Tours of Historic RCA Studio B depart from the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum daily. Tickets are $12.95/adult, $10.95/youth ages 6-17, and are available only in conjunction with museum admission.

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Historic RCA Studio B

Take a sneakPEEk of Historic RCA Studio B

Tour Historic RCA Studio B

Tours of Historic RCA Studio B depart 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. daily from the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum.  Tickets are $12.99/adult, $10.99/youth ages 6-17, and are available only in conjunction with museum admission. Group rates are also available. Call 615-416-2001 for more information.

Museum members receive a discounted rate to Historic RCA Studio B - $8.00/adult and $7.00/youth. To become a member, click here.

Click here to buy the Studio B merchandise

The Past

Jim Reeves at the Studio B microphone, with (l to r) Dean Manuel, Mel Rogers, Leo Jackson, and James KirklandHistoric RCA Studio B - once the recording home of popular music titans such as Elvis Presley, Chet Atkins, Eddy Arnold, and the Everly Brothers - is both a classroom for Nashville-area students and a popular cultural attraction.

Following the Mike Curb Family Foundation's philanthropic 2002 purchase and subsequent lease in perpetuity to the non-profit Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum, the storied studio's exterior has been renovated and the interior has been returned to its 1970s era prime as an analog "temple of sound."

Take a 360º Tour of Studio B

Built by Dan Maddox in 1957, RCA Studio B first became known as one of the cradles of the "Nashville Sound" in the 1960s. A sophisticated style characterized by background vocals and strings, the Nashville Sound both revived the popularity of country music and helped establish Nashville as an international recording center.

Hitmakers in Studio B have included Arnold, Jennings, Bobby Bare, Parton, Reeves, Willie Nelson, and Floyd Cramer, among others. For many years, Country Music Hall of Fame inductee Chet Atkins managed RCA's Nashville operation and produced hundreds of hits in Studio B.

Studio B has also been home to numerous innovations in recording practices, including the development of the "Nashville number system," a musician's shorthand for notating a song's chord structure, which facilitates the creation of individual parts while retaining the integrity of the song.

First made available to Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum visitors in 1977, RCA Studio B was donated to the Museum by the late Dan and Margaret Maddox in 1992. It was operated as an attraction until shortly before the opening of the Museum's new downtown facility in 2001.

View Studio B Top Hits

The Present

Historic RCA Studio B's New Logo Now leased to the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum from the Curb Family Foundation for $1.00 a year, Studio B is co-managed and operated in partnership with Nashville's Belmont University.

The studio has begun a new life as a learning laboratory for students enrolled in Belmont's Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business, studying recording fundamentals; as a classroom for Nashville-area middle and high school students, learning the science of sound and recording technology; and as a cultural attraction for visitors, who can become acquainted with the studio's place in the evolution of Nashville as the Music City.

Take a 360º Tour of Studio B.

Brochure

Download the Historic RCA Studio B Brochure: