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Columbia Studio A Nashville is a recording studio located in Nashville, Tennessee, with a significant history in the development of country music and beyond. Opened in 1964, the studio played host to numerous iconic artists and recordings that shaped the sound of Nashville and influenced popular music globally. Its unassuming exterior belies the creative energy contained within its walls, making it a landmark for musicians and music enthusiasts alike.
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Columbia Studio A Nashville is a recording studio located at 804 16th Avenue South in Nashville, Tennessee. Opened in 1962, the studio has played host to some of the most consequential recordings in American music history, from Bob Dylan's country experiments to Johnny Cash's prison albums and the early stirrings of the outlaw country movement. Now affiliated with [[Belmont University]], the studio remains an active recording facility and one of the most historically significant rooms in Nashville.


== History ==
== History ==


Columbia Studio A was established as a joint venture between Columbia Records and producer Chet Atkins. Atkins, a prominent figure in the Nashville sound, sought a dedicated space for Columbia artists to record, separate from the increasingly crowded RCA Studio B. The studio’s initial focus was on country music, but it quickly expanded to accommodate artists from various genres, including rock, pop, and gospel. The studio’s design, overseen by Atkins, prioritized a natural acoustic environment, contributing to the warmth and clarity of the recordings produced there. <ref>{{cite web |title=The Tennessean |url=https://www.tennessean.com |work=tennessean.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
Columbia Studio A was built in 1962 by [[Columbia Records]] as a dedicated Nashville recording facility, separate from the existing [[Columbia Recording Studio (Nashville)|Quonset Hut]] studio on 16th Avenue that the label had been using since the 1950s. The new studio was designed with acoustics in mind from the ground up, with construction materials and room dimensions chosen to produce a warm, natural sound without excessive reverb or artificial treatment. Producer [[Billy Sherrill]] and engineer [[Frank Jones]] were among the key figures who shaped the studio's early identity, overseeing sessions that ranged from mainstream country to gospel and pop. <ref>{{cite web |title=Columbia Studio A |url=https://www.facebook.com/NashvilleColumbiaStudioA/ |work=Facebook |access-date=2025-06-01}}</ref>


Throughout the 1960s and 70s, Columbia Studio A became a hub for some of the most influential musicians of the era. Artists such as Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, [https://biography.wiki/b/Bob_Dylan Bob Dylan], and Lynn Anderson all recorded at the studio, contributing to a diverse and enduring catalog of music. The studio’s role in the “outlaw country” movement, spearheaded by artists like Nelson and Jennings, was particularly significant, providing a space for them to experiment with a rawer, more authentic sound that challenged the conventions of mainstream country music. The studio’s legacy extends beyond country music, with notable sessions by artists like The Staple Singers and Tony Bennett. <ref>{{cite web |title=The Tennessean |url=https://www.tennessean.com |work=tennessean.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
It's worth clarifying a common conflation: [[Chet Atkins]] was the dominant producer at [[RCA Studio B]], not Columbia Studio A. The two studios operated in the same Music Row neighborhood and shared many of the same session musicians, which has led to Atkins being associated with both facilities in popular accounts, but his primary recording home was RCA. Columbia Studio A was a Columbia Records operation, and its house producers included figures like Bob Johnston, who became one of the studio's most important figures in the mid-1960s and 1970s.
 
[[Bob Johnston]] took the helm as Columbia's Nashville producer in 1965 and used Studio A as his base of operations for a remarkable run of recordings. Johnston brought [[Bob Dylan]] to Nashville in February 1966 to record what became ''[[Blonde on Blonde]]'', and the sessions at Columbia Studio A produced some of Dylan's most celebrated work, including "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands," recorded in a single overnight session. A persistent myth holds that portions of ''Blonde on Blonde'' were recorded at the old Quonset Hut; in fact, the sessions took place at Studio A, a distinction that music historians have worked to correct. <ref>{{cite web |title=Bob Dylan's Officially Released Rarities and Obscurities |url=https://www.searchingforagem.com/bob-rare-alpha5.htm |work=Searching For A Gem |access-date=2025-06-01}}</ref> Dylan returned to Nashville and Studio A in 1967 for ''[[John Wesley Harding]]'' and again in 1969 for ''[[Nashville Skyline]]'', his country-inflected collaboration with [[Johnny Cash]].
 
Cash himself was a frequent presence at Studio A throughout the 1960s and 1970s. His landmark live albums ''[[At Folsom Prison]]'' (1968) and ''[[At San Quentin]]'' (1969) were recorded on location at those prisons, but the overdubs, mixing, and related studio work were conducted at Columbia Studio A, with Bob Johnston producing both records. The albums redefined Cash's career and became two of the best-selling country records of the era. Johnston's production approach — spare, direct, with minimal studio embellishment — matched the room's natural acoustic character.
 
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Columbia Studio A became a hub for some of the most influential musicians of the era. [[Willie Nelson]] and [[Waylon Jennings]] used the studio extensively during the period when they were developing what critics and fans came to call outlaw country — a rawer, less polished approach that pushed back against the string-heavy production that had dominated Nashville since the late 1950s. [[Lynn Anderson]] recorded her 1970 crossover hit "[[Rose Garden (Lynn Anderson song)|Rose Garden]]" at the studio, and [[The Staple Singers]] and [[Tony Bennett]] were among the artists who recorded there outside the country genre, reflecting the studio's genuine range. The 1960s and 1970s were the studio's peak commercial period, and the recordings produced there during those two decades constitute an extraordinary body of work by any measure.


== Geography ==
== Geography ==


Columbia Studio A is situated at 804 16th Avenue South in Nashville, Tennessee. This location places it within a historically significant area of the city, close to other renowned recording studios and music venues. The studio occupies a relatively modest building, deliberately designed to avoid ostentation and focus on the quality of the recording environment. The surrounding neighborhood has undergone considerable development in recent decades, transitioning from a primarily industrial area to a vibrant mix of residential and commercial properties.  
Columbia Studio A sits at 804 16th Avenue South in Nashville, Tennessee, in the heart of the district historically known as [[Music Row]]. The building is a low-profile structure, unremarkable from the street, which has allowed it to survive decades of development on a corridor that has seen considerable change. Music Row runs roughly along 16th and 17th Avenues South between Demonbreun Street and Grand Avenue, and at its peak in the mid-twentieth century it housed dozens of recording studios, publishing companies, and record label offices within a few walkable blocks. Many of those buildings have since been demolished or converted to other uses, making the surviving studios — including Columbia Studio A and the nearby [[RCA Studio B]] — increasingly rare physical remnants of that era.
 
The main recording room at Studio A is known for its natural acoustics. The control room retains much of its vintage character while housing updated equipment, a balance that suits both the studio's working musicians and the historically minded clients who book the room specifically because of its sound and its past. The studio's location on 16th Avenue South also places it within easy reach of the [[Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum]] on Demonbreun Street, which holds archival materials documenting many of the sessions recorded at Studio A.


The studio’s physical layout is designed to optimize sound quality. The main recording room is known for its natural acoustics, achieved through careful construction and the use of specific materials. The control room, where engineers and producers monitor and manipulate the sound, is equipped with state-of-the-art equipment while retaining a vintage aesthetic. The studio’s location also provides a degree of isolation from external noise, crucial for capturing clean and precise recordings. Information regarding specific geographic coordinates or detailed architectural plans is not readily available through the provided sources.
== Current Operations and Affiliation ==
 
Columbia Studio A is now affiliated with [[Belmont University]], the Nashville liberal arts institution whose campus borders Music Row. The university's affiliation has helped preserve the studio as a working facility rather than allowing it to become a purely ceremonial landmark. The studio continues to host recording sessions and is used in conjunction with Belmont's music business and audio engineering programs, giving students direct access to one of the historically significant rooms in American recording history.
 
The studio is not generally open for public tours on a drop-in basis, though special events and limited-access sessions have been offered on occasion. Its Facebook page, maintained under the name Columbia Studio A Nashville, TN, periodically announces events and updates for fans and industry visitors. <ref>{{cite web |title=Columbia Studio A Nashville, TN |url=https://www.facebook.com/NashvilleColumbiaStudioA/ |work=Facebook |access-date=2025-06-01}}</ref>


== Culture ==
== Culture ==


Columbia Studio A fostered a unique creative atmosphere that attracted musicians and producers seeking a collaborative and unpretentious environment. Chet Atkins’ influence was central to this culture, emphasizing musicality and artistic integrity over commercial considerations. The studio became known as a place where artists felt comfortable experimenting and pushing boundaries, resulting in recordings that often defied genre conventions. The studio’s engineers and session musicians also played a vital role in shaping its cultural identity, contributing their expertise and creativity to countless projects.
Columbia Studio A developed a distinct creative identity that set it apart from other Nashville studios of the same era. Where some rooms on Music Row became associated with a particular polished sound — the lush orchestrations and smooth production of the Nashville Sound as practiced at RCA Studio B — Studio A under producers like Bob Johnston tended toward a more stripped-back approach. Johnston didn't believe in over-rehearsing or over-producing. He would sometimes roll tape before artists knew the session had officially started, capturing a looseness that more formal methods tended to eliminate.
 
The studio's session musicians — part of the loose collective known as the [[A-Team (Nashville session musicians)|Nashville A-Team]] or simply the "Nashville Cats" — were central to its sound. Players like [[Charlie McCoy]], [[Kenny Buttrey]], and [[Wayne Moss]] appeared on dozens of Studio A recordings, including the Dylan Nashville sessions, and their ability to read a song quickly and play with both precision and feel defined the studio's output during its peak years. These weren't anonymous hires. They were musicians with strong individual voices who brought something specific to each session.
 
The stories surrounding Studio A have become part of Nashville's broader musical memory. The overnight session for "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands," the informal atmosphere that Johnston encouraged, Cash and Dylan sitting across from each other in the studio — these accounts circulate among musicians, historians, and fans as touchstones of a particular moment in American music. Whether or not every detail of every story is accurate, they reflect something real about what the room meant to the people who worked there.
 
== Notable Recordings ==
 
Columbia Studio A's recording history spans multiple genres and several decades. Among the most significant sessions conducted at the studio:
 
Bob Dylan recorded ''Blonde on Blonde'' (1966), ''John Wesley Harding'' (1967), and ''Nashville Skyline'' (1969) at Studio A, all produced by Bob Johnston. ''Nashville Skyline'' included a duet with Johnny Cash, "Girl from the North Country," recorded during a session that Cash later described as one of his favorite recording experiences.


The studio’s impact on Nashville’s music scene extends beyond the recordings produced within its walls. It became a symbol of the city’s commitment to artistic innovation and its role as a global center for music production. The stories and legends surrounding Columbia Studio A have become part of Nashville’s musical folklore, inspiring generations of musicians and producers. The studio’s legacy continues to be celebrated through documentaries, exhibitions, and ongoing preservation efforts. <ref>{{cite web |title=Metro Nashville |url=https://www.nashville.gov |work=nashville.gov |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
Johnny Cash's studio work during the Bob Johnston period, including recordings tied to the ''At Folsom Prison'' and ''At San Quentin'' projects, was conducted at Studio A. Cash was one of the studio's most regular artists during the late 1960s.


== Notable Residents ==
Willie Nelson recorded at Studio A during his years as a Columbia artist in the 1970s, a period that produced some of his most important work including tracks from ''[[Red Headed Stranger]]'' (1975), the album that effectively launched the outlaw country era commercially.


While Columbia Studio A did not have permanent “residents” in the traditional sense, it regularly hosted an extraordinary roster of musicians, producers, and engineers who became synonymous with the studio’s sound. Chet Atkins himself was a constant presence, overseeing many sessions and offering guidance to artists. Engineers like Jim Hawkins and Glenn Sutton were instrumental in capturing the studio’s distinctive sonic character. Session musicians, often referred to as the “Nashville Cats,” contributed their talents to countless recordings, becoming an integral part of the studio’s identity.
Lynn Anderson's "Rose Garden" (1970), produced by [[Billy Sherrill]], was recorded at Studio A and reached number three on the Billboard Hot 100, one of the most commercially successful country crossover singles of its time.


Among the artists who frequently recorded at Columbia Studio A were Johnny Cash, whose albums *At Folsom Prison* and *At San Quentin* were partially recorded there, cementing his status as a country music icon. Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings utilized the studio extensively during their outlaw country period, creating albums that challenged the norms of the genre. [https://biography.wiki/a/Bob_Dylan Bob Dylan] also recorded significant work at Columbia Studio A, including portions of his *Nashville Skyline* album. Lynn Anderson’s crossover hit “Rose Garden” was also recorded at the studio, demonstrating its versatility and appeal to a broad audience. <ref>{{cite web |title=The Tennessean |url=https://www.tennessean.com |work=tennessean.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The Staple Singers, Tony Bennett, and artists from outside country music also recorded at the studio, reflecting the room's acoustic versatility and Columbia's use of it as a general-purpose Nashville facility rather than a strictly country operation.


== Attractions ==
== Attractions ==


Although Columbia Studio A is not generally open to the public for casual tours, its historical significance makes it a point of interest for music fans visiting Nashville. The studio’s exterior is a recognizable landmark, and many visitors take photographs of the building as a tribute to its legacy. Occasionally, special events or limited-access tours are offered, providing opportunities for fans to learn more about the studio’s history and see the recording spaces firsthand.  
Music fans visiting Nashville often include Columbia Studio A on a self-guided tour of Music Row, even when the building isn't open for formal visits. The studio's exterior at 804 16th Avenue South is a recognizable stop, and the surrounding blocks offer a concentrated look at what remains of Nashville's historic recording district. [[RCA Studio B]], located nearby on Music Row, offers public tours through the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum and provides context for understanding how the two studios shaped Nashville's sound in the same era.


The surrounding neighborhood offers a variety of attractions for visitors, including music venues, restaurants, and shops. The nearby Music Row area is home to numerous recording studios, publishing houses, and record labels, providing a glimpse into the heart of Nashville’s music industry. The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum is also located within easy reach of Columbia Studio A, offering a comprehensive overview of the history of country music. <ref>{{cite web |title=Metro Nashville |url=https://www.nashville.gov |work=nashville.gov |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The [[Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum]] on Demonbreun Street holds extensive archival materials related to Studio A and the artists who recorded there, and its exhibits regularly touch on the Nashville sessions that defined American country, folk, and rock music in the 1960s and 1970s. For visitors who want to understand the studio's place in that history, the museum is the most thorough public resource available.


== See Also ==
== See Also ==
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* [[Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum]]
* [[Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum]]
* [[Chet Atkins]]
* [[Chet Atkins]]
* [[Bob Johnston]]
* [[Nashville Skyline]]
* [[Blonde on Blonde]]
* [[Billy Sherrill]]
* [[Belmont University]]


{{#seo: |title=Columbia Studio A Nashville — History, Facts & Guide | Nashville.Wiki |description=Explore the history, notable recordings, and cultural impact of Columbia Studio A, a legendary Nashville recording studio. |type=Article }}
{{#seo: |title=Columbia Studio A Nashville — History, Facts & Guide | Nashville.Wiki |description=Explore the history, notable recordings, and cultural impact of Columbia Studio A, a legendary Nashville recording studio. |type=Article }}
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[[Category:Music Venues in Nashville]]
[[Category:Music Venues in Nashville]]
[[Category:History of Nashville]]
[[Category:History of Nashville]]
[[Category:Recording studios in Tennessee]]
[[Category:Belmont University]]
[[Category:Music Row]]
```

Revision as of 02:54, 15 April 2026

```mediawiki Columbia Studio A Nashville is a recording studio located at 804 16th Avenue South in Nashville, Tennessee. Opened in 1962, the studio has played host to some of the most consequential recordings in American music history, from Bob Dylan's country experiments to Johnny Cash's prison albums and the early stirrings of the outlaw country movement. Now affiliated with Belmont University, the studio remains an active recording facility and one of the most historically significant rooms in Nashville.

History

Columbia Studio A was built in 1962 by Columbia Records as a dedicated Nashville recording facility, separate from the existing Quonset Hut studio on 16th Avenue that the label had been using since the 1950s. The new studio was designed with acoustics in mind from the ground up, with construction materials and room dimensions chosen to produce a warm, natural sound without excessive reverb or artificial treatment. Producer Billy Sherrill and engineer Frank Jones were among the key figures who shaped the studio's early identity, overseeing sessions that ranged from mainstream country to gospel and pop. [1]

It's worth clarifying a common conflation: Chet Atkins was the dominant producer at RCA Studio B, not Columbia Studio A. The two studios operated in the same Music Row neighborhood and shared many of the same session musicians, which has led to Atkins being associated with both facilities in popular accounts, but his primary recording home was RCA. Columbia Studio A was a Columbia Records operation, and its house producers included figures like Bob Johnston, who became one of the studio's most important figures in the mid-1960s and 1970s.

Bob Johnston took the helm as Columbia's Nashville producer in 1965 and used Studio A as his base of operations for a remarkable run of recordings. Johnston brought Bob Dylan to Nashville in February 1966 to record what became Blonde on Blonde, and the sessions at Columbia Studio A produced some of Dylan's most celebrated work, including "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands," recorded in a single overnight session. A persistent myth holds that portions of Blonde on Blonde were recorded at the old Quonset Hut; in fact, the sessions took place at Studio A, a distinction that music historians have worked to correct. [2] Dylan returned to Nashville and Studio A in 1967 for John Wesley Harding and again in 1969 for Nashville Skyline, his country-inflected collaboration with Johnny Cash.

Cash himself was a frequent presence at Studio A throughout the 1960s and 1970s. His landmark live albums At Folsom Prison (1968) and At San Quentin (1969) were recorded on location at those prisons, but the overdubs, mixing, and related studio work were conducted at Columbia Studio A, with Bob Johnston producing both records. The albums redefined Cash's career and became two of the best-selling country records of the era. Johnston's production approach — spare, direct, with minimal studio embellishment — matched the room's natural acoustic character.

Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Columbia Studio A became a hub for some of the most influential musicians of the era. Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings used the studio extensively during the period when they were developing what critics and fans came to call outlaw country — a rawer, less polished approach that pushed back against the string-heavy production that had dominated Nashville since the late 1950s. Lynn Anderson recorded her 1970 crossover hit "Rose Garden" at the studio, and The Staple Singers and Tony Bennett were among the artists who recorded there outside the country genre, reflecting the studio's genuine range. The 1960s and 1970s were the studio's peak commercial period, and the recordings produced there during those two decades constitute an extraordinary body of work by any measure.

Geography

Columbia Studio A sits at 804 16th Avenue South in Nashville, Tennessee, in the heart of the district historically known as Music Row. The building is a low-profile structure, unremarkable from the street, which has allowed it to survive decades of development on a corridor that has seen considerable change. Music Row runs roughly along 16th and 17th Avenues South between Demonbreun Street and Grand Avenue, and at its peak in the mid-twentieth century it housed dozens of recording studios, publishing companies, and record label offices within a few walkable blocks. Many of those buildings have since been demolished or converted to other uses, making the surviving studios — including Columbia Studio A and the nearby RCA Studio B — increasingly rare physical remnants of that era.

The main recording room at Studio A is known for its natural acoustics. The control room retains much of its vintage character while housing updated equipment, a balance that suits both the studio's working musicians and the historically minded clients who book the room specifically because of its sound and its past. The studio's location on 16th Avenue South also places it within easy reach of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum on Demonbreun Street, which holds archival materials documenting many of the sessions recorded at Studio A.

Current Operations and Affiliation

Columbia Studio A is now affiliated with Belmont University, the Nashville liberal arts institution whose campus borders Music Row. The university's affiliation has helped preserve the studio as a working facility rather than allowing it to become a purely ceremonial landmark. The studio continues to host recording sessions and is used in conjunction with Belmont's music business and audio engineering programs, giving students direct access to one of the historically significant rooms in American recording history.

The studio is not generally open for public tours on a drop-in basis, though special events and limited-access sessions have been offered on occasion. Its Facebook page, maintained under the name Columbia Studio A Nashville, TN, periodically announces events and updates for fans and industry visitors. [3]

Culture

Columbia Studio A developed a distinct creative identity that set it apart from other Nashville studios of the same era. Where some rooms on Music Row became associated with a particular polished sound — the lush orchestrations and smooth production of the Nashville Sound as practiced at RCA Studio B — Studio A under producers like Bob Johnston tended toward a more stripped-back approach. Johnston didn't believe in over-rehearsing or over-producing. He would sometimes roll tape before artists knew the session had officially started, capturing a looseness that more formal methods tended to eliminate.

The studio's session musicians — part of the loose collective known as the Nashville A-Team or simply the "Nashville Cats" — were central to its sound. Players like Charlie McCoy, Kenny Buttrey, and Wayne Moss appeared on dozens of Studio A recordings, including the Dylan Nashville sessions, and their ability to read a song quickly and play with both precision and feel defined the studio's output during its peak years. These weren't anonymous hires. They were musicians with strong individual voices who brought something specific to each session.

The stories surrounding Studio A have become part of Nashville's broader musical memory. The overnight session for "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands," the informal atmosphere that Johnston encouraged, Cash and Dylan sitting across from each other in the studio — these accounts circulate among musicians, historians, and fans as touchstones of a particular moment in American music. Whether or not every detail of every story is accurate, they reflect something real about what the room meant to the people who worked there.

Notable Recordings

Columbia Studio A's recording history spans multiple genres and several decades. Among the most significant sessions conducted at the studio:

Bob Dylan recorded Blonde on Blonde (1966), John Wesley Harding (1967), and Nashville Skyline (1969) at Studio A, all produced by Bob Johnston. Nashville Skyline included a duet with Johnny Cash, "Girl from the North Country," recorded during a session that Cash later described as one of his favorite recording experiences.

Johnny Cash's studio work during the Bob Johnston period, including recordings tied to the At Folsom Prison and At San Quentin projects, was conducted at Studio A. Cash was one of the studio's most regular artists during the late 1960s.

Willie Nelson recorded at Studio A during his years as a Columbia artist in the 1970s, a period that produced some of his most important work including tracks from Red Headed Stranger (1975), the album that effectively launched the outlaw country era commercially.

Lynn Anderson's "Rose Garden" (1970), produced by Billy Sherrill, was recorded at Studio A and reached number three on the Billboard Hot 100, one of the most commercially successful country crossover singles of its time.

The Staple Singers, Tony Bennett, and artists from outside country music also recorded at the studio, reflecting the room's acoustic versatility and Columbia's use of it as a general-purpose Nashville facility rather than a strictly country operation.

Attractions

Music fans visiting Nashville often include Columbia Studio A on a self-guided tour of Music Row, even when the building isn't open for formal visits. The studio's exterior at 804 16th Avenue South is a recognizable stop, and the surrounding blocks offer a concentrated look at what remains of Nashville's historic recording district. RCA Studio B, located nearby on Music Row, offers public tours through the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum and provides context for understanding how the two studios shaped Nashville's sound in the same era.

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum on Demonbreun Street holds extensive archival materials related to Studio A and the artists who recorded there, and its exhibits regularly touch on the Nashville sessions that defined American country, folk, and rock music in the 1960s and 1970s. For visitors who want to understand the studio's place in that history, the museum is the most thorough public resource available.

See Also

```