BBC finalises Maida sale

BBC finalises Maida sale

News

norman lebrecht

August 14, 2023

The impoverished corporation confirmed the sale this morning of its Maida Vale studios to a consortium of film-makers – Tim Bevan with Eric Fellner, and Hans Zimmer with Steven Kofsky.

No price was given. The previous deal was a low £10 million but a last-minute counterbid may have pushed that up.

Here’s the press release:

The BBC has today announced that its Maida Vale recording studios have now been sold.

Maida Vale Studios has become a much-loved and seminal part of musical history, having been bought by the BBC in 1933. Since then, it has seen the likes of David Bowie, The Beatles, Led Zeppelin and Dusty Springfield record in the building, and has become a home for the BBC Performing Groups.

Maida Vale has been sold to a partnership between Tim Bevan & Eric Fellner, and Hans Zimmer & Steven Kofsky. The purchasers have agreed that Maida Vale’s legacy as a centre for pioneering music-making will continue, with plans to keep the original façade of the building and to preserve the ethos of Maida Vale. Initial plans also state that the building will remain as a studio space, with a multi-million pound refurbishment plan for its existing studios. There will also be the creation of a not-for-profit educational facility, and a long-term commitment to providing local jobs, innovation and investment.

Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner, Co-Chairmen of Working Title, said:

“Maida Vale Studios has been synonymous with artistic excellence for generations. The venue has become part of the fabric of the UK’s pioneering cultural industry, from helping to nurture new and ground-breaking artists, to housing some of the world’s most legendary musicians. We are thrilled to be working with our old friends Hans Zimmer and Steve Kofsky on this once in a lifetime project and collectively we are determined to continue the BBC’s legacy at Maida Vale by attracting global talent to the UK. Through our redevelopment plans we will future proof the historic site, continuing its presence in the local community with a new education facility, whilst creating a world class studio space for the next generation of composers, producers, editors and engineers.”

Lorna Clarke, Director of Music at the BBC said:

“Maida Vale has played such an important part in the BBC’s history, and its significance in popular culture is huge. We are so pleased to secure a sale which looks to continue the bright, vibrant future of music making in this iconic building – not only providing new studio spaces but jobs and an education facility.

We look forward to being able to continue to deliver world-class music to BBC audiences with our new tailor-made BBC Music Studios in the wonderfully rich cultural district of London’s East Bank. The sale of Maida Vale comes after plans were announced in 2018 that the BBC will move its music studios and performing groups from its Maida Vale location to a new, purpose-built recording and studio space in Stratford’s cultural quarter of East Bank, residing in East London’s Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.”

Hans Zimmer, composer and music producer, said:

“The first time I worked for the BBC at their Maida Vale Studios was 45 years ago. I was just a kid, in awe, honoured to be booked to play on one of my first sessions. I still remember the strong pull, the desire to touch the walls, as if that would somehow allow me to connect to the artists whose extraordinary music had resonated against these walls on a daily basis. This was a place of revolutionary science in the service of art, this was a place that inspired you to give your best, where music was performed around the clock and art was taken seriously. For the people by the people. This was the place that kept a struggling musician like me from giving up.

At the same time, Tim, Eric and I started working together, making our first movies. Movies not only made in Britain with the greatest talent the country had – and still has – to offer, but movies that often provoked and had something to say about a changing Britain; that gave voice to our generation. Usually by making you laugh. My work with Working Title gave me my career in Hollywood, where Steve Kofsky became my partner, and he and I made sure to drag the work from as many Hollywood films as possible back to Britain. So now I want to close the circle: make Maida Vale Studios a place that inspires, teaches, technologically serves the arts and humanity, and gives the next generation the same opportunities I was given: to create and to never give up.”

The new BBC Music Studios in East Bank – planned to open in late 2025 – will include tailored spaces designed to accommodate the world’s biggest musical acts and ensembles. Providing listeners with unparalleled access, the new studios will also be open to the public, featuring a library housing the largest sheet music collection in the world. It will be host to classical, pop and choral music and will accommodate the requirements of the BBC Performing Groups. It will also host music sessions from the likes of Radio 1 Live Lounge through to BBC Proms rehearsals, Radio 3 concerts, and special performances from the BBC Pop music stations, with the public invited to attend.

Moving the BBC Music Studios from Maida Vale is also part of a wider partnership with the V&A, Sadler’s Wells, UCL and UAL’s London College of Fashion to create London’s newest creative quarter, East Bank. This partnership has also extended to the local community, where the BBC has been supporting East London talent through a programme of music education and outreach including local apprenticeships such as the STEP traineeship.

Comments

  • UK Arts Administrator says:

    This is terrific news which will provide a fantastic new facility in London for large film scores, as well as smaller projects, post-production and much more. Hans Zimmer is a terrific music producer, in the true sense of the word, as for his projects he pulls together people of many and varied skills. His projects also inject very significant sums into the UK orchestral and music production economy, with spin-offs all down the line as there is a highly complex ecosystem that sits under the actual film music sessions. This is a really positive and most welcome boost to the UK’s music industry.

    • Peter San Diego says:

      Let’s hope that it boosts the UK’s musical arts as much as its musical industry. These initial statements are most encouraging.

  • Gustavo says:

    Zimmer ohne Aussicht.

  • CarlD says:

    Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner are top drawer folks. All best to them with this!

  • Donald Hansen says:

    Why no mention in the press release of Maida Vale’s contribution to CLASSICAL music, beginning in 1934 with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Adrian Boult? Oh well, you can read all about that by going to Wikipedia for an extensive and well written article. It’s amazing what went on at Maida Vale.

    • Rob Keeley says:

      Stravinsky, for one.

    • Allen Harris says:

      Because for the BBC’s Director of Music, Lorna Clarke, classical music doesn’t exist. She it was who made the recent idiotic proposal to axe the BBC Singers and make 20% cuts to the BBC Orchestras.

  • Corno di Caccia says:

    In a typically ridiculous BBC appointment, Lorna Clarke has no background in Classical music whatsoever, which rather presages plans for its demise. It has been showing for years and, judging by the poor standard of presenters on Radio 3 and the array of glittering nobodies that present the few televised Prom concerts, its not looking good. So, no surprise that no mention was made in the Press release of the importance of Classical music as part of Maida Vale’s history. I’m sure Lorna Clarke didn’t even notice.

  • Anton says:

    A legendary rehearsal space, yes. But the acoustic of MV1 is not in all honesty ideal for big symphonic forces: it only sounds good in the room when occupied by less than 40 players. The amount of manipulation BBC engineers used to produce an uncluttered result over the radio was incredible. The musicians themselves will be better off elsewhere.

  • Rob Keeley says:

    ‘iconic’ – tick
    ‘vibrant’- tick

    not a mention of the great classical music figures who worked there.

  • Zippy says:

    How is it that it can be impossible for the BBC to keep going due to asbestos, but a marvellous new facility in other hands?

  • Anthony Sayer says:

    in the wonderfully rich cultural district of London’s East Bank

    These BBC types just can’t help themselves, can they?

  • Anon says:

    Zimmer is recording in London at the moment. How lucky for him he’ll have his own studio very soon!

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