The studio was created in 1978 at a disused cinema theatre on the street floor (not ground floor, due to a bridge and streets separated by four floors) of a building known as Sportpalatset (Palace of Sports) in central Stockholm.[citation needed] The massive edifice, built around 1930, owed its name to a large indoor public bath (closed in the mid-1950s) and several other sports facilities which had been housed upstairs over the years. ABBA had been looking for a modern studio with a good, spacious live sound where they would be able to work at their own leisure and decided that the best solution was to build their own.[2] The first song recorded at the studio was "Chiquitita", and the band would record their next three studio albums: Voulez-Vous, Super Trouper, and The Visitors at Polar Studios.[2]
The centrepiece of the studio was a 40-channel Harrison 32 Series mixing console, which was modified by technician Leif Mases to give it a unique sound that in some respects resembled a Neve desk. ABBA's 1981 album The Visitors marked a turning point for Polar, as it was recorded on the studio's new 3M digital recorder - thus becoming one of the first digital mainstream pop records.[2][3]
The music video for ABBA's 1979 song "Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)" was filmed in the studio; it depicted the group recording the track, although in reality the audio recording was already complete. On the same day, the group also filmed the Spanish language video for "Estoy Soñando" there.
Ownership history and closure
The studio's original location was a former cinema theatre, in an early 1930s building at Sankt Eriksgatan 58-60 on Kungsholmen. Construction began on the studio in 1977, and it opened for production on May 18, 1978. In 1984, Stig Anderson bought out his partners in the company.[4] Shortly afterward, he sold the studio to his daughter Marie Ledin, her husband Tomas Ledin, and their business partner Lennart Östlund.[4][5][2]
In 2004, the private housing cooperative that owned the building which housed Polar raised the space's yearly rent to $184,000—triple the amount asked of other renters in the building.[4][6] As a result, the studio vacated its original location on May 1 of that year.[2] Some time later, the former owners of Polar relocated to a new facility at Kingside Studio.[4][7] The studio moved several more times; the last address was in Hammarby Sjöstad in Stockholm. In the fall of 2015 business was scaled down and equipment was moved to a warehouse.
Legacy
In 2010, ABBA The Museum premiered an exhibit that attempted to recreate the band's Polar Studios setup.[8]
Equipment
Polar's recording facility consisted of two different sections, one that utilized analog tape machines and one that implemented the cutting-edge digital equipment of the day.
Studio A featured a Solid State Logic 4056 mixing console, coupled with any combination of a Studer A-820 24-track, Studer A-827 24-track, or Otari DTR-900 MK II 32-track tape machines.[9] Studio A featured four separate isolated rooms, each with varying acoustics. Polar's Studio B maintained a Harrison 32C mixing console, 48-channel Calrec UA 8000 mixing board paired with a 3M digital 32-track audio recorder.[9] When Polar premiered this setup in 1981, it was one of the first digital studios in the world. Studio B consisted of one "live room" in which musicians performed.[9]
^ abcShepherd, John; Horn, David; Laing, Dave; Oliver, Paul; Wicke, Peter, eds. (2003). Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World, Volume 1: Media, Industry, Society. London & New York City: Continuum. p. 668.
"Abba": The Complete Recording Sessions, Carl Magnus Palm and Dick Wallis, 13 October 1994, Verulam Publishing Ltd, ISBN0907938108