Interviews » trusty-tune-shop

Trusty Tune Shop: A Grandma run studio!

We hear about a lot of great studios here at Tape Op but not very many are run by 75 year old grandmothers. Elsie Childers runs her Trusty Tuneshop studio on her farm in Nebo, Kentucky. The big room has a Tascam digital mixer and 24 tracks of digital recording while the little room has 8 tracks of analog recording. I called Elsie up one afternoon to find out how she became a studio owner and found out just how busy she really is.

How did you end up running a recording studio?

Well I've been running one since 1979 when I built the little one and then then my husband passed away in '91 — we'd been married for almost 48 years — and I went ahead and built the bigger one. Went in it a little deeper than just local and started going international.

Elsie Childers

Do you get work from all around?

Yes, I just got a call from a lady, an international star. She's just coming in off an Alaskan tour, next March and I think she's going to do four albums. She's going to try and do a Christmas one really quickly and then a pop one. She does R&B and some inspirational. So she's going to try and do a bunch of them while she's here. As many as she can do, then she's coming back in October. We had a concert pianist from Italy who came in and did an album last year, and brought his CD over this year. He has them done over there — he lives in Milan. He and his wife came last year and this year. We have quite a few people from different places and then we also do a lot of locals as well.

Is there any type of music you mostly specialize in or does it pretty much cover the map?

Pretty well whatever comes in. We do it all. Just anything. We try to be a service to everyone.

Is the studio connected to a house, or is it a totally separate.

No this is a big 40 by 60 building. I have a 130 acre working farm that this is on. We've got soybeans out here and a big lake in the back stocked with fish.

Is fishing included with the recording time?

Yeah. We've lived on this farm since 1950. We built a home here, and the home is just in front of the building. I have a walk and a patio and it's kind of connected.

It definitely looks like it's got a grandmother's touch with pink curtains and traditional family photos around the sides.

Yeah. I had one of those rock stars in here once he had his earrings and all that. Well he went through my little bitty studio and then stopped short when he got to the door of the big one and said; "This is spiritual." It broke us up.

It just looks unlike any studio I've ever seen.

It is different. We are very different people, that's why we have a palm tree as our symbol. You know palm trees are the only trees that have a heart.

Trusty Tune Shop collage

That's true. Do you engineer?

I do some, but mostly I have four engineers that work with me. A lot of them do different things. One of them is a drummer and the other can play saxophone. There's Bill Porter who did all of Elvis' last seven years. He's in St. Louis at college down there teaching. I can get him if people can afford him but he's pretty expensive and I haven't had to call him too much. He does let me list him as one of my engineers. He still has good ears. He was in Louisville, when I met him and he married a girl from Madisonville — that's a town just right up the road — that's the way I met him.

So that's how you rope all your engineers in.

One engineer does most of it and he's been in radio for twenty years and he has good ears. He knows what people want to hear.

How did you end up in recording? Was your husband...

No he was a farmer and a soil conservationist. He worked for the Soil Conservation Service until he passed away. He was their field man — he laid out pines and ditches and everything. He was a farmer.

Were you into music and recording then?

Yes, I started when I was twenty-two. I started taking my songs down to Nashville about time Chet [Atkins] came down as did Ted and Bob Ferguson and Buddy Kelling. He had a little bitty office down there in a cubby hole. CMA had a little office and Joe Walker was running it. Yeah, I had been taking my songs around, I have a publishing company and two small labels I use here at the studio mostly.

What kind of music do you put out?

Just whatever. Like we've put out some gospel on it and two pretty good sized country albums by Barry Russel. He has a band that's pretty good and he came in and did some albums. Discmakers printed them up for us. I'm a representative for Discmakers and I just got signed up with Billboard to be on their new TalentNet. I guess they are going full hog on this. I'm glad to be a representative.

Billboard's a big thing.

Yeah, I was proud for them wanting me to work with them.

That's great. Well, you seem awfully busy for someone who is supposed to be retired.

Well, I'm not retired, just tired. But I do enjoy it.

The studio stays pretty busy though?

Pretty busy. We had a heat wave. Yesterday and today it was a hundred. It's awfully hot here. So we didn't do too much through that. Then of course I go places like the World Congress of Arts and Communications every year. I chair their music seminar. I'm deputy director general of IBC in London and I go and chair their music seminars wherever they have them. This year it was in Portugal. We've been to Australia, to London, to Oxford University. We have 47 different countries represented and it's kind of a communications thing of learning people's cultures. It's interesting. Then I go to CMAA [Country Music Association of America] show every year down at Las Vegas. I'll be going again this year in October. We started LeAnne Rimes at 19 in '94 . She came down there when she was just little. I go every year. It helps the young people get started.

You sent me a photo from there. It looks like you're MCing.

Yeah, I do that every year. That's just something I do. I don't get paid for that, it's something I'm paying back.

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