The 1970s was a golden and chaotic decade for the record business. Vinyl reigned supreme, and music was big business, but it was also deeply personal and cultural.
Recording studios became creative playgrounds where artists, producers, and engineers experimented with sound in ways never heard before. Record stores were social spaces, buzzing with fans flipping through bins in search of the perfect LP.
Behind the scenes, deals were struck in smoky places, and sometimes even on the street, while record pressing plants worked nonstop to keep up with demand. The 70s reshaped the music industry forever, leaving behind both legendary albums and unforgettable stories.
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Sound City was hallowed ground for rock in the ’70s. Tom Petty and countless others shaped their sound by pushing analog gear to its limits
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In the ’70s record business, deals were often made in hallways, backstage, or wherever the party happened to be.
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Before streaming, every hit album had to be physically pressed, tested, and shipped. Quality control meant listening to stacks of vinyl by hand.
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A gold record meant more than sales, it was bragging rights.
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The S*x Pistols signed their record deal right outside Buckingham Palace, just before dropping ‘God Save the Queen.’
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Record stores were cultural hubs. You didn’t just shop for vinyl, you discovered your identity.
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Steely Dan’s perfectionism was legendary. They’d spend weeks on a single track, pushing engineers and tape machines to the edge.
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Studio marathons could last days, Pink Floyd famously lived inside Abbey Road while building their soundscapes.
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Rows of colorful LPs invited hours of flipping, debating, and showing off your latest finds.
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Early metal at work: a young Ozzy Osbourne in the studio.
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It didn’t look like much, but Muscle Shoals was a hit factory. From this modest building came some of the greatest soul and rock tracks of the decade.
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A good pair of headphones and a condenser mic, the recipe for countless classics.
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No computers, no presets, just skill, instinct, and a very groovy shirt.
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George Harrison. Musicians of the ’70s blurred the line between rock star and spiritual seeker.
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The Beatles at Abbey Road Studios. With instruments scattered and creativity flowing, the studio was a laboratory of sound. Abbey Road became the blueprint for how records would be made for decades to come.