Chicago in the Rockies 1973 Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is - Video
PUBLISHED:  Aug 27, 2010
DESCRIPTION:
Chicago in the Rockies Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is ____________________________________
Caribou Ranch was a recording studio built by producer James William Guercio in 1972 in a converted barn on ranch property in the Rocky Mountains near Nederland, Colorado, on the road that leads to the ghost town of Caribou. The studio was in operation until it was damaged in a fire in March 1985.
In 1972, Joe Walsh and Bill Szymczyk were starting work on Barnstorm at Walsh's home in Colorado when a mixer blew out on the first day. Szymczyk knew Guercio was building a new studio, visited the in-progress barn conversion at the ranch, and concluded that it would work for their project. They used the new studio to finish Barnstorm. Szymczyk next made Rick Derringer's All American Boy and the hit single "Rock & Roll, Hoochie Koo" there. Elton John's 1974 album Caribou was named after the ranch where it was recorded. (John also recorded the single "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" at Caribou Ranch, as well as his next two albums, "Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy" and "Rock of the Westies.") The group Chicago, managed by Guercio, recorded five studio albums there; Chicago VI, Chicago VII, Chicago VIII, Chicago X, and Chicago XI. Earth, Wind, & Fire recorded two of their albums there as well; 1974's Open Our Eyes (Produced by Maurice White & Joe Wissert) and the 1975 Grammy winning That's the Way of the World (Produced by White and Charles Stepney). Amy Grant, who had recorded 4 albums there, including her platinum-certified mainstream breakthrough album Unguarded, was about to fly out of Nashville to return to Caribou for work on her next project when word reached her that the studio was in flames.

The studio complex was shut down and never used again after a March 1985 fire destroyed the control room and caused about US$3 million in damage. According to the Nederland Fire Chief, while the fire department was doing overhaul on the fire to make sure it was out, several Gold Record plaques awarded to Guercio's group Chicago that were hanging on the wall of the studio, were damaged by a chain saw.

Guercio's interests had shifted away from music. In 1996 and 2001 transactions he sold 2,180 acres (8.8 km2) of the ranch to Boulder County and the City of Boulder, and another 1,489 acres (6.03 km2) were placed under conservation easement. A housing development by Guercio's Caribou Companies takes up much of the remainder.

In a 2008 interview with Denver PBS series Studio 12 ("Caribou Ranch," February 13. 2008), Guercio said the studio's control room was rebuilt after the fire. (For purposes of clarification, only the roof and structure of the control room were repaired; the actual room itself was not. The part of the studio where the musicians performed remained intact.) Guercio added, however, that he has no plans to reopen the recording facility for business.
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