Apex Studios

Coordinates: 40°45′54.0″N 73°58′38.4″W / 40.765000°N 73.977333°W / 40.765000; -73.977333
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Apex Studios was a recording studio in Manhattan, New York City. It had a high reputation for recording jazz.[1] It was located in the Beaux Arts Steinway building. The owner was Bob Scheuing. When Al Schmitt started in 1950, the two engineers were Fred Herbert Otto and Tom Dowd.[1]

Apex did almost all of the work for National, Atlantic, and Prestige record labels.[1]

Miles Davis's album Miles Davis and Horns was partly recorded here in 1951. Duke Ellington did a session with his son, Mercer. It was one of the first major sessions engineered by Al Schmitt.[1]

The studio also recorded radio shows for Voice of America in many languages.[1]

Artists that recorded at the studio included Charlie Parker, The Clovers, Clyde McPhatter, the Modern Jazz Quartet, Peppermint Harris, Lightnin' Hopkins.[1]

The studio went bankrupt and closed in the early 1950s.

Notable Recordings

References

  1. ^
    OCLC 1045666473.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link
    )

40°45′54.0″N 73°58′38.4″W / 40.765000°N 73.977333°W / 40.765000; -73.977333