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Minneapolis' Sound 80 studio now on National Register of Historic Buildings Sound 80 -- the pioneering south Minneapolis studio where Bob Dylan’s best album, Prince’s crucial demos and the classic “Funkytown” were recorded -- has landed on the National Register of Historic Buildings.
The 49-year-old building, 2709 E. 25th St., was the premier recording facility in the Twin Cities in the 1970s.
In December 1974, Dylan re-recorded five of the songs on “Blood on the Tracks” at Sound 80. Prince recorded some of his demos there circa 1976 that led to his contract with Warner Bros. In 1979, Steven Greenberg cut “Funkytown,” the first No. 1 tune recorded in Minnesota, at Sound 80 with singer Cynthia Johnson and engineer/producer David Rivkin.
Cat Stevens, Dave Brubeck and Kiss did sessions there as did Twin Cities guitar star Leo Kottke. Other local acts, including Michael Johnson, Willie & the Bees and Yanni, spent time in Sound 80. The studio was involved in the first Grammy for a digital audio recording. In 1979, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra earned the prize for best chamber orchestra recording, featuring the works of Aaron Copland and Charles Ives, made at the Minneapolis studio.
Sound 80 was founded by composer/pianist Herb Pilhofer and engineer Tom Jung. Since 1990, the building has been home to Orfield Labs, which boasts "the quietest place on Earth," according to the Guinness Book of World Records.
Steve Orfield enlisted Kristen Zschomler, an historian/archaeologist with the Minnesota Department of Transportation, to handle the extensive paperwork and red tape for the historic designation. She connected with Orfield while doing research into places where Prince worked and lived. Done on her personal time, Zschomler’s four-year deep dive into Prince has led to documentation but not designation of some Purple sites in Minneapolis.
What does that mean?
“There’s nothing official about any of them,” Zschomler said. However, she said her paperwork filed with the national register has identified places that if threatened by a developer, they could be protected as “significant property.”
To Zschomler’s to-do list, add Kay Bank Studios, now Creation Audio.
While Sound 80 was significant and can now put up a plaque to prove it, another Minneapolis recording studio is older and perhaps more historic. Opened in 1953 by University of Minnesota electrical engineering grad Bruce Swedien in a 1914-built movie theater at 2541 Nicollet Av.S., Kay Bank is famous for the 1960s hits “Six Days on the Road” by Wisconsin’s Dave Dudley and “Surfin’ Bird” by the Twin Cities’ own Trashmen.
During Swedien’s tenure there, he recorded jazz stars Herbie Mann and Art Blakey as well as such locals as polka faves Six Fat Dutchmen, jazz pianist/singer Jeanne Arland Peterson and the Herb Pilhofer Octet. (After moving to Los Angeles, Swedien would later achieve Grammy-winning renown as the engineer on Michael Jackson’s and Quincy Jones’ biggest projects.)
Kay Bank was where Bobby Vee cut his first single, “Suzie Baby,” and the Fendermen made “Muleskinner Blues” and the Castaways tracked “Liar Liar.” In the 1980s, the building became home to the influential Twin/Tone Records, where Husker Du, Soul Asylum, the Wallets, the Replacements and others recorded. On the other end of the musical spectrum, choreographer-turned-singer Paula Abdul recorded some of her blockbuster 1988 debut there.
Straight up, tell us: Does the still-vital Kay Bank building warrant historic designation? “Kay Bank should be eligible,” Zschomler said.
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