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Ardent Donates Console to Stax Museum

Memphis, TN (October 24, 2008)-- John Fry, founder of the renowned Ardent Studios, has donated the historic Auditronics console, which was used for many years in his studios, to the Stax Museum of American Soul Music. The console was often used in shaping the sound of countless Stax Records hits during a period when Ardent worked closely with the Stax label and recording studios.

Pictured at Memphis’ Stax Museum

are curator Carol Drake (left)

and Ardent Studios’ John Fry

Memphis, TN (October 24, 2008)– John Fry, founder of the renowned Ardent Studios, has donated the historic Auditronics console, which was used for many years in his studios, to the Stax Museum of American Soul Music. The console was often used in shaping the sound of countless Stax Records hits during a period when Ardent worked closely with the Stax label and recording studios.

The console was made by the Memphis company Auditronics, owned by Welton Jetton and Steve Sage. Auditronics had supplied smaller consoles to both Ardent and Stax in 1966. The donated console was fabricated from amplifiers and equalizers made by Spectrasonics of Odgen, UT.

The 20-input, 8-output console was installed at Ardent’s location on National Street in 1969 and moved to Ardent’s present location on Madison Avenue, where it served in Studio B until 1985. Auditronics also supplied Stax with an identical console for its A Studio in 1970.

When the Capitol Theater was transformed into Stax Records in 1959, it began launching the careers of artists such as Isaac Hayes, Otis Redding, the Staple Singers, Luther Ingram, Albert King, the Bar-Kays, Booker T. & the MG’s, Johnnie Taylor, Rufus and Carla Thomas, and dozens of others whose influence remains vital in the music of today.

Today, the Stax Museum of American Soul Music, located at the original site of Stax Records, has more than 2,000 exhibits, videos, stage costumes, photographs, and instruments used to record the Stax sound. Included are items such as Phalon Jones’ saxophone that was retrieved from a lake intact after the fatal crash of Otis Redding and the Bar-Kays; Otis Redding’s favorite brown suede jacket; Albert King’s famous purple Flying V guitar; Tina Turner’s gold sequined stage dress and Ike Turner’s silver lame suit and Fender guitar; the organ used by Booker T. Jones to record “Green Onions”; and Isaac Hayes’ restored, peacock-blue 1972 Superfly Cadillac El Dorado complete with television, refrigerator, and gold trim. In the Hall of Records, approximately 800 45 rpm single records and 300 LPs are on display.

Visitors can stand on the exact spot where much of the great Stax music was made, in the recreation of Stax’s legendary Studio A, now including the console from Ardent Studios which is identical to the one formerly housed at Stax.

Songs recorded on the Ardent console now at the Stax Museum include Isaac Hayes’ Hot Buttered Soul; The Staple Singers’ The Staple Swingers; Best of Sam & Dave; Led Zeppelin III; James Taylor’s Mudslide Slim and the Blue Horizon; Big Star’s #1 Record and Radio City; ZZ Top’s Fandango and Tejas; the Bar-Kay’s Too Hot to Stop, and hundreds of other recordings that define the sound and songs of a generation.

Ardent Studios
www.ardentstudios.com

Stax Museum of American Soul Music
www.soulsvilleusa.com

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