The Vinyl Guide - Artist Interviews for Record Collectors and Music Nerds
The legend himself Jack Douglas (1945-2026) shares stories from five decades of rock history — from producing John Lennon's final album to the memories Aerosmith, Cheap Trick, The Who, and his recent production of Silverplanes. Topics Include: * Jack Douglas joins Nate from a snowy driveway, cigar in hand. * Silverplanes' debut album Airbus is finally releasing after years of delays. * Jack met Silverplanes' Aaron Smart through his college-age son. * Aaron turned out to own the Sunset Boulevard studio Jack had worked in. * Jeff Emerick mixed the album shortly before his sudden death in 2018. * The pandemic added two more years of delay to the release. * Jack and Aaron are now label partners with New York real estate billionaire Douglas Durst. * Their label operates 50/50 with artists — no standard royalty deals. * Signed artists include Robin Taylor Zander and the Detroit Youth Choir. * Jack builds songs from a single acoustic guitar performance first. * Aerosmith was different — built from the band groove up, lyrics last. * Walk This Way had no lyric until a Young Frankenstein gag unlocked it. * Jack started his career as a TV composer while janitoring at Record Plant. * He worked on sessions that became The Who's Who's Next. * Kit Lambert and Keith Moon were both, politely, out of their minds. * Jack survived eccentric clients by being reliably sober and crazy simultaneously. * John Lennon was the easiest artist Jack ever worked with. * John would say: "I'm the artist, you're the producer — let's work like that." * Jack engineered Imagine and stayed close to Lennon through the Lost Weekend years. * He was in and out of the Fame sessions with Lennon and Bowie. * John told Bowie: "I'm writing you the best hit you'll ever have." * John knew about — and liked — Aerosmith's cover of "Come Together." * George Martin gave Jack a flat in Kensington and a Morgan sportscar. * Jack helped produce Ringo's "Grow Old With Me," hiding Here Comes the Sun in the strings. * Double Fantasy was secretly recorded at Hit Factory, too far west for fans. * John wanted a middle-of-the-road record aimed at people aged 28 to 40. * Earl Slick was kept from rehearsals deliberately — a wildcard for fresh solos. * Rick Nielsen discovered John's Shea Stadium Rickenbacker with the setlist still taped on. * Rick later gifted John a custom all-white Rickenbacker, model 001, never cashed his check. * Cheap Trick's "I'm Losing You" session was thrilling but too edgy for the album. * Jack hid microphones throughout the sessions, gifting John cassettes on his birthday. * Jack destroyed the tape of the last day — John had sworn him to secrecy. * After John's murder, Jack and Yoko listened to vault tapes alone until dawn. * Yoko later sued Jack; Phil Spector's incoherent testimony and a wig mishap followed. * Jann Wenner called Jack a nobody — until Jack's lawyer read Wenner's own book aloud. * The jury was out ten minutes. Jack won millions. * The 2010 Stripped Down version was mixed in the exact same Record Plant room. * Live at Budokan was actually Osaka — Budokan tapes were too poorly recorded. * Jack rebuilt the Osaka drum kit using speaker-driven bass frequencies and filtered signals. * Aerosmith's Live Bootleg was sent back to Sony unchanged after Jack faked a remix session. High resolution version of this podcast is available at: www.Patreon.com/VinylGuide [http://www.patreon.com/VinylGuide] * Apple: https://tinyurl.com/tvg-ios [https://tinyurl.com/tvg-ios] * Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/tvg-spot [https://tinyurl.com/tvg-spot] * Amazon Music: https://tinyurl.com/tvg-amazon [https://tinyurl.com/tvg-amazon] * Support the show at Patreon.com/VinylGuide [https://patreon.com/vinylguide]
564 jaksot
Kommentit
0Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija
Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity The Vinyl Guide - Artist Interviews for Record Collectors and Music Nerds-yhteisöön!