Built in a 1920s-era movie theater building located in East Nashville, Woodland was designed and constructed under the supervision of former Bradley and Columbia Studios recording engineerGlenn Snoddy for the parent company of the Crescent-Loew movie theater chain. The facility included a recording studio as well as administrative space for gospel label Nashboro Records and Excellorec Publishing.[1] In 1968 the studio replaced its original Altec mixing console with a new 24-input 16-buss console with quad capabilities, four echo sends, two cue busses, and simultaneous four, two, and mono mixdown facilities, making Woodland one of the most advanced facilities at the time.[2] By 1969 Snoddy was Woodland's president and chief technical officer, with Jim Pugh serving as the studios' chief engineer.[3] That year the original building was expanded to add a second 16-track studio (Studio B),[2] and advertised that it had a Moog synthesizer, as well as a custom lighting system designed to change color and fluctuate with the music in the studio.[4]
In 1976 Woodland upgraded Studio B from 16 to 24 tracks with a new Neve mixing console.[2] The following year, Kansas moved the recording sessions for their album Point of Know Return to Woodland, and recorded their hit "Dust in the Wind" at the studio.[9] That same year, Neil Young recorded portions of his album Comes a Time at Woodland.[10]Barbara Mandrell also recorded portions of her 1977 album Love's Ups and Downs at the studio, the first of many albums she'd record at Woodland into the 1980s.
In December 1978, Woodland's Studio A was upgraded with a Neve 8078 mixing console.[2] Around the same time, when Charlie Daniels and his band were recording Million Mile Reflections at Woodland, he realized the album needed a song that featured fiddle, and he wrote "The Devil Went Down to Georgia" at the studio, with the song becoming the band's biggest hit.[11]
In 1991, Robert Solomon, who had gotten his start at Woodland as an engineer in the 1970s, took over running the studio.[12]
Other artists who recorded at Woodland in the 1990s included the Indigo Girls, Aaron Tippin, and the Fixx, whose 1999 album title 1011 Woodland referenced the studios' street address.
On April 16, 1998, the studio was seriously damaged by a mile-wide tornado, which led to the studio falling into disrepair and contentious litigation between Solomon and the building's owners. As of December 2000, Solomon was no longer running the studio, which sat vacant and was condemned.[12][8][13]
In March 2020, the studio sustained damage from yet another tornado, which tore the roof off the studio. Welch and Rawlings rebuilt the studio over the next four years. Their 2024 album Woodland was both recorded at, and is named after the studio.[16]