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  1. Quonset Hut Studio was a music recording studio established in 1954 in Nashville, Tennessee by brothers Harold and Owen Bradley as Bradley's Film & Recording Studios and later operated as Columbia Studio B. The Quonset Hut was the first commercial recording studio in what would later become known as Music Row.

    • Quonset hut

      A Quonset hut / ˈ k w ɒ n s ɪ t / is a lightweight...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Owen_BradleyOwen Bradley - Wikipedia

    • Before The Fame
    • The Nashville Sound
    • Starmaker
    • Bradley's Barn Studio
    • Later Years and Honors
    • Bibliography
    • External Links

    A native of Westmoreland, Tennessee, United States, Bradley learned piano at an early age, and began playing in local nightclubs and roadhouses when he was a teenager. At 20, he got a job at WSM-AM radio, where he worked as an arranger and musician. In 1942, he became the station's musical director, and was also the leader of a sought-after dance b...

    Country music had long been looked on as unsophisticated and folksy, and was largely confined to listeners in the less affluent small towns of the American South and Appalachia. In the late 1950s, Bradley's home base of Nashville was positioning itself to be a center of the recording industry, and not just the traditional home of the Grand Ole Opry...

    The singers Bradley produced made unprecedented headway into radio, and artists such as Kitty Wells, Patsy Cline, Brenda Lee, Loretta Lynn, Lenny Dee, and Conway Twitty became household names. Rock and Roll singers such as Buddy Holly and Gene Vincent also recorded with Bradley in his Nashville studio. Bradley often tried to reinvent older country ...

    Bradley sold The Quonset Hut Studio to Columbia Records and bought a farm outside of Nashville in Mount Juliet, Tennessee in 1961, converting a barn into a demo studio which he named Bradley's Barn. Within a few years, Bradley's Barn became a popular recording venue in country music circles. The Beau Brummels paid tribute to the studio, through tit...

    Owen Bradley was inducted in 1974 to the Country Music Hall of Fame. He also achieved the distinction of having produced records for more fellow Hall of Fame members (six) than anyone else except Paul Cohenwho produced nine. He retired from production in the early 1980s, but continued to work on selected projects. Canadian artist k.d. lang chose Br...

    Richliano, James Adam (2002). "Angels We Have Heard: The Christmas Song Stories." Star Of Bethlehem Books, Chatham, New York. (Includes interviews with Bradley and chapters on Bradley's involvement...
    Owen Bradley at AllMusic
    Owen Bradley discography at Discogs
    Owen Bradley recordings at the Discography of American Historical Recordings.
  3. In 1962, they sold the Quonset Hut TM studio to Columbia Records, but the Bradley brothers continued to use the studio for a few years. The last single to be recorded in the studio was John Anderson’s “Swingin.” Lou Bradley, no relation to the Bradley brothers, was an engineer for Columbia for 13 years.

  4. Headings. - recording studios. - quonset huts. - television studios. - music. - prefabricated buildings. - Tennessee -- Davidson County -- Nashville. Latitude / Longitude. 36.149194,-86.791999. Notes.

  5. Bob Moore’s bass can be heard on countless recordings made in Nashville during the 1950s through the 1980s. As a member of studio musicians known as the A Team, Bob played on recordings ...

  6. Quonset Hut Studio was a music recording studio established in 1954 in Nashville, Tennessee by brothers Harold and Owen Bradley as Bradley's Film & Recording Studios and later operated as Columbia Studio B. The Quonset Hut was the first commercial recording studio in what would later become known as Music Row.