Tag Archives: December Music et al

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Chas Hodges from the Outlaws talks about Joe Meek

Telstar the song

On December 22, 1962, more than a year before the Beatles arrived in the United States and became the British Invasion’s avant garde, the Tornados became the first British band to have a #1 hit in the US.

“Telstar” remained as the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart until January 11, 1963.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Rudy Van Gelder

Joe Meek was both the composer and recording engineer for the song. By 1962 the recording studio had become an instrument as much as simply a space in which to record sound. In the US, the first most famous recording engineer was Rudy Van Gelder. He is best known for his work with jazz musicians in his Englewood Cliffs, NJ studio.

Van Gelder explained that he was an engineer and not a producer. He was not in charge of the sessions he recorded; he did not hire the musicians or play any role in choosing the repertoire. He did have the final say in what the records sounded like.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Joe Meek

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Joe Meek was born on April 5, 1929 to a farming family in Newent, England. From the beginning his interests revolved around music. He loved tinkering with electronics, even recording and cutting discs in his backyard shed and creating sound effects and music for plays.

Early on Meek moved to London and got a job at IBC, one of the UK’s major recording studios.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Sound

Sound Engineer Joe Meek

Meek became one of the UK’s most popular engineers, but his style demanded independence and independence was not what a studio like IBC was in the habit of giving.

He left IBC when presented with the opportunity to design and run Lansdowne studios. Despite successes there as well, Meek wanted more and ambition met opportunity in July 1958 when popular American artists Les Paul and Mary Ford had a hit “Put a Ring On My Finger,” a Meek composition.

Meek created a recording studio at 304 Holloway Road, basically an apartment.  (Interestingly, Van Gelder’s first recordings were done in his parents’ home.)

Sound, not decor, mattered to Meek.

From an Independent article: One of Meek’s recording artists, Screaming Lord Sutch, used to tell stories about recording conditions inside 304 Holloway Road. In the cramped little flat, there would be a bass player on the stairs. Meek would be at his homemade controls. The guitarist would be strumming away in the front room. The vocalist would be somewhere else and – to round it off – extra percussion would be provided by somebody stamping up and down in the bathroom.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Influence on musicians

Like himself, there were musicians who wanted more independence than the established studios provided. Meek’s studio was the place for them and Meek wanted them there.

Meek gave guitarists Jimmy Page, Steve Howe, Ritchie Blackmore, and others the opportunity create their own sound and style.

From the Meek siteJoe pushed the very limits of imagination, innovating such techniques as close miking instruments, dampening a bass drum with blankets, direct injecting electric guitars, using compression aberrations (pumping and breathing) like an instrument, blowing the EQ high into the red as a practice of embracing artifact noise and rhythms, and the incorporation of sound effects that painted a wide array of atmospheres and aural landscapes.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Meek Sued

In March 1962, Jean Ledrut, a French composer, accused Meek of plagiarism, claiming that Meek had copied  “Telstar” from “La Marche d’Austerlitz”, a piece from a score that Ledrut had written for the 1960 film Austerlitz. The a lawsuit prevented Meek from receiving royalties from the record.

Austerlitz was not released in the UK until 1965 and Meek was unaware of the film when the Ledrut filed the lawsuit. The courts sided with Meeks in January 1967, three weeks after Meek’s death.

Sound Magician Joe Meek

1960s

The so-called good ol’ days of the 1960s were good for many, but not all. Being gay,  likely bipolar, and a workaholic who slept perhaps one day a week facing increased pressure from larger studios trying to minimize Meeks’ success created a situation that was beyond Meeks’ ability to manage.

On February 3, 1967 Meek shot and killed his landlady and then himself.  February 3, 1959 was the day Buddy Holly died in that infamous plane crash. On February 3, 2003, the most famous American recording engineer, Phil Spector, shot and killed Lana Clarkson.

Today a plaque in front of 304 Holloway Road commemorates his presence. It is on the wall between the Holloway Express Grocery Store and the Titanic Café and Restaurant (noted for its “all day English breakfasts”).

Sound Magician Joe Meek

Sound Magician Joe Meek

December 19 Music et al

December 19 Music et al

Bob Newhart

December 19 Music

December 19 – 25, 1960: Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart comedy album returned for a third time to Billboard #1. It was his debut album.

Newhart recorded it at the Tidelands Club in Houston, Texas. The album won Album of the Year and  Newhart was named Best New Artist. It was the first comedy album to win Album of the Year and the only time a comedian had won Best New Artist.

Newhart wanted the title to be The Most Celebrated New Comedian Since Attila the Hun, but Warner Bros. executives created the album’s title and Newhart had to settle for his idea as a subtitle. (musicavclub review of album as a subversive landmark)

December 19 Music et al

Come See About Me

December 19 Music et al

December 19 – 25, 1964: “Come See About Me” by the Supremes #1 on the Billboard Hot 100, their third consecutive release that went to #1.

Motown’s famous team of Holland–Dozier–Holland wrote and produced the song. The Supremes performed the song on the Ed Sullivan show on December 27, 1964.

The group also recorded a German version of the song, entitled “Johnny und Joe.”

December 19 Music et al

Beatles

December 19 Music et al

December 19, 1969: The Beatles released their 7th and last Christmas  fan club recording. The Beatles had recorded it separately since they had effectively split by this point. It features an extensive visit with John and Yoko at their Tittenhurst Park estate, where they play “what will Santa bring me?” games.  George Harrison appears only briefly, and Ringo only shows up to plug his recent film, The Magic Christian. Paul sings his original ad-lib, “This is to Wish You a Merry, Merry Christmas.” Starting at 1:30, at the tail-end of Ringo’s song, the guitar solos from “The End” are heard, followed by Yoko interviewing John.

December 19 Music et al

The End

December 19, 1974: after four years’ negotiation, the Beatles had agreed — or appeared to have — on the terms governing their formal split, and a meeting had been arranged at the Plaza Hotel in Manhattan. George Harrison was performing at Madison Square Garden that night; McCartney had flown in from London; and Starr, having signed the document earlier, was on the telephone.

At the last minute, John Lennon objected to a clause that he felt would create tax problems for him (as the only Beatle living in the United States), and decided not to attend. Harrison, furious, canceled plans for Lennon to join him onstage at Madison Square Garden, but McCartney turned up at the East 52nd Street apartment that Lennon and Pang shared to discuss the sticking point. Things remained unresolved.

December 19 Music et al

December 18 Music et al

December 18 Music et al

Lion Sleeps Tonight

December 18, 1961 – January 12, 1962: a South African song from the 1920s, “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” by the Tokens #1 Billboard Hot 100.

Solomon Linda, a South African singer of Zulu origin wrote the original song, “Mbube” (Zulu: lion) in the 1920s. Many, including the Weavers, Jimmy Dorsey, Miriam Makeba and the Kingston Trio, covered the song before the Tokens’ success.

December 18 Music et al

Blue Hawaii

December 18, 1961 –  May 4, 1962 – Elvis Presley’s Blue Hawaii movie soundtrack the Billboard #1 album.

Blue Hawaii was the fourteenth album by Elvis. RCA had released it on October 20, 1961. It is a soundtrack for Presley’s film of the same name. The album spent 20 weeks at the number one slot and 39 weeks in the Top 10 on Billboards Top Pop LPs chart. (see April 21, 1962)

December 18 Music et al

I Want To Hold Your Hand

December 17, 1963: radio DJ Carroll James at Washington. D.C. station WWDC, played a U.K. copy of  “I Want to Hold Your Hand” on the radio after a 15-year-old girl from Silver Spring, MD wrote to him requesting Beatles music after seeing the CBS-news segment.  James Carroll became the first disc jockey to broadcast a Beatles record on American radio. He had obtained the record from his stewardess girlfriend, who brought the single back from the UK. Due to listener demand, the song was played daily, every hour.

 

The next day, Capitol Records threatened to sue WWDC to stop playing song, but then reversed itself and decided to rush-release “I Want To Hold Your Hand.” Capital had previously scheduled the release for  January 13, 1964.  Capital cancelled Christmas breaks and made sure that pressing plants and staff could do an earlier release.

Capital succeeded and released the  song on December 26!  (next Beatles, see Dec 23)

Another Beatles Christmas Record

December 18, 1964, The Beatles: “Another Beatles Christmas Record” issued to UK fan club members.

They sing “Jingle Bells” which is followed by individual messages to the fans. John mocks the prepared statement.

When Paul asks John about it, John responds “No it’s somebody’s bad hand-wroter.” The conversation continues and the disc finishes with them briefly singing “Oh Can You Wash Your Father’s Shirt?”

American fans did not receive Another Beatles’ Christmas Record . They got an edited version of  the 1963 Beatle Christmas message. (next Beatles, see Dec 26)

December 18 Music et al

LSD

Acid Test

December 18, 1965: Big Beat Acid Test, The Big Beat Club, Palo Alto. The  poster/announcement for the event came in three colors: white, red, and yellow. The artists designed it to be cut in half (look at the “dotted” line down the middle) and the top of the right half attached to the bottom of the left.

December 18 Music et al

The recently re-named Grateful Dead were there. Tom Wolfe wrote about it in Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test , Owsley Stanley introduced manager Rock Scully to the Grateful Dead, and  Hugh Romney–known today as Wavy Gravy–first joined the festivities.

The Big Beat was the San Francisco Peninsula’s first “rock” club. Yvonne Modica owned it.

Timothy Leary

In 1966: Timothy Leary founded the League of Spiritual Development with LSD as the sacrament. (see Jan 8)

December 18 Music et al

The Family Way

December 18, 1966: with music by Paul McCartney, “The Family Way” movie premiered.

John Boulting produced the film. Roy Boulting directed it. John Mills and his daughter Hayley Mills starred. (NYT review) (next Beatles, see March 18, 1967; Family Way, see Jan 6, 1967)

December 18 Music et al