London offers the music enthusiast with lively live shows recorded in the city’s past-historical chapels. Usually, the structures of churches created an acoustic quality that had a profound influence on the beginning development of music. Chapel acoustics created a great experience of sensation surrounded by the sound of music, enrapturing the audience. Considering that, recording studio London developed on the principles of acoustics for taking sound, it seemed a natural development that a cathedral will turn into a viable as well as sought-after recording space for music.
Soon after The second world war, bombed-out and deconsecrated churches played a major part in London’s musical life. St. John the Evangelist, Smith Square, as soon as restored to its cathedral-like glory grew to become a small concert venue. Throughout the daytime, the special acoustics make it a superb recording location. St. Luke’s, Old Street, refurbished for musical use is place to your London Symphony Orchestra. The former Trinity Chapel, Borough, is right now the Henry Wood Hall, a dedicated recording facility and also rehearsal hall. This hall also keeps an affiliation with Hyperion records, a high-esteemed traditional label.