Grosvenor Road Studios (GRS), formerly known as Hollick and Taylor Studios, is a suite of recording studios in Handsworth,[a] Birmingham, England. It is the oldest extant recording studio in the city.[1][2]
The studios are in a former five-bedroomed house, 16 Grosvenor Road, which was built in 1872.[b][2][3] From 1945 the house was occupied by a married couple, John R. and Joan Taylor, who developed a recording studio there shortly after arriving.[1][2] The studios became known as Hollick & Taylor when John set up a partnership with Charles Hollick, an engineer.[1]
Studio clients also included school orchestras, brass bands, military bands, and cathedral choirs. Test pressings and performers' self-funded records were released on the Hollick & Taylor label, with some commercial releases - including a 1972 release by the Bert Weedon Quartet[8] - on the Grosvenor label.
The name Grosvenor Recording Studio Complex was adopted after Hollick's death.[1] Eventually, the Taylor's sons, Christopher and Richard, were brought into the business. In 2003 John and Joan Taylor retired to Peterborough[7] and the studios were acquired by Black Voices as a social enterprise, managed by a voluntary board.[4] In 2008, £1.5 million in grant funding enabled a major refurbishment.[2] The same year the gardens were redeveloped as a community facility, and in November a sculpture of a peony seed pod, by Juginder Lamba in Shropshire oak, was unveiled by Prince Edward, Duke of Kent.[9] For a period from its refurbishment the studio operated under the name Centre for Music & Arts Technology.[3][10]
As of 2015, the complex had three studios - the largest accommodating up to 50 performers[1] - and was still using its 1950s microphones.[11]
Notes
^Some sources give the location as Perry Barr, the studio being much closer to its modern-day centre than to that of Handsworth. The studio's communications consistently gave its address as Handsworth; its modern postal address is also Handsworth.
^Until 1911, when it was absorbed into Birmingham, in Warwickshire, Handsworth was part of Staffordshire.