Associated Independent Recording (AIR), an independent recording company, was founded in London in 1965 by Beatles producer George Martin and his partner John Burgess after their departure from EMI.
Since 1969 AIR has operated its own professional audio recording facilities.
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AIR built their first facility on the fourth floor of 214 Oxford Street, containing four studios and a MIDI programming room. The facility included two large studios, one 58 ft x 32 ft the other 30 ft x 28 ft, and two small ones. The studios contained two Bösendorfer pianos, many soundproof booths, and a 56 channel mixing console, custom designed by Neve to AIR's specification.
The company built another recording studio on the Caribbean island of Montserrat in the 1970s. In 1986 the facility was described as:
The Montserrat facility was destroyed by Hurricane Hugo in 1989.
In 1991, AIR Studios took over Lyndhurst Hall, a Grade II listed building designed by Alfred Waterhouse, located in the Hampstead suburb of northern London. The space was revamped as a recording facility and opened for business in December 1992. AIR Lyndhurst is now a key London facility for classical and popular recordings, as well as film scores, television post-production, and dialogue, sound effects and music for video games.
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