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Fantasy Studios

Fantasy Studios was a music recording studio in Berkeley, California, at the Zaentz Media Center, known for its recording of award-winning albums including Journey's Escape and Green Day's Dookie. Built as a private recording studio for artists on the Fantasy Records label in 1971, it was opened to the public in 1980 for recording, mixing and mastering.[1] It was permanently closed on September 15, 2018.

Fantasy Studios
Company typeRecording studio
IndustryMusic
Founded1970
Defunct2018
Headquarters,
United States
Websitefantasystudios.org

History edit

Fantasy Records edit

Fantasy Records and its subsidiary, Galaxy, were established in San Francisco, California, in 1949 by Max and Sol Weiss. The first artist on the label was Dave Brubeck.[2] With help from profits earned from his records the label went on to record Gerry Mulligan, Chet Baker, Cal Tjader and Vince Guaraldi.[3] In addition to musical acts, the label recorded beat poets Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Allen Ginsberg and comic Lenny Bruce.[2]

Creedence Clearwater Revival and expansion edit

Saul Zaentz, who joined Fantasy Records as a salesman in 1955, assembled a group of investors in 1967 and purchased the label from the Weiss brothers.[4] In 1968 Fantasy Records signed Creedence Clearwater Revival (CCR), who soon became extremely profitable for the label. Within eighteen months, twenty of CCR's singles made Billboard Hot 100 list and nine were consecutive Top 10 singles in the US. The band also earned 21 RIAA-certified gold or platinum records with total sales of over 100 million worldwide.[5] These successes for CCR made Fantasy the most profitable independent record company in the U.S.[6] and directly resulted in the expansion of Fantasy Records.[7]

In 1971 Fantasy Records relocated to Berkeley, California.[8] In addition to a lobby area, the building included a sauna, an exercise room and a lunch room, which until 1981 was catered daily by Narsai's Restaurant in Kensington. The sauna and exercise room were later rebuilt for other purposes.

In the early 1970s, under the leadership of label president Ralph Kaffel, Fantasy Records purchased the catalogs of three independent jazz labels: Prestige, Riverside (established in 1953 by Bill Grauer and Orrin Keepnews) and Milestone, which Keepnews started in 1966 after the demise of Riverside. After the acquisitions the company became known as "Fantasy Inc."[9]

Recording studios edit

Fantasy Records built Fantasy Studios to accommodate its growing roster, which remained primarily jazz artists but included some in rock, soul and disco. The building went up at 10th and Parker Streets in the western industrial area of Berkeley. Because of the source of funding, it was nicknamed "The House That Creedence Built."[10] Fantasy was the most profitable independent record company in the U.S.[10] Jim Stern, who had served as producer for the Sons of Champlin and Van Morrison, was chief engineer from 1974 until 1981. Jesse Osborn was another early engineer along with Eddie Bill Harris and Don Cody.[11]

Studio expansion edit

In 1980, Fantasy Records hired a new Studio Director, Roy Segal. One of Segal's first initiatives was to the addition of Studio D, as well as upgrading the acoustical treatment and equipment in the existing studios.[12] Such upgrades included removing carpet from the studio floors and installing bass traps and tiling for the walls in an effort to acoustically tune the rooms. Equipment upgrades included replacing the original consoles in Studios A and C with Neve 8108s and a Trident in Studio B.

In 1982, Segal was asked to manage the three-year-old Saul Zaentz Film Center, at which point he brought in Nina Bombardier to manage the studios. Bombardier started with Fantasy in 1973 as a receptionist,[13] then moved to manage the Record Plant in Sausalito. She served as the director of Fantasy Studios from 1982 to 2007.

In addition to recording music, Fantasy Studios saw clients in the film, television, gaming and audio book industries for additional dialog recording sessions. All studios were ISDN-compatible, providing full-frequency audio and real-time connectivity to other recording studios around the world.[3]

There were two full-time mastering engineers on site: George Horn and Joe Tarantino.[14] Over his career, Horn remixed or remastered albums by artists such as Charles Mingus, The Grateful Dead, Creedence Clearwater Revival and Santana. Joe Tarantino mastered albums by artists such as Stan Getz, Sonny Rollins, Dave Brubeck, Charlie Parker and Miles Davis.

Ownership changes and closure edit

Concord Records acquired Fantasy in late 2004 and the two labels merged to form Concord Music Group. Concord Music Group owned the studios through 2007, at which point the new owners of the Saul Zaentz Media Center, Wareham Property Group, purchased the studios.[15] The role of Studio Director was filled by music producer Jeffrey Wood upon Bombardier's departure.[4] Staff engineers at the time were Adam Muñoz, Jesse Nichols and Alberto Hernandez.[16]

In 2018 Wareham Property Group decided to permanently close the studios.

Facilities edit

Each of Fantasy Studios' three studios were built to serve a specific purpose. There were five working natural echo chambers of varying sizes and tones, accessible from all three control rooms.

Studio A edit

 
Studio A live room

At 1,344 square feet,[17] Studio A could accommodate a big band, and included a DeMedio console.[12] Small audiences could be brought in to give a recording date the feel of a live album, as Keepnews did for a 1973 Cannonball Adderley session, resulting in the album Inside Straight.[18] Studio A also had a projection booth, pull-down screen and portable mixing console that was built for film mixes. During those early years Fantasy also had a film unit and its films (mostly promotional pieces for the label's artists) were mixed in Studio A. The film unit was headed up by Irving Saraf and Robert N. Zagone, two Bay Area documentary filmmakers. Feature films were mixed in Studio A as well, including Academy Award winners One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Apocalypse Now, Amadeus and The English Patient.[3]

In 1980, bass traps and wall tiling were installed to improve acoustics. Studio A's mixing console was replaced with a Neve 8108, which was eventually replaced with an SSL Duality SE.[17]

Studio B edit

 
View from control room to live room of Studio B

Studio B, at 546 square feet,[19] was used mostly for smaller acts and comedy records, and was typically used for overdub sessions. Like Studio A, it too used a DeMedio console.[7][12] In 1980, bass traps and wall tiling were installed to improve acoustics. Studio B's mixing consoles replaced with a Trident, which was eventually updated to a Digidesign C24. Studio B is where Journey's Faithfully, from their Frontiers album was recorded.[19]

Studio C edit

Studio C was built expressly for CCR, with a separate entrance.[20] Parts of their albums Mardi Gras and Pendulum were recorded there, and the Live in Europe album was mixed there. John Fogerty recorded The Blue Ridge Rangers in Studio C and was in residence there until he left Fantasy in 1974. At 888 square feet, Studio C was also the site of a film soundstage and Foley pits. Studio C was the only studio at Fantasy which used an API console.[12] Studio C was closed to the public in 2008 with the space taken over by another Zaentz Media Center tenant.[7]

Studio D edit

 
Main tracking room of Studio D

From the profits of the 1975 Zaentz-produced film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Fantasy Studios expanded further in 1980 with the addition of an adjoining seven-story building which included a fourth recording room, Studio D.[7] It also marked the point at which all rooms became open for use by the public for recording, mastering and film scoring.

The new Studio D was designed by Tom Hidley and constructed by Sierra Audio. The control room featured an automated Neve 8108 board, Hidley monitors, Ampex 16- and 24-track recorders and a Studer 24-track recorder. At 1,500 square feet, the live room was built with multiple interior surfaces (unlike the other three rooms): one side of the room featured bass traps, cork and rock on the walls for a "dead" sound; the other featured hardwood floors and ceiling, and mirrored walls for a more "live" sound.[21] Studio D's mixing console was later updated to an SSL SL 4000 E.[21]

One of first albums to be recorded and mixed in its entirety in the newly opened Studio D was Journey's Escape, which reached #1 on the Billboard 200 Chart. The album contained such hits as "Open Arms" (which reached #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 List), "Who's Crying Now" (reaching #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 List) and "Don't Stop Believin'" (reaching #9 on the Billboard Hot 100 List).[22] Fantasy Studios' staff engineer Wally Buck worked as Assistant Engineer on the album.

In November 2011, Studio D's original half-wood, half-carpet floors were updated to hardwood cherry flooring.

Selected major releases by year edit

Recording artists edit

Producers and engineers edit

  • Tom Allom, Producer
  • Jim Anderson, Engineer
  • Michael "Mike" Anderson, Engineer
  • Wally Buck, Engineer
  • T-Bone Burnett, Producer
  • Ozzie Cadena, Producer
  • Jason Carmer, Engineer
  • Don Cody, Engineer
  • Ben Conrad, Engineer
  • Richie Corsello, Engineer
  • T.J. Dougherty, Producer
  • Joe Ferla, Producer
  • Steve Fontano, Engineer
  • Mike Fraser, Engineer
  • Jim Gaines, Engineer
  • Eddie Harris, Engineer
  • Stephen Hart, Engineer
  • Joe Henry, Producer
  • Mike Herbick, Engineer
  • Alberto Hernandez, Engineer
  • Phil Kaffel, Engineer
  • Orrin Keepnews, Producer
  • Glenn Kolotkin, Engineer
  • Danny Kopelson, Engineer
  • Dave Luke, Engineer
  • George Martin, Producer
  • James McCullagh, Engineer
  • Adam Muñoz, Engineer
  • Jesse Nichols, Engineer
  • Jesse Osborn, Engineer
  • Alex Perialas, Producer
  • Bob Porter, Producer
  • Frank Rinella, Engineer
  • Michael Rosen, Engineer
  • Michael Semanick, Engineer
  • Kevin Shirley, Producer
  • Jake Sinclair, Engineer
  • Tom Size, Engineer
  • Tone Def, Producer
  • Jim Stern, Engineer
  • Lee Townsend, Producer
  • Butch Walker, Producer
  • will.i.am, Producer
  • Eric Thompson, Engineer

References edit

  1. ^ "The Berkeley Main Post Office Salutes Ashkenaz and Fantasy Films. Category: Extra from The Berkeley Daily Planet". berkeleydailyplanet.com. Retrieved 2019-05-01.
  2. ^ a b Johnson 2006, p. 37
  3. ^ a b c Gilbert, Andrew. "Fantasy is No Mirage." The Monthly. April 2009
  4. ^ a b Tate, Brian. "Digital media in fantasyland." 2015-10-04 at the Wayback Machine San Francisco Business Times,. February 1, 2008
  5. ^ Creedence Clearwater Revival Album & Song Chart History, Billboard.com. .
  6. ^ Johnson 2006, p. 49
  7. ^ a b c d Poet, j. (August 6, 2008). "Fantasy Studios: Alive and Well in Berkeley." Crawdaddy!
  8. ^ "Zaentz Media Center – 2600 Tenth Street". Wareham Properties. Retrieved August 8, 2011.
  9. ^ . Concord Music Group. Archived from the original on July 29, 2011. Retrieved August 8, 2011.
  10. ^ a b Johnson 2006, p. 126
  11. ^ Johnson 2006, p. 229
  12. ^ a b c d Johnson 2006, p. 228
  13. ^ Johnson 2006, p. 157
  14. ^ "Services". Fantasy Studios. Retrieved August 8, 2011.
  15. ^ Schultz, Barbara (July 1, 2008). . Mix. NewBay Media. Archived from the original on August 26, 2011. Retrieved August 8, 2011.
  16. ^ "Staff". Fantasy Studios. Retrieved August 8, 2011.
  17. ^ a b "Studio A". Fantasy Studios. Retrieved August 8, 2011.
  18. ^ Johnson 2006, p. 127
  19. ^ a b . Fantasy Studios. Archived from the original on August 9, 2011. Retrieved August 8, 2011.
  20. ^ "Fantasy Studios About". Fantasy Studios. Retrieved August 8, 2011.
  21. ^ a b "Studio D". Fantasy Studios. Retrieved August 8, 2011.
  22. ^ "Journey – Escape". Allmusic. Retrieved August 8, 2011.
Bibliography
  • Johnson, Heather (2006). If These Halls Could Talk: A Historical Tour Through San Francisco Recording Studios. Thomson Course Technology. ISBN 1-59863-141-1.

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Fantasy Studios was a music recording studio in Berkeley California at the Zaentz Media Center known for its recording of award winning albums including Journey s Escape and Green Day s Dookie Built as a private recording studio for artists on the Fantasy Records label in 1971 it was opened to the public in 1980 for recording mixing and mastering 1 It was permanently closed on September 15 2018 Fantasy StudiosCompany typeRecording studioIndustryMusicFounded1970Defunct2018HeadquartersBerkeley California United StatesWebsitefantasystudios wbr org Contents 1 History 1 1 Fantasy Records 1 2 Creedence Clearwater Revival and expansion 1 3 Recording studios 1 4 Studio expansion 1 5 Ownership changes and closure 2 Facilities 2 1 Studio A 2 2 Studio B 2 3 Studio C 2 4 Studio D 3 Selected major releases by year 4 Recording artists 5 Producers and engineers 6 ReferencesHistory editFantasy Records edit Fantasy Records and its subsidiary Galaxy were established in San Francisco California in 1949 by Max and Sol Weiss The first artist on the label was Dave Brubeck 2 With help from profits earned from his records the label went on to record Gerry Mulligan Chet Baker Cal Tjader and Vince Guaraldi 3 In addition to musical acts the label recorded beat poets Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Allen Ginsberg and comic Lenny Bruce 2 Creedence Clearwater Revival and expansion edit Saul Zaentz who joined Fantasy Records as a salesman in 1955 assembled a group of investors in 1967 and purchased the label from the Weiss brothers 4 In 1968 Fantasy Records signed Creedence Clearwater Revival CCR who soon became extremely profitable for the label Within eighteen months twenty of CCR s singles made Billboard Hot 100 list and nine were consecutive Top 10 singles in the US The band also earned 21 RIAA certified gold or platinum records with total sales of over 100 million worldwide 5 These successes for CCR made Fantasy the most profitable independent record company in the U S 6 and directly resulted in the expansion of Fantasy Records 7 In 1971 Fantasy Records relocated to Berkeley California 8 In addition to a lobby area the building included a sauna an exercise room and a lunch room which until 1981 was catered daily by Narsai s Restaurant in Kensington The sauna and exercise room were later rebuilt for other purposes In the early 1970s under the leadership of label president Ralph Kaffel Fantasy Records purchased the catalogs of three independent jazz labels Prestige Riverside established in 1953 by Bill Grauer and Orrin Keepnews and Milestone which Keepnews started in 1966 after the demise of Riverside After the acquisitions the company became known as Fantasy Inc 9 Recording studios edit Fantasy Records built Fantasy Studios to accommodate its growing roster which remained primarily jazz artists but included some in rock soul and disco The building went up at 10th and Parker Streets in the western industrial area of Berkeley Because of the source of funding it was nicknamed The House That Creedence Built 10 Fantasy was the most profitable independent record company in the U S 10 Jim Stern who had served as producer for the Sons of Champlin and Van Morrison was chief engineer from 1974 until 1981 Jesse Osborn was another early engineer along with Eddie Bill Harris and Don Cody 11 Studio expansion edit In 1980 Fantasy Records hired a new Studio Director Roy Segal One of Segal s first initiatives was to the addition of Studio D as well as upgrading the acoustical treatment and equipment in the existing studios 12 Such upgrades included removing carpet from the studio floors and installing bass traps and tiling for the walls in an effort to acoustically tune the rooms Equipment upgrades included replacing the original consoles in Studios A and C with Neve 8108s and a Trident in Studio B In 1982 Segal was asked to manage the three year old Saul Zaentz Film Center at which point he brought in Nina Bombardier to manage the studios Bombardier started with Fantasy in 1973 as a receptionist 13 then moved to manage the Record Plant in Sausalito She served as the director of Fantasy Studios from 1982 to 2007 In addition to recording music Fantasy Studios saw clients in the film television gaming and audio book industries for additional dialog recording sessions All studios were ISDN compatible providing full frequency audio and real time connectivity to other recording studios around the world 3 There were two full time mastering engineers on site George Horn and Joe Tarantino 14 Over his career Horn remixed or remastered albums by artists such as Charles Mingus The Grateful Dead Creedence Clearwater Revival and Santana Joe Tarantino mastered albums by artists such as Stan Getz Sonny Rollins Dave Brubeck Charlie Parker and Miles Davis Ownership changes and closure edit Concord Records acquired Fantasy in late 2004 and the two labels merged to form Concord Music Group Concord Music Group owned the studios through 2007 at which point the new owners of the Saul Zaentz Media Center Wareham Property Group purchased the studios 15 The role of Studio Director was filled by music producer Jeffrey Wood upon Bombardier s departure 4 Staff engineers at the time were Adam Munoz Jesse Nichols and Alberto Hernandez 16 In 2018 Wareham Property Group decided to permanently close the studios Facilities editEach of Fantasy Studios three studios were built to serve a specific purpose There were five working natural echo chambers of varying sizes and tones accessible from all three control rooms Studio A edit nbsp Studio A live room At 1 344 square feet 17 Studio A could accommodate a big band and included a DeMedio console 12 Small audiences could be brought in to give a recording date the feel of a live album as Keepnews did for a 1973 Cannonball Adderley session resulting in the album Inside Straight 18 Studio A also had a projection booth pull down screen and portable mixing console that was built for film mixes During those early years Fantasy also had a film unit and its films mostly promotional pieces for the label s artists were mixed in Studio A The film unit was headed up by Irving Saraf and Robert N Zagone two Bay Area documentary filmmakers Feature films were mixed in Studio A as well including Academy Award winners One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest Apocalypse Now Amadeus and The English Patient 3 In 1980 bass traps and wall tiling were installed to improve acoustics Studio A s mixing console was replaced with a Neve 8108 which was eventually replaced with an SSL Duality SE 17 Studio B edit nbsp View from control room to live room of Studio B Studio B at 546 square feet 19 was used mostly for smaller acts and comedy records and was typically used for overdub sessions Like Studio A it too used a DeMedio console 7 12 In 1980 bass traps and wall tiling were installed to improve acoustics Studio B s mixing consoles replaced with a Trident which was eventually updated to a Digidesign C24 Studio B is where Journey s Faithfully from their Frontiers album was recorded 19 Studio C edit Studio C was built expressly for CCR with a separate entrance 20 Parts of their albums Mardi Gras and Pendulum were recorded there and the Live in Europe album was mixed there John Fogerty recorded The Blue Ridge Rangers in Studio C and was in residence there until he left Fantasy in 1974 At 888 square feet Studio C was also the site of a film soundstage and Foley pits Studio C was the only studio at Fantasy which used an API console 12 Studio C was closed to the public in 2008 with the space taken over by another Zaentz Media Center tenant 7 Studio D edit nbsp Main tracking room of Studio D From the profits of the 1975 Zaentz produced film One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest Fantasy Studios expanded further in 1980 with the addition of an adjoining seven story building which included a fourth recording room Studio D 7 It also marked the point at which all rooms became open for use by the public for recording mastering and film scoring The new Studio D was designed by Tom Hidley and constructed by Sierra Audio The control room featured an automated Neve 8108 board Hidley monitors Ampex 16 and 24 track recorders and a Studer 24 track recorder At 1 500 square feet the live room was built with multiple interior surfaces unlike the other three rooms one side of the room featured bass traps cork and rock on the walls for a dead sound the other featured hardwood floors and ceiling and mirrored walls for a more live sound 21 Studio D s mixing console was later updated to an SSL SL 4000 E 21 One of first albums to be recorded and mixed in its entirety in the newly opened Studio D was Journey s Escape which reached 1 on the Billboard 200 Chart The album contained such hits as Open Arms which reached 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 List Who s Crying Now reaching 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 List and Don t Stop Believin reaching 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 List 22 Fantasy Studios staff engineer Wally Buck worked as Assistant Engineer on the album In November 2011 Studio D s original half wood half carpet floors were updated to hardwood cherry flooring Selected major releases by year editJack Nitzsche One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest Original Soundtrack 1975 Journey Escape 1981 Journey Frontiers 1983 Y amp T In Rock We Trust 1984 Europe The Final Countdown 1986 Soda Stereo Signos 1986 Too Short Life Is Too Short 1988 Bobby McFerrin Simple Pleasures 1988 Chris Isaak Heart Shaped World 1989 Primus Sailing the Seas of Cheese 1991 En Vogue Funky Divas 1992 Green Day Dookie 1994 Blues Traveler Four 1994 Rancid And Out Come the Wolves 1995 Jawbreaker Dear You 1995 Santana Supernatural 1999 Santana Shaman 2002 Richard Thompson Grizzly Man Original Soundtrack 2005 Joanna Newsom Have One on Me 2010 Bill Frisell All We Are Saying 2011 Iggy amp the Stooges Ready to Die 2013Recording artists editAerosmith Azymuth Tori Amos Joan Baez Joshua Bell Tony Bennett Blues Traveler Bralalalala David Bowie Chanticleer Tracy Chapman Chuck D Eric Clapton Nels Cline Chick Corea Counting Crows Andrae Crouch Death Angel Francesco De Gregori Placido Domingo Doobie Brothers Dr John Duran Duran Sheila E En Vogue Bill Evans Bill Frisell Forbidden Grateful Dead Cee Lo Green Green Day Buddy Guy Sammy Hagar MC Hammer Herbie Hancock Ben Harper Isaac Hayes Lauryn Hill John Lee Hooker Huey Lewis and the News Iggy amp the Stooges Indigo Girls INXS Chris Isaak Wyclef Jean Journey B B King Lil Wayne Los Lonely Boys Taj Mahal Dave Matthews Bobby McFerrin Sarah McLachlan Charles Mingus Mos Def Joanna Newsom Noemi Laura Pausini Pavement Phish The Pretenders Primus Rancid Sonny Rollins Santana Joe Satriani Homayoun Shajarian and Tahmoures Pournazeri Tears for Fears Testament The Temptations Richard Thompson Too Short Train McCoy Tyner U2 The White Stripes Wilco Soda Stereo Stevie Wonder Neil Young Virginia Wolf Y amp TProducers and engineers editTom Allom Producer Jim Anderson Engineer Michael Mike Anderson Engineer Wally Buck Engineer T Bone Burnett Producer Ozzie Cadena Producer Jason Carmer Engineer Don Cody Engineer Ben Conrad Engineer Richie Corsello Engineer T J Dougherty Producer Joe Ferla Producer Steve Fontano Engineer Mike Fraser Engineer Jim Gaines Engineer Eddie Harris Engineer Stephen Hart Engineer Joe Henry Producer Mike Herbick Engineer Alberto Hernandez Engineer Phil Kaffel Engineer Orrin Keepnews Producer Glenn Kolotkin Engineer Danny Kopelson Engineer Dave Luke Engineer George Martin Producer James McCullagh Engineer Adam Munoz Engineer Jesse Nichols Engineer Jesse Osborn Engineer Alex Perialas Producer Bob Porter Producer Frank Rinella Engineer Michael Rosen Engineer Michael Semanick Engineer Kevin Shirley Producer Jake Sinclair Engineer Tom Size Engineer Tone Def Producer Jim Stern Engineer Lee Townsend Producer Butch Walker Producer will i am Producer Eric Thompson EngineerReferences edit The Berkeley Main Post Office Salutes Ashkenaz and Fantasy Films Category Extra from The Berkeley Daily Planet berkeleydailyplanet com Retrieved 2019 05 01 a b Johnson 2006 p 37 a b c Gilbert Andrew Fantasy is No Mirage The Monthly April 2009 a b Tate Brian Digital media in fantasyland Archived 2015 10 04 at the Wayback Machine San Francisco Business Times February 1 2008 Creedence Clearwater Revival Album amp Song Chart History Billboard com Johnson 2006 p 49 a b c d Poet j August 6 2008 Fantasy Studios Alive and Well in Berkeley Crawdaddy Zaentz Media Center 2600 Tenth Street Wareham Properties Retrieved August 8 2011 Fantasy Concord Music Group Archived from the original on July 29 2011 Retrieved August 8 2011 a b Johnson 2006 p 126 Johnson 2006 p 229 a b c d Johnson 2006 p 228 Johnson 2006 p 157 Services Fantasy Studios Retrieved August 8 2011 Schultz Barbara July 1 2008 Not Just a Fantasy Fantasy Studios Legendary studio is back from the brink Mix NewBay Media Archived from the original on August 26 2011 Retrieved August 8 2011 Staff Fantasy Studios Retrieved August 8 2011 a b Studio A Fantasy Studios Retrieved August 8 2011 Johnson 2006 p 127 a b Studio B Fantasy Studios Archived from the original on August 9 2011 Retrieved August 8 2011 Fantasy Studios About Fantasy Studios Retrieved August 8 2011 a b Studio D Fantasy Studios Retrieved August 8 2011 Journey Escape Allmusic Retrieved August 8 2011 Bibliography Johnson Heather 2006 If These Halls Could Talk A Historical Tour Through San Francisco Recording Studios Thomson Course Technology ISBN 1 59863 141 1 Portals nbsp Film nbsp Music nbsp San Francisco Bay Area Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fantasy Studios amp oldid 1216846969, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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