The NSC / Sound Enterprises Story
In 1989 two businessmen by the names Steve Martel and Ron Murphy decided to open a store specialising in old phonograph records, situated at 17610 W. Warren in Detroit, Michigan. They named the business National Sound Corporation.
They had the idea of also being able to cut Dub plates and records for the use in their customer’s jukeboxes, and so some record cutting equipment was also set up in one of the shops back rooms. Shortly after opening they where visited by Derrick May and Juan Atkins, who whilst looking for records noticed the cutting lathe and asked about having some acetates made.
After cutting a couple of dubs for Derrick and Juan, Ron was told that there were a lot of Detroit producers that needed a local place to have dubs and masters cut. Ron decided to upgrade the equipment whilst Derrick and Juan spread the word about the new cutting service.
The first master to be cut was Plus 8 label, followed a week later by Underground Resistance label.
Since those first masters were cut back in ‘89 there have been thousands that have followed, all inscribed with the initials NSC.
Producers were encouraged by Ron to make their records unique, by including information and phrases written onto the records, and even going as far as to talking Kevin Saunderson into cutting one of his records in reverse, and cutting locked grooves for Jeff Mills’ Discovers The Rings Of Saturn project.
The death of Steve Martel in 1994, and the subsequent problems that arose with the remaining estate, led Ron to purchase the equipment and relocate the recording service to a new location, the success of which had already led to the closure of the retail side of the business.
The new name chosen was the Sound Enterprises, however Ron has continued to put the old NSC logo on each master produced, in memory of Steve Martel without whom the business would have never been started.
Reproduced from Discogs.com







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