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Cleveland Recording Company

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Cleveland Recording Company
IndustryRecording studio
Founded1938
FounderFrederick C. Wolf
Defunct1977
FateClosed
SuccessorSuma Recording
Headquarters
Number of locations
1220 Huron Road (1938-1946); 1515 Euclid Ave (1946-1970); 1935 Euclid Ave (1970-1977)
Key people
Frederick C. Wolf, Ken Hamann, John Hansen, Grand Funk Railroad, James Gang, The Lemon Pipers, The Human Beinz, Velvet Crest, The Outsiders

Cleveland Recording Company was a historic recording studio in Cleveland, Ohio, which produced many hit records in the 1960s and 1970s by artists such as James Gang and Grand Funk Railroad.

History

Cleveland radio announcer Frederick C. Wolf opened Cleveland's first professional recording studio in 1938 at 1220 Huron Road in the Carnegie Hall building. He founded the studio as a place to record local Slovenian musicians he was featuring on his Sunday morning Czechoslovakian music programs on WGAR. One of the early artists to record with Wolf was Cleveland band leader and future "Polka King," Frankie Yankovic.[1] In 1946, Wolf incorporated the studio as Cleveland Recording Company and moved operations to the Loew's State Theater building at 1515 Euclid Avenue.

In 1950, Wolf opened WCCR (AM) in the same location and hired Ken Hamann to engineer both the radio and the recording studios. Hamann eventually built the studio into a state-of-the-art recording and mastering facility and produced many regional and national hit records there, including The Outsiders' "Time Won't Let Me," The Human Beinz' "Nobody But Me," The Lemon Pipers' "Green Tambourine," Velvet Crest "Look Homeward Angel," James Gang album Thirds, and seven albums by Grand Funk Railroad.[1]

In 1970, Hamann and production engineer John Hansen purchased Cleveland Recording Company from Wolf and moved the studio to 1935 Euclid Avenue. Hamann and Hansen ended their partnership in 1977 when the property was purchased by Cleveland State University, forcing the studio to move. Hansen moved to a new location and focused on commercial recording until his death in 1990. Hamann opened Suma Recording Studio in Painesville, Ohio, where it continues to operate to this day with some of the same equipment from the Cleveland Recording Company studio.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b "Cleveland Recording Co. - The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History". Case Western Reserve University. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  2. ^ "Suma Recording: Ken & Paul Hamann make recording history". Tape Op Magazine. Retrieved 27 April 2016.