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Yellow Brick Road Private Estate Bedford Auction Closed (#2419428)

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Hand Crafted Record Storage & Vinyl Album Collection

  Lot # 038
Listing Image
Payment Options Seller Accepts PayPal
Seller Accepts Credit Cards
Details
Condition
Very Good
Size
19" x 36" x 18"
Location
Basement
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Lot # 038
System ID # 2454348
End Date
Start Date
Description

This Lot consists of a Hand Crafted Solid Wood Floor Standing Holder for your Vinyl Album Collection. This also includes a Vinyl Record Collection of over 100 Albums with Covers and Two Cleveland Recording Company Albums without covers as can be seen in photographs.

Cleveland Recording Company was founded in 1930 by radio announcer Frederick C. Wolf. This was Cleveland's first professional recording studio and one of the longest operating independent recording studios in the United States.  In 1946, the offices were moved to Carnegie Hall Building on Huron Road. In 1950 Wolf opened radio station WDOK and hired Ken Hamann as an engineer for both the radio station and recording studio.  Hamann helped build the studio into a state-of-the-art recording and mastering facility in which many regional and national hit records were produced. These included the Outsiders' "Time Won't Let Me," the Human Beinz' "Nobody But Me," the Lemon Pipers' "Green Tambourine," and albums by the James Gang and Grand Funk Railroad. In 1970, Ken Hamann and production engineer John Hansen purchased Cleveland Recording Co. from Wolf. A proposed demolition of the building (later halted by the formation of the PLAYHOUSE SQUARE Assn.) forced them to move the studio a few blocks east to the former Luby Chevrolet dealership at 1935 Euclid Ave. Their renovation of the site earned them a design award. Hamann and Hansen severed their partnership in 1977.  Hamann opened Suma Recording Studio in Leroy Township, east of Cleveland, and Hansen continued to operate Cleveland Recording at a new location until his death in 1990.