Since 2016, Dave Cobb has leased the studio and used it to operate his Low Country Sound record label imprint.
[2] Chet Atkins and Owen Bradley constructed a new 3-story building at the original address of 806 17th Avenue South (the street would be renamed Music Square West in 1975) to be leased by RCA Victor.
[3] Studio A was one of three similarly-designed large studios built by RCA in New York, Los Angeles, and Nashville specifically for recording large groups of musicians, such as choirs, string sections, or orchestras, playing together live, which was essential to the Nashville sound production style.
[7] Between 1965 and 1977 the studio hosted artists including Perry Como, The Blackwood Brothers, Connie Smith, Charley Pride, Lynn Anderson, Dolly Parton, The Beach Boys, The Blackwood Brothers, George Beverly Shea, Nancy Sinatra, Eddy Arnold, Merle Haggard, Lee Hazlewood and Ann-Margret, and Dottie West.
Artists recording at the studio in the Javelina era included Amy Grant, Glen Campbell, DC Talk, Jimmy Buffett, Tim McGraw, Beth Nielsen Chapman, Reba McEntire, Little Texas, Point of Grace, Martina McBride, Wynonna Judd, Mark Chesnutt, Sawyer Brown, Rebecca Lynn Howard, Steve Wariner, Alabama, Vince Gill, BeBe & CeCe Winans, Dan Seals.
[13] In 2009 Folds enlisted the help of Sharon Corbitt-House to re-open it to outside clients as a commercial studio under the name of Ben's Place and later Grand Victor Sound.
[11][14] Artists recording at the studio during this timeframe included Kacey Musgraves, Joe Bonamassa, John Hiatt, and Jewel.
Folds himself recorded So There at the studio with the yMusic Ensemble, which included a piano concerto performed with the 83-piece Nashville Symphony and producer Elliot Scheiner.
[13] In late 2014, just prior to the building's demolition, Curb Records founder, Mike Curb, and local philanthropists Chuck Elcan and Aubrey Preston partnered to collectively purchase the building for $5.6 million in order to preserve its historic significance.