One of my favourite podcasts is A History Of Rock Music In Five Hundred Songs https://500songs.com - it emphasises over and over, with played examples, that there isn't a clear first anything. Sun did get three or four episodes, though - it was extremely important.
My biggest peeve when I visited Memphis. My wife went to Graceland, which I was excited to avoid. A couple buddies and I went to Sun Records for a tour.
So many black rock pioneers recorded there and they got about 10 minutes of lip service. The whole rest of the hour was dedicated to Elvis. I left a bit early when I realized they were sticking with Elvis the whole time.
Now, the Lorraine Motel - that is a tour I feel like everyone should experience.
Agreed and I want to highlight this comment. Skip everything else and go straight to the Lorraine Motel / National Civil Rights Museum. It's basically the opposite of a waste of time. For those that don't know this is where MLK was murdered and is now a museum / memorial.
> Phillips regretted bailing on black music. Sun artist Rufus Thomas recalled, “Me and Sam Phillips, we were tighter than the nuts on the Brooklyn Bridge, but when Elvis and Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash came along, no more blacks did he pick up at all.”
The article did address this a bit, but I still agree with the spirit of this comment thread that too often when the beginning of rock 'n' roll is discussed the absolutely critical role black artists played in creating it is ignored/dismissed.
> Sam Phillips opened Sun Records in a tiny rented storefront on Union Avenue in Memphis in 1952 with the slogan, “We Record Anything-Anywhere-Anytime.” For a few dollars, anyone could walk in and make an acetate dub of their choice, usually a song or a special message for a loved one.
Do places like this still exist? I can imagine there would be a market for a small storefront in a mall or wherever where people can rent a studio and do a recording or live stream with rented "pro" gear like lights, cameras and microphones. The only risk to the person renting it out would be hygiene and damaged or stolen property, but nothing an entry gateway, ID requirement, a deposit and payment method registration wouldn't deter I'm sure. It could also have tiers, like a "free" / open photo area at the front for random instagram passers-by, a cheap tier for teenagers, and a pro tier for people that want to rent the facilities for a few hours.
The barrier of entry is much lower than back then, so there probably just isn’t that much demand. These days you can record a whole album at home on your phone or computer and that can already sound very professional.
Some places like you describe do exist though (e.g. here in Berlin [1]), but I wouldn’t consider them cheap and the one I linked to is geared more to rehearsal than recording. You can rent equipment and rooms per hour.
Another thing that comes to mind is the recording booth at Third man records [2], although it is more of a retro novelty.
People building and renting out home studios is actually quite popular and I know more than one person who does it, though I have doubts they're actually making much money.
A friend of mine was recording an album in Sun Studio in 2013. You can have a look on how it looks inside in this video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j846mh7YrxQ (starting at 13:27)
> After Phillips’s first few unsuccessful attempts to get black music heard by the world, B. B. King urged him to call nineteen-year-old Ike Turner, a bandleader in nearby Clarksdale, Mississippi.
"B.B." stood for, in some stories, "Beale Street Blues Boy"
I was lucky enough to host Greil Marcus (first name rhymes with "real" not "dial") at Google, and he's written very extensively on the power of the raw blues:
I will go out on a limb and state my considered opinion that both Rock Around the Clock and That's All Right are western swing. Their main significance is that they perfected the genre and made improvements impossible. So Elvis had to invent rock 'n' roll with his next single, Good Rockin' Tonight.
We'd have been fine without Elvis and Sun Records.