The Neve 80 Series are a series of hand-wired analoguemixing consoles designed and manufactured from 1968 to 1979 by Neve Electronics, founded by the English electronics engineerRupert Neve. Renowned for their sound quality, Neve 80 Series consoles dominated the high-end recording studio market in the 1970s.[1]
Following Neve's success with the A88 and BCM10 mixing consoles and the company's move to a new purpose-built factory in Melbourn in 1968, the company developed and introduced the first 80 Series mixing consoles.
Each of these consoles was assembled with a combination of Neve's preamps, line amps, and compressor/limiters modules, completely hand-wired by Neve technicians to exacting standards.
The simplest 80 Series consoles had 4 buses and were outfitted with Neve's 1073 preamps, 1272 line amps, and 2254 compressor/limiters. The 8014 featured 16 channels, and 8 track monitoring, while the 8034 featured 20 channels, and 16 track monitoring.
In 1976, Neve introduced the first in-line-monitor Neve consoles, the 8058 and 8068.[1] In 1978, the 8078, last of the hardwired "production" 80 Series consoles, was introduced.[1] Late-’70s Neves were available factory-equipped with NECAM (Neve Computer Assisted Mixdown system), Neve’s first foray into computer-assisted mixing technology and the world’s first successful moving-fader automation system.[1]
A limited number of these consoles were ever made; Neve ceased production of the 80 Series in 1979.
Removing many of the inadequacies of the 8078 series was a custom-made Neve console A4792, constructed in 1978 for George Martin's AIR Studios in Montserrat.[1] Used on such recordings as Dire Straits' award-winning album Brothers in Arms, that A4792 console is now in operation at Subterranean Sound Studios in Toronto, Ontario. Only three of these consoles were ever made; of the other two originally installed at AIR Studios in London, one is in operation at AIR Lyndhurst Hall, while the other is in use at The Warehouse Studio in Vancouver, B.C.
Legacy
The rarity of these consoles makes them quite valuable, and there are now only a few select studios who have Neve 80 Series consoles still in use. These include:
Lattitude Studio South in Leiper's Fork, Tennessee (8078) owned by producer, writer, engineer, mixer Michael Lattanzi. Console previously owned by Dave Way in Los Angeles.[20]
Sound City Studios in Van Nuys, California (operating one 28-channel 8028[27] and one 40-channel 8078) (which closed in May 2011 and reopened in early 2017). The board was purchased by Dave Grohl for his personal studio, Studio 606. In 2013, he produced a documentary about the console and an album recorded with it with a large panel of rock stars, called Sound City
^Scoppa, Bud (1 March 2009). "L.A. Grapevine, March 2009". Mix. Retrieved 21 March 2017. A 28-input, 16-bus, 24-monitor 8028 with 1085 EQs and no automation.