Le Bar Bat Hi 8 Film Late Rent Jon Hammond Show Theme Song




HammondCast Show show

Summary: #WATCHMOVIE HERE: Le Bar Bat Hi 8 Film Late Rent Jon Hammond Show Theme Song Jon's archive https://archive.org/details/LeBarBatHi8FilmLateRentJonHammondShowThemeSong Youtube https://youtu.be/Crtq3tjm4FU Le Bar Bat Hi 8 Film Late Rent Jon Hammond Show Theme Songby Jon Hammond  Le Bar Bat​ Hi8 Film Late Rent Jon Hammond Show Theme SongMUSICIANS:Alex Foster  tenor saxophoneBarry Finnerty  guitarChuggy Carter  /  Leslie J. Carter  percussionJames Preston  drumsJon Hammond  organJon Hammond Band​Camera Joe Bergerwww.HammondCast.comLe Bar Bat 311 W 57th St, New York, NY 10019Cable TV Show - Jon Hammond ShowManhattan Neighborhood Network - MNN​ Ch. 1 35 years#LeBarBat#MediasoundStudios #BobbyBlankNote this club was the old Mediasound Studios (excerpt from Mix Online Magazine) by Bobby Blank: "Bob Clearmountain, Godfrey Diamond, Michael Barbiero, Michael Delugg, Harvey Goldberg, Joe Ferla, Jeff Lesser, Alec Head, Bill Stein, Ron Saint Germain, Michael Brauer, Don Wershba, Ed Stasium, Gregg Mann, Carl Beatty, Kol Marshall, Lincoln Clapp, Joe Jorgensen, Alan Varner, Doug Epstein, Liz Saron, Trudy Schroder, Ramona Janquitto, Ron Dante, Charlie Calello, Tony Bongiovi — these are just some of the names that became the nucleus of Mediasound.In New York City, from the close of the '60s through the birth and death of disco, Mediasound was a hit machine. Founded by Harry Hirsch, with assistance from Bob Walters and financial/business backing from owners Joel Roseman and the late John Roberts, Mediasound opened in June 1969 at 311 West 57th St. in the heart of Manhattan. Once home to the Manhattan Baptist Church, today the site is occupied by Providence (formerly the trendy Le Bar Bat), where you can still see the Gold Records on the wall. The live room, home to the hits, with, from left, the late Joe Jorgensen, chief engineer Fred Christie and founder Harry Hirsch The original idea came out of a random talk between Hirsch and Walters, who then went looking for money. “There were many 4-track studios in New York City,” recalls Roseman. “There was room for a state-of-the-art facility, one that could handle any kind of recording, tape copies, mastering — so we decided to change the scope of the idea. We went from the original $100,000 investment to over $1 million. It took a very long time to find the space, but Harry Hirsch found the Baptist church on 57th Street.”“I will always be grateful to John Roberts, Joel Roseman and Bob Walters,” Hirsch says, “who listened when I told them, ‘I found a church from heaven on 57th Street,’ and trusted me to design, build and be its first president.”A contemplative Barry Manilow in the live room.Producer Ron Dante: “I brought in my new recordingartist Barry Manilow to record his second album—the one that included our first breakthrough million-seller ‘Mandy.’ Right away we knew that Mediasound was the place to make the best-sounding records in the business.” Bob Clearmountain (Kool & The Gang, Sister Sledge, Gloria Gaynor and countless others) was handpicked to change the light bulbs 40 feet up in the cathedral ceiling. "I was the only one nuts enough to go up there!" he recalls.Producer Ron Dante with Pat Benatar. Dante: "Being in Mediasound always made you feel like you were about to create a hit."Tony Bongiovi, front, seen here withTrini Lopez in 1978, at Power StationThe owners, at Woodstock '94, 25 years after the original: JoelRoseman (L) and the late John RobertsPat BenatarCharlie Callelo"  Publication date 2019-03-19Usage Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 InternationalTopics Le Bar Bat, Late Rent, Jon Hammond Show, Mediasound Studios, Cable TV Show, Theme Song, Hammond Organ, Fender Showman amp, SNL Saxophonist, Alex Foster, Barry Finnerty, Jon Hammond, Chuggy Carter, James Preston, Drummer