Arab Times

Geoff Emerick looks back

Music engineer revisits ‘Sgt Pepper’

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LOS ANGELES, July 23, (RTRS): If you looked at the music sales charts this year and saw the Beatles’ masterpiec­e “Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” perched in the top spot, you weren’t having a flashback to 1967 and the Summer of Love, when the album was first released. Yes, the Beatles got back this year, and you’ll get no argument from Geoff Emerick, the Grammy-winning engineer of that landmark album, that it’s absolutely where they once belonged. Emerick began his career as a teenager in 1962 for EMI in London, where he assisted the production of the Beatles’ recordings, including their first hit, “Love Me Do.” Over the years Emerick has twirled the knobs for a dazzling array of music greats, including Kate Bush, the solo Paul McCartney, Supertramp, Elvis Costello and another Brit sonic masterpiec­e, the Zombies’ “Time of the Season.” But his first time in Variety was tied to his Grammy win for “Sgt Pepper” in 1968.

Question: By the time “Sgt Pepper” arrived, you’d already logged many hours with the Beatles at Abbey Road.

Answer: I was dropped into the deep end of the pond. I was mastering American records for the UK market one day, and the next day, when I was around 19, I was working on “Revolver.”

Q: As great a record in its own way as “Sgt Pepper,” if not better?

A: The Beatles knew from listening to American records that sounds could be better than what we were

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Hartford Deputy Chief Brian Foley said Saturday that officers made 50 underage

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hearing in the UK So we worked on microphone positionin­g, miking the drums, working to get something more than the wishy-washy Cliff Richard sounds. Q: What were they aiming for? A: I remember John telling me he wanted his voice to sound like “the Dalai Lama singing on a mountain” for “Tomorrow Never Knows.” So we hit on the idea of taking a spinning Leslie speaker from the Hammond and putting John’s voice through it.

Q: There’s been a lot of publicity around the rerelease of “Sgt Pepper” and the fact that it’s been remixed.

A: And an awful lot of it has been misinforma­tion that I frankly find both defamatory and disrespect­ful. I’ve read that we put no time into the stereo mix, which is just inaccurate. We put just as much into the stereo mix as we did the mono mix. And to hear that George Martin would have loved to have all the tracks we have today to work from, I would say, “No, he wouldn’t.” But of course he’s not here to ask.

Q: You’ve written a book on recording the Beatles (“Here, There and Everywhere”). Is there any one aspect of the process that you think had most impact on the end product?

A: We worked in the No. 2 control booth at Abbey Road, which is upstairs, which meant the band worked as if we weren’t there. So we were part of the most amazing process, observing songs in the process of creation. I could hear Paul developed a great understand­ing of how the recording process worked.

drinking referrals at Hot 93.7’s Hot Jam concert at Xfinity Theatre. Most of those charged were issued a summons to appear in court. Several other arrests were made throughout the evening. (AP)

SALZBURG, Austria:

Austria’s Salzburg Festival opens Saturday, the start of more than a month of classical and dramatic performanc­es featuring some of opera’s brightest and most controvers­ial stars.

A highlight of the 40-day festival will come on Aug 6 with a production of Verdi’s masterpiec­e “Aida”, directed by Iranian artist Shirin Neshat. (AFP)

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