This article is about the San Mateo recording studio. For the recording studio known as Pacific High Recording located in San Francisco, California, see, see Pacific High Recording.
Pacific Recorders was founded in 1968 by guitarist and Mojo Men co-founder Paul Curcio,[1] with equipment assembled by Bob Matthews and Betty Cantor of the Grateful Dead's sound crew.[2] The studio was located at 1737 South El Camino Real in San Mateo, California.[3]
The studio's chief engineer, Ron Wickersham, was also a design engineer at nearby Ampex,[2] and Pacific Recording obtained the first Ampex MM-1000 16-track recorder in the Bay Area (and only the second in the U.S.). Wickersham designed and built a mixing console to accommodate the 16 tracks, making Pacific the first 16-track studio in the Bay Area.[4] Wickersham left after less than a year to join the Grateful Dead's sound team and co-found Alembic with wife and company CEO Susan Wickersham, who he met at the studio.[2]
The Grateful Dead, who had been recording their third studio album at the similarly-named Pacific High Recording in San Francisco, was so interested in exploring the possibilities of 16-track recording that they moved to Pacific Recorders and re-recorded the entire album.[5][6]
Curcio left Pacific in 1978 and founded Arrow Recording Studios. He would go on to found Music America Studios in 1982, where he produced Metallica's debut studio album, Kill 'Em All.[2]