Record Plant
The Record Plant, the storied Los Angeles recording studio where Michael Jackson, Prince, BeyoncĂŠ, Lady Gaga and dozens of other music superstars made classic albums for decades, is one step closer to a sale now that veteran producer Rafa Sardina has purchased its assets for $500,000 during a bankruptcy proceeding last week. Sardina, who has won four Grammys and 13 Latin Grammys and has worked with Jackson, Stevie Wonder and Sheryl Crow, among others, takes over ownership of dozens of speakers, sound boards, microphones, cassette decks, CD recorders and other valuable sound equipment that was the heart of the studio for decades.
Founded in 1968, the Record Plant has been the standard for music production due to its high-end equipment and an emphasis on service and luxury that made megastars feel like they were in their own homes. Thanks to perks like a hot tub room, stars such as John Lennon and Fleetwood Mac took over studio rooms in the Plantâs early days; after it moved to its current location on North Sycamore Avenue in Los Angeles, BeyoncĂŠ rented every room to make her album Lemonade and Kanye West and Pharrell rode motorized scooters through the hallways.
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Sardina, who interviewed successfully at Record Plant early in his career before deciding to work at a different studio, did not respond to requests for comment about why he made the purchase offer. A lower bid, according to court documents, came from Italian producer Patrizio Moi, who has occupied a Record Plant studio room known as Digi-Plant since 2014. He offered $50,000.
Moi and the studioâs latest owner, Philip Lawrence of Bruno Marsâ songwriting team, the Smeezingtons, have been battling over possession of the Record Plant for several years. Moi has declared in U.S. district court that Lawrence and his associates first offered him a co-ownership deal, then, in 2020, sold him the entire studio for $1. The two sued each other until last year, when Lawrenceâs company, Philmar, declared bankruptcy, forcing the court to sell the Record Plantâs assets in order to pay off his debts. Moi argued to the court that he should take over the equipment and other property, but the judge, Victoria Kaufman, ruled against him.
Moi has said he hopes to take over the studio and run it as if it never closed. That will be harder to do so now that the studioâs high-tech equipment is likely to be removed, but he remains optimistic. Per his earlier agreement with Lawrence, he owns the Record Plant trademark and website domain. It is possible that Moi makes a deal with the land owner, CIM Group, to take over the lease.Â
âThereâs a lot of moving pieces,â Moi says by phone.Â
However, the bankruptcy courtâs trustee, Amy Goldman, disputed the previous arrangements between Lawrence and Moi, because Lawrence âretained possession of the propertyâ and never transferred it to Moi even after their 2020 agreement. The judge agreed with Goldman â effectively denying Moiâs claim to any of the equipment or other property inside the studio. âThe property can be sold free and clear,â Kaufman wrote last week.
Sardinaâs purchase of the equipment, which includes multiple valuable microphones, including what Moi calls âstuff you cannot find anymore,â has not fully closed. The courtâs trustee Goldman must âdeliver all relevant and related sale documents to effectuate and close the sale and related transactions,â according to the judgeâs ruling.Â
The $500,000 set to be paid by Sardinaâs company, Firefly Music Row, will be used to pay off the debts of Lawrenceâs company, Philmar, according to court documents.
The front door to the Record Plant â where BeyoncĂŠ once booked every room to record Lemonade, Kanye West and Pharrell rode motorized scooters through the hallways and Michael Jackson, Rihanna, Eminem, Lady Gaga and hundreds of others made classic albums â is locked. There are no cars in its parking lot across the street. And the 55-year-old studio, which moved to this location on North Sycamore Avenue in Los Angeles in 1985, is âset to closeâ forever, according to a July report in Los Angeles magazine that was widely repeated online.
But the truth is more complicated. The fate of the Record Plant is in the hands of a U.S. bankruptcy court in California, the result of a multimillion-dollar squabble between a fast-talking Italian music producer and a prolific hitmaker for Bruno Marsâ songwriting and production team, the Smeezingtons. Court trustees will sell the Record Plantâs assets to pay its creditors, then grant whatâs left of the business to the highest bidder. The new owner could then decide to close it for good or keep it open.
âI think the brand means something,â says Rick Stevens, a former major-label executive who bought the studio in 1991. âThe high-tech living room, the level of service and differentiating itself from most of the other recording studios on the planet â if somebody [buys it and] does that, the Record Plant brand could be revitalized and reborn.â
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The latest era of Record Plant turmoil began in 2016, when Stevens realized producers were eschewing expensive studios to make music with ProTools and Ableton in their bedrooms. âI had been planning an exit for a couple of years,â he says. âIt was time to move on.â
At the time, Stevens was also working as CEO of an entertainment company run by billionaire Ron Burkle; they built an investment firm that sought to buy holdings in electronic dance music. Stevens found himself regularly visiting the dance-party island of Ibiza, âin the heyday of the EDM world,â as Stevens recalls. There, he befriended Marcel Boekhoorn, an accountant-turned-entrepreneur who was a billionaire and owned a yacht. Boekhoorn said he was working with Mars and a colleague, Philip Lawrence, the songwriter and producer whose name appears on the credits of just about every Mars song, plus hits by Adele, Justin Bieber and others.
A self-taught pianist who had been a performer at Disney World, Lawrence first met Mars through a mutual friend. They rose together, and Lawrence soon became an eight-time Grammy Award winner, mega-rich in the music business. He was also troubled. In a 2020 interview, he acknowledged cheating on his wife, celebrity stylist and fashion designer Urbana Chappa, then going to rehab. âI did not understand the impact of my behavior. I did not understand how damaging cheating is,â he said. âI had to get sober. That was my initial assignment â what is this thing thatâs blocking me from becoming a whole person? ⌠How can I be well?â
Boekhoorn and Lawrence partnered in a new company, Philmar, which bought the Record Plant from Stevens in late 2016. Their idea, according to Amsterdam filmmaker Remko Peters, a friend of Boekhoorn who wound up as a managing partner at the studio, was that Lawrence would scout and develop music talent and bring them to the Record Plant to record. (Boekhoorn declined to answer questions for this story.)Â
The plan worked â for a few years. Shawn Mendes, Chaka Khan, Mars himself and other top stars recorded at the Record Plant during this period. But soon, Lawrence and Patrizio Moi, the Italian producer who has worked with Bieber, Meghan Trainor, Pavarotti and others and had a long-standing deal to work in Record Plantâs upstairs studio, had a dispute over money. âLawrence,â Moi says, âdid not do what he was supposed to do.âÂ
âI WANT TO LIVE HEREâ
The first Record Plant first opened in 1968 in New York City, and the Los Angeles installation followed a year later, debuting with a party invitation that read, âL.A.âs First Hunchy Punchy Recording Studio,â as co-founder Chris Stone later wrote. One of its founders, engineer Gary Kellgren, supplemented its state-of-the-art technology, including multitrack tape machines, large consoles and monitor mixers, with an innovation â studios resembling living rooms. âWhen we started Record Plant, recording studios were like hospitals: fluorescent lights, white walls and concrete floors,â Stone wrote. âThe best and greatest compliment that any artist who came to work with us could make was, âMy God, this is beautiful â I want to live here.’â
Soon megastars from John Lennon to Fleetwood Mac to Stevie Wonder were recording at the studio on 3rd Street in West Hollywood, and the off-duty activities, for many, had become at least as attractive as making records. âThis place was a rock ânâ roll mecca complete with a hot tub room and other creative spaces specifically designed for orgies and drug use,â wrote Jim Peterik, a member of the â80s band Survivor, in his 2014 memoir Through the Eye of the Tiger. âEach recording console was equipped with razor blades for chopping cocaine and at least three boxes of Kleenex.â Buck Dharma, guitarist for Blue Ăyster Cult, which recorded its 1979 album Mirrors at the LA Record Plant, recalls to Billboard, âWe were half-jokingly cautioned about getting into the hot tub. It had a reputation for being funky.â
In 1991, Stevens, a former A&R executive at MGM and Polydor, read a Los Angeles Times article about the LA installment of the Record Plant, by now in its second location on North Sycamore Avenue, and assembled a group to buy it. His innovation was to pamper clients âat the highest level, the way they live,â he says. âMy goal was to say, âI want these people treated like theyâre at a five-star hotel.’â He also brought in a key employee: Rose Mann-Cherney, on-site manager, beloved by clients for decades. âNobody knew better how to deal with the stars,â Stevens says. âShe was able to help me execute my vision.â (Mann-Cherney did not respond to requests for comment.)
The reborn Record Plant returned to its former glory, drawing musicâs biggest names for years: Celine Dion, Barbra Streisand, Janet Jackson, Michael Jackson, Eminem, BeyoncĂŠ, Rihanna, Bieber and dozens of others. Prince built his own studio there in the late â90s, and signed the studioâs guest book with his symbol. âRecord Plant is the best studio Iâve ever been in. Itâs unexplainable. I donât know if itâs the piece of property it sits on or the stories in the walls,â says Paul Blair, the producer known as DJ White Shadow, who worked on Lady Gagaâs ARTPOP and other hits at the studio. âIt was just like the perfect storm of awesomeness. There was this little glass room that had all the records. Iâd go back there and Lionel Richie and Quincy Jones would be drinking red wine. Before Fifth Harmony took off â the girls were probably 14 â they were laying on the floor playing board games while taking turns cutting their parts.â
Adds CJ deVillar, a Record Plant staff engineer from 1997 to 1999 who worked with Michael Jackson and many other stars: âIt was a really great culture there for a while.â
LAWSUITS, DIVORCE AND BANKRUPTCY
In 2014, Moi visited the Record Plant and decided he loved everything about it â âI had goosebumps,â he says â and made a deal with Stevens to rent a two-room upstairs studio, Digi-Plant, as resident producer. Moi spent earnings from his London real-estate portfolio to invest in equipment and renovations.Â
When Boekhoorn and Lawrenceâs Philmar bought the studio two years later, Moi was disappointed. He and Stevens were close â Stevens calls Moi âmy favorite Italian guyâ â and Moi had suggested buying it himself, but they never advanced beyond the price-negotiation phase. Philmar won out with a better offer. âItâs business, right?â Moi says. âI was upset, but I was like, âThatâs how it went.’â
In January 2017, Peters, the studioâs managing partner, proposed a deal to Moi: The Italian producer would relinquish Digi-Plant so BMG could rent it for a higher price. In exchange, Moi would receive equity in the Record Plant, making him a minority owner. Moi agreed. (Peters says the BMG story is ânot correct.â He believes Lawrence and Moi initially liked each other but had their own ways of making and producing music, and their relationship eventually soured.) âItâs always about money,â Peters says. âWhatâs new?â
Moi declared himself an owner of Record Plant and insisted on receiving shares of its profits. But Lawrence and Philmar âbegan manufacturing excuses to string along Moi, and ultimately refused to share any profits,â Moiâs attorneys argued in court documents. A source close to Lawrence responds that Moi, âa difficult man,â took advantage of the proposed 2017 deal to âhijackâ the Record Plant trademark, âsomehow get controlâ of its email address and âstarted launching lawsuits.â The source adds: âHe absolutely robbed the Record Plant.â
Record Plant Recording Studio
Remko Peters
Moi sued Philmar in 2018, arguing that he had a 20% stake in the Record Plant, according to court documents. (This later increased to 27%, when Moi bought out a minority partner, he says.) Two years later, Boekhoorn, the Dutch billionaire who was a partner in Philmar, left the business, selling his stake to Lawrence for nearly $2.8 million, according to court records. âItâs one of the most expensive studios in L.A.,â Peters says. âAfter Covid, people bought their own studios at houses.â
That left Lawrence as president and CEO of the Record Plant. And the litigation with Moi was taking a toll on Lawrenceâs finances. According to Moi, Lawrence told him, âThis thing is a money pit. This thing is not working financially. Take the Record Plant but dismiss the lawsuit.â
In October 2020, Lawrence and Moi began negotiating a legal settlement. Moi says he met with Lawrence in New York for several hours, four or five days in a row, hammering out a handshake deal. On Nov. 8, 2020, Moi visited Lawrenceâs house in Los Angeles for a one-on-one meeting, with no attorneys present, and asked the Smeezingtons songwriter to sign a complicated, 89-page agreement that would make Moi and Lawrence co-owners of the Record Plant. As court records show, Lawrence signed a âPurchase and Sale Agreementâ transferring ownership of the studio to Moi, as well as numerous other documents, such as a transfer of the Record Plant trademark and its website domain.
As part of the agreement, Moi paid Lawrence $1. Why such a low amount? Because Lawrence owed so much money to Moi, as a Record Plant partner who owned 27% of the company but had not received any equity payments, they executed the deal basically for free â and in exchange for wiping out Lawrenceâs debt to him, Moi took ownership of the studio. âThe dollar was whatever,â Moi says. âHe had to put some price in there.â
Moi moved to take over ownership of the Record Plant, but Lawrence objected, claiming the November 2020 agreement he signed was made under false pretenses â âspecious,â his attorneys later called the agreement in a lawsuit. Miles Cooley, an attorney for Lawrence, later declared in court that Moi had neglected a âproposed transaction,â a âclosingâ and several other requirements outlined in a letter of agreement in order for him to take over the Record Plant. âWithout those items resolved, it was illogical, absurd and entirely without any factual basis for Moi to assert that he was âownerâ of Record Plant,â Cooley said.
The source close to Lawrence says the Smeezingtons songwriter was characteristically âtrusting, probably over-generous, not contentiousâ and âwas just trying to find an amicable solution with Moi.â The source adds that Lawrence âjust took Moiâs word he was going to do the right thing,â but âMoi just went in and grabbed everything,â including Record Plantâs trademarks. In court documents, Lawrence and Philmar accused Moi of âinternational misrepresentationâ and âfraudulent inducement.â In his statement, Cooley added, âNo court in this state would ever believe that Lawrence transferred the Record Plant business to Moi for $1.â
Moiâs response in court was to declare the Nov. 8 agreement to be âbinding and enforceableâ and accused Lawrence and Philmar of acting with âmalice, fraud and oppression.â The dueling lawsuits are elaborate and ugly. They became uglier still when Lawrence threw in an unexpected curveball â last August, he filed for bankruptcy.
Moiâs attorneys dug up Lawrenceâs 2022 divorce proceeding with his wife, Chappa. In April, Robb Report described their Los Angeles mansion â which contained a Moroccan-inspired spa â as a âlavish Encino spread ⌠loaded with every amenity imaginable and then some.â The cost of the house was $11.5 million. The article did not mention that Chappa had hired a forensic accountant to look into Lawrenceâs financial affairs, in order to determine his obligations to her and the coupleâs four young children. According to court records, Lawrence had nearly $22 million in property assets from three homes and $90 million from selling his song catalog to Tempo Music Investments, a music-investment company that partners with Warner Music Group. Lawrence also borrowed $15 million from Hipgnosis, the music-catalog company that has purchased hundreds of millions of dollars worth of songs from top songwriters, using his own catalog as collateral.
But Lawrence also had massive debts, including more than $23 million due in back taxes, according to court records. And as part of their divorce proceeding, Chappa accused Lawrence of withholding key financial details about his assets. According to court records, Lawrence asked a business manager to hold $2.3 million of his money â an amount he had not disclosed in the divorce proceeding.
âLook, he knows he made mistakes,â the source close to Lawrence says. âHe got himself in a bit of a mess.â
WHATâS NEXT FOR THE RECORD PLANT?
The type of bankruptcy Lawrenceâs company Philmar filed in March was Chapter 11 â a reorganization of the companyâs debts and assets under court supervision. But in June, Moi requested that the bankruptcy court change the designation to Chapter 7 â a more extreme form of bankruptcy that would require Philmar to liquidate all of its assets to pay off its many creditors. The court agreed.
âHe couldnât keep up the legal fees,â says the source close to Lawrence. âHis only option, at that point, was bankruptcy.â
Where does that leave the Record Plant? Itâs unclear. Moi is aggressive about wanting to be the studioâs owner, and has plans to renovate the studios, buy more equipment and work with the landlord, CIM Group, to resume the studioâs rent payments. (A CIM representative declined to comment.) He claims he owns the Record Plant trademarks, while bankruptcy-court trustees control the furniture, speakers, consoles and microphones contained in the building.
Due to Philmarâs Chapter 7 status, the trustees in the bankruptcy proceeding are required to sell the Record Plant assets to pay off the creditors (which include CIM for back rent payments, and Moi for equipment, as the Italian producer argues in court). But another buyer could come in and take over the assets. Amy L. Goldman, a court trustee, said in a July filing she has had sale discussions with âMr. Moi, the landlord, [Philmarâs] principals, and at least two others.â âWhen you sell in bankruptcy, you are required to get the highest and best price,â says Mary Whitmer, a bankruptcy attorney in Cleveland who is not involved in the case. â[The trustee] will tell all of them, âWhatever bid you make, Iâm going to shop it around.’â
Despite his bankruptcies, Lawrence, who identifies himself as the Record Plantâs owner and CEO, plans to keep the studio open if he winds up as the permanent owner, sources close to him say. Boekhoorn, the Dutch investor, could potentially be involved. (âPerhaps,â says Peters, Boekhoornâs filmmaker friend who worked at the Record Plant. âI cannot say yes, I cannot say no.â) But if Moi emerges as the studioâs owner through the bankruptcy proceeding, he will keep running it as a music studio. âI will double down and invest whatever it takes to relaunch it,â he says. âThree more studios upstairs, and renovate four studios downstairs. A major Italian renovation.â
Adds Moi: âWe want the Record Plant to survive. Iâm trying my best.â
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