Robert George "Joe" Meek (5 April 1929 – 3 February 1967) was an English record producer, musician, sound engineer and songwriter who pioneered space age and experimental pop music and is considered one of the most influential sound engineers of all time, being one of the first to develop ideas such as the recording studio as an instrument, and becoming one of the first producers to be recognized for his individual identity as an artist.
He developed an interest in electronics and performance
art at a very early age, filling his parents' garden shed with begged and
borrowed electronic components, building circuits, radios and what is believed
to be the region's first working television. After two years National Service
in radar with the R.A.F., he moved to London in 1954 where he was hired by
Lansdowne Studios, which was producing some of the hottest and most popular
trad jazz recordings of the 1950's. There he engineered best selling records
for artists such as Lonnie Donegan, Chris Barber and Humphrey Lyttleton, and
also started sneaking his own protégés in after hours to make his own
recordings.
He won himself few friends at Lansdowne for his unusual
techniques, which included over- and under-using common recording methods such
as limiting and compression to achieve startling audio results; while it got
his recordings noticed, it annoyed the other engineers, who were forced to
reset the entire studio's equipment every time they followed him in a session
and eventually he was edged out.
While at Lansdowne, he kitted out his two-room apartment
as a recording studio, using mostly crude second hand equipment, with his
living room serving as the recording studio and his bedroom the engineer's
booth. Here he made the first recordings by later stars such as John Leyton and
Michael Cox, and also defied possibility by recording (on mono equipment) what
is thought to be the world's first true stereo concept album, "I Hear A
New World", a collection of audio impressions of his idea of life on the
moon.
He started his own label, Triumph Records, but became
disillusioned with his partner's business practices and six months later walked
out of the deal. He was able to keep his growing roster of artists working
exclusively for him, as he had had the foresight to legally sign them to him
personally instead of to the label. He moved into a larger apartment over a
leather goods shop at 304 Holloway Road, which was to be his home and studio
for the rest of his life. Here he produced the greatest and most famous
recordings of his career.
With several records already having made the Top 20 of
the British charts, he achieved a major No. 1 hit with John Leyton's haunting
"Johnny Remember Me", which stayed at the top of the charts in
Britain, Europe and Australia for several weeks. The following year, inspired
by the first satellite TV broadcast, he wrote, recorded
and produced
"Telstar" by The Tornados which, after rising rapidly up the charts
in the rest of the world, hit No. 1 in the US just before Christmas. However,
although he continued to have some success for the next three years with
Leyton, the Tornados and other popular artists in Europe, his 1964 hit
"Have I The Right" by The Honeycombs was his only other major
international hit, and after this his career plummeted.
John Leyton with Joe Meek & Geoff Goddard
|
Meek with The Tornados |
He had suffered from chronic depression for some time and
as his career failed, his problems worsened. Although he had been receiving
treatment, nothing effective had thus far been found and on the morning on
February 3rd 1967, strung out after several sleepless nights, convinced someone
was trying to harm him and following an argument with his landlady, with whom
he normally got on well, he shot his landlady then took his own life
immediately afterwards.
A few weeks after
his death, the "Telstar" law suit was settled in his favour, with
most of the money going to pay back taxes and settle artists' law suits. What
were regarded in the 1960's as his bizarre and eccentric recording methods and
business practices are now recognised as innovative and influential by today's
independent producers, who have adopted many of his techniques as standard.
After Meek's death, the thousands of recordings he hid at
his studio remained unreleased and preserved by Cliff Cooper of the
Millionaires. Subsequent to his suicide in 1967, Cooper is said to have
purchased all of Meek's recordings for £300 (equivalent to £5,485 in 2019).
These recordings were called the "Tea Chest Tapes" among fans, as
they were stored in a tea chest when Cooper took them out of his flat. In 2008
they were auctioned in Fame Bureau's 'It's More Than Rock 'N' Roll' auction,
where they sold for £200,000.They contained over 4,000 hours of music on 1,850
tapes, including recordings by David Bowie, Gene Vincent, Denny Laine, Billy
Fury, Tom Jones, Jimmy Page, Mike Berry, John Leyton, Ritchie Blackmore, Jess
Conrad, Mitch Mitchell and Screaming Lord Sutch.
(Edited from bio by Mount Hope NY & Wikipedia)
FOR”THE JOE MEEK STORY – THE PYE YEARS
ReplyDeleteSequel Records NED CD 171 (2cd set) (1991 UK)” GO HERE:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/5APWmpws
Disc1
01 Blue Rondos - Little Baby
02 Bobby Rio - Value For Love
03 Tony Dangerfield & The Thrills - She's Too Way Out
04 Glenda Collins - It's Hard To Believe It
05 Flee-Rekkers - Sunday Date
06 Honeycombs - Have I The Right
07 Ricky Wayne & The Off-Beats - Make Way Baby
08 Andy Cavell - Andy
09 Riot Squad - I Take It That We're Through
10 Packabeats - Theme From The Traitors
11 Honeycombs - Colour Slide
12 Iain Gregory - Mr. Lovebug
13 Puppets - Baby Don't Cry
14 Peter London - Bless You
15 Alan Dean & The Problems - Thunder & Rain
15 Bobby Rio & The Revelles - Boy Meets Girl
17 Saints - Wipeout
18 Honeycombs - Something Better Beginning
19 Jess Conrad - Hurt Me
20 Puppets - Everybody's Talking
21 Iain Gregory - Time Will Tell
22 Flee-Rekkers - Stage To Cimmaron
23 Honeycombs - Is It Because
24 Riot Squad - Gotta Be A First Time
Disc 2
01 Honeycombs - That's The Way
02 Flee-Reekers - Lone Rider
03 Glenda Colins - Something I've Got To Tell You
04 Puppets - Poison Ivy
05 Riot Squad - It's Never Too Late To Forgive
06 Iain Gregory - Can't Your Hear The Beat Of A Broken Heart
07 Honeycombs - I Can't Stop
08 Judy Cannon - Hello Heartache
09 Saints - Huskie Team
10 Bobby Rio & The Revelles - Everything In The Garden
11 Peter Jay - Paradise Garden
12 Flee-Reekers - Sunburst
13 Blue Rondos - I Don't Want Your Loving Anymoer
14 Honeycombs - That Loving Feeling
15 Riot Squad - Cry Cry Cry
16 Puppets - Shake With Me
17 Flee-Reekers - Fireball
18 Pat Reader - Cha Cha On The Moon
19 Andy Cavell - Tell The Truth
20 Tony Dangerfield & The Thrills - I've Seen Such Things
21 Packabeats - Evening In Paris
22 Honeycombs- This Year Next Year
23 Chick, Red Cameron & The D.J.'s - Early In The Morning
24 Peter Cook - Georgia On My Mind
Thanks to MIW @ Loadsamusics Forum for original post.