Innovations in monitoring were driven by Sides' early prototypes, which set standards for accurate playback in mixing environments. Beginning in , Sides developed custom tri-amped systems, such as the HR1 and HR2 series, delivering flat responses from 18 Hz to 25 kHz with wide dispersion patterns up to 120 degrees horizontally. These prototypes addressed common issues like time alignment and low-distortion reproduction, avoiding electronic corrections in favor of physical solutions, and influenced industry-wide of neutral-response monitors for critical . The systems' emphasis on transient accuracy and uniform sound field distribution helped establish benchmarks for studio control rooms. During the early 2000s, Ocean Way pioneered hybrid analog-digital workflows to bridge traditional warmth with digital precision, conducting experiments that shaped the transition in professional recording. Engineers recorded at high resolutions like 192 kHz in while applying analog processing, such as API 550A EQs, prior to digital capture to enhance signal quality and reduce digital artifacts. These practices, including clip gain techniques for vocals, informed broader industry shifts toward integrated systems. Sides' involvement extended to contributions in plugin development, where studio measurements and workflows informed emulations of Ocean Way's acoustics, facilitating accessible replication of hybrid techniques in software.

References

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