User Manual
Table Of Contents
- UAD Powered Plug-Ins
- Introduction
- UAD Installation
- Overview
- QuickStart DVD
- System Requirements
- Supported Hosts
- Latest Information & Software Updates
- UAD Software Installation
- Install Software First
- UAD Hardware Installation
- Authorization
- Authorize Plug-Ins Procedure
- Load Authorization File
- Offline Authorization
- Using Unlicensed Plug-Ins
- Verifying Installation
- Learn More
- Software Removal
- UAD System Overview
- My.uaudio.com
- Using Multiple UAD Cards
- UAD Meter & Control Panel
- Overview
- Launching the UAD Meter & Control Panel Application
- Using the UAD Meter
- UAD Meter Elements
- UAD Control Panel
- System Information Panel
- Plug-Ins Panel
- Configuration Panel
- Help & Support Panel
- Using UAD Powered Plug-Ins
- Tempo Sync
- UAD Delay Compensation
- UAD-Xpander & UAD-Xtenda
- LA-2A and 1176LN
- LA-3A Compressor
- Fairchild 670
- Precision Multiband
- Precision Limiter
- Precision Buss Compressor
- Neve 33609 Compressor
- VCA VU
- Neve 88RS Channel Strip
- CS-1 Channel Strip
- Precision Equalizer
- Cambridge EQ
- Pultec and Pultec-Pro
- Neve 1073 Equalizer
- Neve 1081 Equalizer
- Helios Type 69 Equalizer
- Roland CE-1
- Roland Dimension D
- Roland RE-201
- RealVerb Pro
- DreamVerb
- Plate 140
- Precision Maximizer
- Precision De-Esser
- Precision Enhancer kHz
- SPL Transient Designer
- Nigel
- Introducing Nigel
- Preflex Plug-in
- Preflex Modules
- Gate/Comp Module
- Amp Module
- Amp Controls
- Cabinet Module
- Phasor Module
- Mod Filter Module
- TremModEcho plug-in
- Trem/Fade Module
- Mod Delay Module
- Echo Module
- Moog Multimode Filter
- History
- Index

UAD Powered Plug-Ins Manual - 356 - Chapter 39: History
With all this success, Universal Recording went through several incarnations, with the dream
version completed in 1955. At that time it was the most advanced and largest independent re-
cording facility in the country attracting top producers like Nelson Riddle, Mitch Miller and
Quincy Jones. It was also at that time that Bruce Swedien went to work for the studio.
"It's absolutely true," he states. "Bill Putnam was the father of recording as we know it today.
The processes and designs which we take for granted — the design of modern recording desks,
the way components are laid out and the way they function, console design, cue sends, echo
returns, multitrack switching — they all originated in Bill's imagination."
Murray Allen, who purchased Chicago's Universal Recording from Putnam in 1972 elaborates.
"Bill was a brilliant person, highly talented, with a great set of ears," he says. "He was Duke
Ellington's favorite engineer, among many, and at one time he had more singles in the top 40
than anybody else. At the time, if you needed something in sound, he was the guy. He designed
systems for the Sands and other big showrooms in Las Vegas; John Kennedy flew him out to ar-
range the sound for the broadcast of his inauguration. He did it all."
Moving West- United Recording Corp. With his Chicago studio so successful, Putnam's clients
began urging him to open a facility on the West Coast, and finally he was convinced. In 1957
he sold his interest in Universal Recording, started a new company called United Recording
Corp. and moved to Hollywood, taking over a building at 6050 Sunset and starting construc-
tion on new studios. Stereo was taking off, and Putnam was determined to incorporate as many
technological innovations into the complex as possible.
In 1958, Studio B was completed along with two reverb chambers. The facility soon grew to
three studios, a mixdown room, three mastering rooms including one with stereo, and a small
manufacturing plant, all in 15,000 square feet. The studios were busy around the clock, with
projects from Ricky Nelson to voiceovers for Hanna Barbera cartoons like the Flintstones.
In the early 60s Western Recorders, one block away at 6000 Sunset, was acquired and re-
modeled. The studio was renamed United West-
ern, and business continued to grow. The talent
behind and in front of the glass in those days
reads like a who's who of classic recording:
Bones Howe, Wally Heider and Lee Hirschberg
were on staff. During the 60s and 70s the studios
were jumping 24 hours a day, seven days a
week with artists like Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby,
Dean Martin, Sammy Davis, Nat King Cole,
Johnny Mercer and Ray Charles. Charles classic
"I Can't Stop Loving You" was recorded there, as