Raindirk
Olympic's Secret Weapon
Cyril Jones founded Raindirk in 1973 and built custom mixing consoles entirely by hand, one at a time, to the precise specification of the studios and engineers who commissioned them. He had no marketing department, no advertising, and no profile outside a small circle of serious recording engineers — and he didn't need one.
The Raindirk Series 3 installed at Olympic Studios in Barnes, West London became arguably the most-recorded-on console in British rock history. In the decade it sat at the heart of Olympic, an almost implausible roster of major artists worked with it — often without knowing, or particularly caring, what brand of desk was in the room.
Raindirk's obscurity is entirely disproportionate to its influence. The Series 3 was considered by Olympic's engineers to be as musically satisfying as any Neve they had used, and the Concorde — one of the first British in-line consoles — was owned personally by Pete Townshend of The Who. Deep Purple had originally commissioned Jones' work for De Lane Lea Studios, and the lineage ran directly from there.
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Notable Consoles
Series 3
1975 – 1987- Channels
- 24 – 40
- Layout
- Split / In-line
- EQ
- 3 – 4 band
Concorde
1977 – 1992- Channels
- 24 – 32
- Layout
- In-line
- EQ
- 4-band
Symphony
1988 – 1998- Channels
- 32 – 48
- Layout
- In-line
- EQ
- 4-band