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8-10 Basing St, Notting Hill
London, England, United Kingdom
51.5083° N · -0.2082° W
Get DirectionsBasing Street Studios at 8-10 Basing Street in Notting Hill was established by Island Records founder Chris Blackwell inside a converted Victorian church in 1969 and became one of London's most significant recording facilities of the 1970s. Brian Eno recorded Another Green World there in the summer of 1975 — the album that marked his definitive break from rock music toward something more experimental, more spatial, and more interested in texture than in songs. The converted church's acoustics contributed to the album's distinctive sound: intimate in some places, cavernous in others, always aware of the room.
Another Green World is the record where Eno fully became Eno: the album where the studio ceased to be a place of documentation and became the instrument itself. He worked with a group of musicians — Robert Fripp, Percy Jones, Phil Collins, John Cale among others — and used them to generate material that he then shaped, processed, and composed around, often departing from conventional song structures entirely in favour of pieces built from texture and atmosphere. The fourteen tracks include both conventional songs and purely instrumental pieces that anticipate the ambient work he would pursue explicitly over the following years.
Basing Street Studios operated under various names — Island Studios in its earliest years, then Basing Street, then SARM Studios — and continued as a significant London recording facility for decades. The converted Victorian church in Ladbroke Grove, surrounded by the multicultural neighbourhood that produced reggae, punk, and much of the post-war British working-class music Eno explicitly was not making, is one of the more architecturally distinctive studio buildings in London's recording history.
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