(Boyers, Pennsylvania) claims to house over 20 million assets, including the masters for Sony Music, Universal, and Warner. However, those are storage clients —they do not own the collection. ABKCO owns theirs.
The machines themselves are dying. The world’s supply of working Studer A80 and A820 tape decks is finite. The archive has a "parts organ donor" program: whenever a studio closes, they buy their broken tape machine just to strip it for pinch rollers and capstan motors. The Largest Multitrack Music Collection Ever- -...
In the digital age, we often take for granted the ability to isolate a vocal, remove a guitar solo, or listen solely to the kick drum of a classic rock anthem. But behind every great song is a ghost in the machine: the multitrack master tape. For decades, these reels of magnetic tape—holding the individual building blocks of music history—were scattered across storage units, record label basements, and private attics. That is, until one man decided to bring them all home. (Boyers, Pennsylvania) claims to house over 20 million
Imagine a painting. The stereo master is the finished canvas hanging in a museum. The multitrack master is the pile of 24 individual transparencies—each containing just the drums, just the bass, just the backing vocals, or just the cough at the end of the fourth take. The machines themselves are dying