The first Greek hire by a historic US music studio
Listening to "Every Breath You Take" as a teenager in his room in the Attica suburb of Pikermi, Alexandros Kalteziotis never imagined that in just 10 years he'd be in the same studio where The Police recorded much of their work.
Yet the 25-year-old graduate of the Berklee College of Music has already spent roughly a year working in the hallowed halls of Henson Recording Studios, a major chapter in US musical history, stretching back to Charlie Chaplin, who built the Hollywood complex in 1917 as a film studio. Herb Alpert and Jerry Moss took over the space in 1966 and used it to house A&M Records, until the entire thing was bought by Jim Henson in 2000, where he carried on the legacy of the renowned recording studios. Today, the company of the creator of "The Muppet Show" is a sprawling facility that rarely lets people who are not related to show business in, whatever Kermit...
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