George Martin, Beatles Producer, Dies at 90
George Martin, the Beatles producer and arranger who supervised most of the band’s era-defining recordings — from “Love Me Do” through the psychedelia of “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” to their final collaborations on “Abbey Road” — has died at the age of 90, according to Ringo Starr.
Starr, the Beatles drummer, spread the word of Martin’s death through a Twitter message late Tuesday.
Thank you for all your love and kindness George peace and love xx???????? pic.twitter.com/um2hRFB7qF
— #RingoStarr (@ringostarrmusic) March 9, 2016
Martin was an EMI staff producer who had the foresight and the ear to sign a band that had been turned down by virtually every other major label in London in 1962, before Starr was a full-fledged member. Martin signed the group from Liverpool to the Parlophone imprint he oversaw before meeting the members on the strength of demo tapes shopped by manager Brian Epstein. He often said in interviews that he was initially impressed as much by their wit and natural charm as he was by their musical abilities.
In a story that has become Beatles legend, as Martin showed the group around the EMI recording studio at their first extended recording session, he asked if there was anything they didn’t like about the configuration of the studio. Guitarist George Harrison quickly responded: “For starters, I don’t like your tie.”
Martin proved to be a huge influence on the group’s sound — he famously suggested they speed up the tempo of “Please, Please Me,” turning a Roy Orbison-esque ballad into a rocker that marked the Beatles’ first No. 1 record in Britain. Perhaps most significantly, he expressed his faith in John Lennon and Paul McCartney as songwriters by conceding to their demand to record their own material and rebuffing his suggestion that the pop tune “How Do You Do It” be their first single.
Through the band’s ups and downs in the late 1960s, Martin remained a constant for the Beatles, a figure who commanded respect from Lennon, McCartney, Starr and Harrison no matter how fierce the in-fighting was among the foursome. Martin was the subject of the 2011 BBC documentary “Produced By George Martin,” which showcased the range of his work.
Martin’s skill as a producer and arranger allowed the Beatles to flourish as they evolved from recording the material they’d worked out on stage for years in clubs to the more intricate recordings found on the 1965 album “Rubber Soul” and 1966’s “Revolver.” He helped them arrange strings for “Yesterday” and work with more exotic instruments such as the Indian sitar that Harrison began experimenting with on such songs as “Norwegian Wood.”
The band’s major collaboration with a producer other than Martin came on tracks that comprised the 1970 album “Let It Be,” which by many accounts was a frustrating experience as producer Phil Spector applied his “Wall of Sound” formula to songs such as the title song and “The Long and Winding Road.” After “Let It Be,” the group enlisted Martin for producing duties on “Abbey Road,” which was released prior to “Let It Be” but was recorded afterward.
Martin worked with a range of other artists during and after the Beatles’ era, from Cilla Black to Tom Jones to America to solo works by Paul McCartney and by Wings. But it was his success with the Beatles that made Martin one of the most famous record producers of all time. He earned Britain’s prestigious CBE honor in 1988.
Born in 1926, Martin became interested in music at a young age. During World War II, he worked as a surveyor and clerk for the War Office and joined the Royal Navy working as a pilot in its Fleet Air unit. He left the service in 1947 and enrolled in Guildhall School of Music, where he studied piano.
He began working for the BBC’s classical music department after graduation but by 1950 had joined EMI. He worked as an assistant to the head of the low-profile Parlophone imprint, which was known for novelty and comedy records including a recording of the famed Beyond the Fringe comedy outfit featuring Peter Cook, Dudley Moore and Alan Bennett.
By 1955, Martin had taken over as head of Parlophone. His experience with cutting-edge British comedy talent resonated would later help him bond with the Beatles. Martin by his own account was intrigued by the surge of pop and R&B acts in Britain in the early 1960s. He was in the market for a group to work with when Epstein called on him with tapes that had been recorded — and rejected — by Decca Records. Martin set a handshake deal with Epstein in May 1962 but didn’t finalize the contract until he met the band the following month.
The band’s first session at the Abbey Road recording studio was held in September, and by this time original Beatles drummer Pete Best had been replaced by Starr. Martin got off to a rocky start with the new drummer by insisting that the session musician he’d lined up for the recording, Andy White, replace Starr on the session that yielded “Love Me Do.” It didn’t take long for Starr to convince Martin of his bona fides as a drummer.
Martin’s renown from his association with the Beatles led him to leave EMI in 1965 to work as freelance producer for the Fab Four and others.
In 1969 Martin opened the doors of his state of the art Associated Independent Recording (AIR) Studios in Central London. The facility became a sought-after recording venue for acts ranging from McCartney and Peter Gabriel to classical artists to Adele. He opened a second AIR venue in Montserrat a few years later.
In 1994 and ’95, Martin supervised the remastering of classic Beatles recordings for the “Anthology” soundtrack that accompanied the eight-part documentary series on the band.
Martin’s final studio recording work came in 1998 with the Beatles tribute album “In My Life.” He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame the following year.
In 2006, Martin and his son, Giles Martin, remixed 80 minutes of Beatles tunes for the Cirque du Soleil live show “Love.” That work earned the elder Martin his sixth career Grammy. His first wins came in 1967 when “Sgt. Pepper” claimed best contemporary album and album of the year honors.
Also in 2006, Martin sold AIR Studios to businessman Richard Boote.
In addition to Giles, Martin’s survivors include his wife Judy, another son and two daughters.
Tributes from arts and musical figures poured in on social media after Martin’s death was confirmed.
Thank you Sir George Martin: the greatest British record producer of all time. We will never stop living in the world you helped create.
— Mark Ronson (@MarkRonson) March 9, 2016
R.I.P. George Martin. I'm so gutted I don't have many words. Thinking of Judy and Giles and… https://t.co/3Nc8sCgRpN
— Sean Ono Lennon (@seanonolennon) March 9, 2016
Our creative community has lost a gifted artist. We remember Sir George Martin. pic.twitter.com/HuqWMIXae2
— The GRAMMYs (@TheGRAMMYs) March 9, 2016
(Pictured: George Martin, right, with Ringo Starr)
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