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    Fame Recording & Rehearsal Studios Photos

    Recommended Reviews - Fame

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    Reviews With Photos

    Tony A.

    This is a nice little piece of history. Tours are atv9am and 4pm and they are recording all the time. To get to hang out in the studio where some of the greats had gotten their start or cut their 2nd and 3rd albums was just a really cool experience. We got to listen to some recorded music in Studio A where Aretha and many others cut some tracks. It would be really cool to get to here some live music on the tour, but maybe that can just be a suggestion for now

    StudioB
    Terri F.

    Saturday was when the tours are. The tickets were $15/ each . It was a very informative tour and questions were answered. It was great I would recommend it. We also went to Alabama Music Hall of Fame and muscle shoals music studio. We did all three tours in one day it was well worth the time. Then we had dinner in Florence down town. Fun day!

    The board
    Laura M.

    Fame Studios is what brought us the north Alabama and it didn't disappoint. The tour guide was a Fame engineer and ended with us in a control room sitting and listening to tracks from the Small Town Big Sounds album.

    Exterior, a few parking spots
    Farrah D.

    I'm pretty surprised that FAME (I didn't know it was an acronym until the tour) has so few reviews--the way the staff talked, they do a pretty steady tour business. A couple of the people in our group were visiting from Saskatchewan! We had a great hour here on a Saturday morning. The young woman working the front and answering the phones, Abby, was a total delight. She clearly loves being around such an important part of American music history and was really fun to talk to. I can't recall our tour guide's name but she was great. She has worked at FAME for several years and had a very casual style as compared to what you might be thinking of for a paid tour. For one thing, there are really only two rooms--studio A and studio B--so it's not as if you're zipping around from place to place. She was not scripted at all. Rather, she just talked informally about how FAME came to be, who has recorded there, and how the company has evolved over time. We started our tour in what was basically a break room; there were pictures on the wall all the way up to the ceiling, and the tour guide pointed out a few of the pictures and told anecdotes about those musicians. At the end of the tour, we went into the control room of Studio A, where the son of FAME's founder, who has gone into the family business, was working on a track that had been recorded in the studio earlier this year. He took questions from our group and showed us some cool stuff about how the sound board works--taking different components out, changing the volume of certain components, etc. And did I mention that you get to stand in the room where Etta James recorded "I'd Rather Go Blind"?!?! Overall, my husband and I thought this was a super fun way to spend a morning. It's not fancy. You're not getting a slick experience created by marketing consultants. FAME is a working studio that hasn't changed a whole lot since the '60s. The experience is best for people who have at least some awareness of the history of the music scene in the Shoals area--the staff assumes that you know your stuff already, at least a little bit--you're not going to get an orientation here. That said, Muscle Shoals/Florence are not close to much of anything else--we went 2.5 hours out of our way to get here (we were in Nashville for a long weekend)--so hopefully the folks that come to the studio know exactly what they're coming for.

    Gordon M.

    In Muscle Shoals, a small town in North Alabama, history was made FAME studios. Some of the artists that recorded here were; Aretha Franklin, Duane Allman, John Hiatt, Little Richard, Bobbie Gentry, Otis Redding, Spooner and the Spoons, Otis Clay, Ella Washington, Soul Survivors, Alabama, Jamey Johnson, Wilson Pickett, Jerry Lee Lewis, The Drifters, George Jones, Ray Stevens, Billy Ocean, Bill Haley & The Comets, John Paul White, Billy Currington, Darryl Worley, Waylon Jennings, Bobby Womack, The Ramrods, Drive By Truckers, Jason Isbell & the 400 unit, Iron Horse, Civil Wars. They offer tours M-F and sell t-shirts. This place doesn't have the ambience of the breakaway Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, but is still a must visit for music enthusiast.

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    9 months ago

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    7 months ago

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    3 months ago

    Drove 2 hours out of our way to experience the studio and studio tour. Amazing tour and studio. This was the highlight of my trip!

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    Review Highlights - Fame

    Hell, the parking lot should be a National Historic Landmark-- Duane Allman camped out there.

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    Muscle Shoals Sound Studio

    Muscle Shoals Sound Studio

    (55 reviews)

    Muscle Shoals has got the Swampers. What an iconic line- and what a place to visit if you're in the…read morearea. This very small and humble looking building has a huge history in music in America. The tour was a great way to see and experience what it was like when rock, pop and country legends recorded there. The tales of recording sessions bring everything to life. The studio still records music and it is part of a non-profit organization. The building is on the national register of historic places. Our tour guide was passionate about the history past and present. It's a good companion tour to the tour of the Fame studio just a few miles away.

    A fascinating tour if you have any interest in the music of the 60s and 70s. Very easy to sign up…read morein advance via the website with lots of options to fit all schedules (every hour on the half hour.) Excellent tour guide, unfortunately her name escapes me, but she held our attention throughout. It lasted about an hour, and was packed with information. One interesting factoid is that this studio is beatifully restored to what it looked like in the late 60s/early 70s, and is set up somewhat like a museum (photos from the past everywhere) even though it is also (once again) a working recording studio. It is now owned and operated by a non-profit foundation--at the time of this writing only one of the original Swampers is still living. Highly recommend watching the movie documentary "Muscle Shoals" prior to booking this tour.

    Fame - recording_studios - Updated June 2026

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