Rumbo Recorders was a recording studio in the Canoga Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.
History
In 1977, Daryl Dragon and Toni Tennille, the husband and wife team widely known as Captain & Tennille, began building the studio at 20215 Saticoy Street for their own private use following the success of their single "Love Will Keep Us Together". Dragon named the studio Rumbo Recorders after a toy elephant he named Rumbo when he was 5 years old, and was also the alias used by Dragon on Dennis Wilson's 1970 single "Sound of Free".[1] The studio's entrance was appropriately flanked by a large pair of elephant statues.[2]
After reassurance from Geordie Hormel at Village Recorder of the commercial viability of a studio, Dragon hired Rudi Breuer, who had done work at The Village, to complete Studio A. Rumbo Recorders opened in 1979.[1] Studio A featured a 650 square foot control room outfitted with a 60-input Neve V Series recording console and two Studer A827 24-track multitrack recorders.[1]
In 2003, citing massive changes in the recording industry, Dragon and Tennille sold Rumbo Recorders.[2]
Location
Rumbo's location in the West San Fernando Valley offered producers and artists a creative space away from the distractions of Hollywood,[4] and factored into producer Mike Clink's choice of Rumbo Recorders for the recording of Guns N' Roses album, Appetite for Destruction.[2]