[2] Since then Trod Nossel has worked with many artists, including Fleetwood Mac and R. Kelly, as well as placing songs for television.
[citation needed] Andrew Loog Oldham, manager and producer of the Rolling Stones was a close friend of Cavalier.
He described “life on the Trod Nossel Studios lot” as “an American movie” in an interview on a Sirius Radio commentary (Chapter 6).
The studio has received much press, in many news and magazine articles, including those in The New York Times, for its involvement in the industry.
[3] The Record Journal (a Connecticut paper) advocates, “In the ‘60s it was all about Trod Nossel.” Richard Hanley of Quinnipiac University said that Trod Nossel “was the key place for artists” and that Doc “embodied the spirit of the age.”[4] Doc’s daughter, Darlene Cavalier, now runs the studio.