London, England (CNN) -- The iconic Abbey Road music studios made famous by the Beatles are not for sale, the music label that owns them said Sunday, after days of speculation that they were. It is seeking a partner to help pay for upgrades, according to Terra Firma, which controls EMI, owner of the recording studios.
"EMI confirms that it is holding preliminary discussions for the revitalization of Abbey Road with interested and appropriate third parties," Terra Firma said. But that does not mean the studios are for sale, it added. "In mid-2009, we did receive an offer to buy Abbey Road for in excess of £30 million (currently about $46 million), but this was rejected since we believe that Abbey Road should remain in EMI's ownership," the music company said in a statement.
The studios became world famous when the Beatles were photographed crossing the road there for the cover of their album "Abbey Road."
But it's not only where the Beatles recorded "All You Need is Love" and numerous other songs, but where much of Britain's best known music of the 20th century was laid down. Rock stars Pink Floyd and Cliff Richard, composer Sir Edward Elgar, and the movie soundtracks for "Star Wars" and the "Harry Potter" films were recorded there.
English Heritage, a cultural institution, is considering plans to list the studios as a site of national historic importance, Terra Firma said. That would give it protected status. "EMI ... supports such a listing as an appropriate way of protecting our world famous music heritage site," the company said Sunday.
Terra Firma bought EMI in 2007.
Andrew Lloyd Webber, the composer of "Phantom of the Opera" and "Cats" and one of Britain's richest men, is "very interested" in buying the studios, a representative said Friday. "He first recorded there in 1967 with Tim Rice. Andrew has since recorded most of his musicals there," said the representative, Jenni Pain. "He thinks it is vital that the studios are saved for the future of the music industry in the UK. Abbey Road has such great facilities, with three major recording studios, and Andrew has probably brought more musicians to record there than anyone else, because it has the capacity to record large orchestral productions."
That's good, but I had heard that the National Trust wanted it. That would have secured it's future for the long-term (or would it just have turned it into a museum??).
have it so that you can pay to go in and pay to use different studios, say playing on a "pseudo mixer" wherre you can choose from a selection of classic tracks recorded at Abbey Rd, and you can have ten mins of "fucking about with the masters" in data format...and then ave your finished projects saved to memory stick...for you to buy....
can you imagine? i'd pay to do that
let's face it.....if the "Abbey Road crossing" still gets the amount of use it does to this day...can you imagine the scope of a paid tour of the actual studios, and the possibility of "twiddling the knobs"...even if only a mock-up