Hi Friend,
What can Les Paul’s original recording studio reveal about the way modern music production really began?
On this week's podcast episode, I talk with with Tom Camuso, Director of Engineering at The Les Paul Recording Studio, and Michael Braunstein, 3rd Generation Les Paul Manager.
We discuss restoring Les Paul’s groundbreaking recording gear, rebuilding his historic studio in Los Angeles, and showing a new generation how much of today’s studio technology started with Les himself.
Tom and Michael walk through Les Paul’s original 1956 Fairchild-based console, his early multitrack ideas, his sound on sound experiments, and the studio’s educational mission.
They also share why the Les Paul Foundation exists, how it supports music education, and why Les Paul’s legacy goes far beyond the guitar that carries his name.
In This Episode . . .
Why Les Paul’s recording studio was brought from New Jersey to Los Angeles
Why Les Paul’s 1956 console was so far ahead of its time
How machine control, direct outs, patching, and monitoring were built into the original console decades before adoption on commercial desks
How the studio is being used for both education and commercial recording
What it took to restore Les Paul’s original console and tape machines
Why Les Paul’s sound on sound process changed recording forever
How students react when they see the physical gear behind modern plugins and DAWs
What the Les Paul Foundation does to preserve his legacy and support music education
And much more.
You can hear it at bobbyoinnercircle.com, or via Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, YouTube Music, Mixcloud, Spotify, Deezer, TuneIn Radio, or RadioPublic.
Also, a video version of this podcast is now available on YouTube as well.
Enjoy the show!
Bobby
P.S. Mixing, production, music business . . . if you want to learn it, I've probably got a course for it. See for yourself at bobbyowsinskicourses.com.