Jump to content

Doppler Studios

Coordinates: 33°48′32″N 84°22′04″W / 33.809009°N 84.367664°W / 33.809009; -84.367664
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by BattyBot (talk | contribs) at 00:51, 12 August 2015 (removed Template:Multiple issues & general fixes using AWB (11363)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Doppler Studios
The exterior view of Doppler Studios, as photographed from the main parking lot in January 2009.
Map
Address1922 Piedmont Circle, Atlanta GA 30324
Coordinates33°48′32″N 84°22′04″W / 33.809009°N 84.367664°W / 33.809009; -84.367664
TypeRecording studio
Opened1969
Website
www.dopplerstudios.com

Doppler Studios, a recording studio in Atlanta, Georgia established in 1969 as the one-room studio home of a jingle company.

History

Founded by original co-owners Pete Caldwell and Tom Wells to serve as their jingle company, Doppler was initially a single recording studio; in 1978 the move was made to the current location on Piedmont Circle into a building housing two studios. Between 1978 and 1985, two additional studios were added to the building. In 1985, a 10,000-square-foot addition was built, housing Studios E & F; Studio E was designed by George Augspurger (of Perception Inc. in Los Angeles, CA), the acoustical engineer who designed the main monitor speakers in Studios A & E and also redesigned several other rooms at Doppler. The seventh room, Studio G (also designed by Augspurger), was added in 1995.[1]

In 1996, Bill Quinn and Joe Neil purchased Doppler from Caldwell and Wells. Neil, who already operated his remote recording company Sam's Tape Truck, started as an audio engineer at Doppler. Neil built a second room in the original building before leaving Doppler in the late 70's to work at Mastersound Studios, returning to Doppler in 1983 and eventually becoming Doppler's chief engineer. Quinn came to Doppler in 1973 at Neil's suggestion, and worked as an engineer until becoming studio manager in 1988.[2]

Notable Recording Sessions at Doppler

References

  1. ^ "Doppler Studios" (September 1995), Mix Magazine Presents: Southeast's Finest, pg. 11
  2. ^ "Doppler: staying strong with eclectic services" (January 2000), Post
  3. ^ "How The Hell I Did It". Emusician.com. 2005-03-28. Retrieved 2014-06-29.
  4. ^ http://www.cinematlmagazine.com/cinematl-reel-ga/2014/3/28/get-to-know-a-studio-its-time-to-put-doppler-on-your-radar