
Trident
Where Glam Rock Was Born
Trident Studios opened in 1968 on St Anne's Court in London's Soho district, and for a remarkable five-year period it was arguably the most important creative space in British music. The studio built its own mixing consoles — the A-Range and B-Range — and the results were extraordinary.
David Bowie recorded Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars on a Trident console. Lou Reed tracked Transformer in the same room. Elton John made his early breakthrough albums there. The Beatles came to use the piano for "Hey Jude." The list of records made at Trident during its peak years reads like a curriculum for understanding 1970s rock.
Trident consoles were never mass produced and only a handful survive. Their rarity has elevated them to near-mythological status among collectors and engineers who have been fortunate enough to use one.
Notable Consoles

A-Range
1971 – 1975- Channels
- 16 – 24
- Layout
- Split
- EQ
- 3-band

B-Range / Series 80
1973 – 1984- Channels
- 16 – 40
- Layout
- Split
- EQ
- 3-band

TSM
1978 – 1985- Channels
- 24 – 64
- Layout
- In-line
- EQ
- 4-band swept

Di-An
1986 – 1989- Channels
- 32 – 96 (digital)
- Layout
- In-line digital (centralised DSP)
- EQ
- Digital, parametric
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