Shel Talmy, the legendary music producer whose raw and thrilling sounds helped to define the visceral thrill of heavily compressed and explosive rock n roll, has died at the age of 87.
The American producer who was behind classics such as the Kinks’ You Really Got Me and the Who’s My Generation died peacefully in his sleep, due to complications after a stroke.
Born Sheldon Talmy in Chicago in 1937, he moved to Los Angeles where his career began in Hollywood’s Conway Studios, producing early pop, R&B and surf-craze music. Whilst on holiday in the UK in 1962 he blagged a job at Decca Records and produced their first releases from The Kinks including Long Tall Sally and You Still Want Me. The follow-up to these tracks was You Really Got Me, with Talmy – who hired a pre-Led Zeppelin Jimmy Page to play rhythm guitar as a session musician.
Talmy continued working with the Kinks until 1967, producing No 1 hits Sunny Afternoon and Tired of Waiting for You as well as Dedicated Follower of Fashion, All Day and All of the Night, and more.
The Who’s Pete Townshend was such a fan of Talmy’s work on You Really Got Me that he wrote a song inspired by it, I Can’t Explain, to persuade Talmy to produce the band’s first work. I Can’t Explain became their debut and reached the UK Top 10, as did the Talmy-produced follow-up Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere, but it was third single My Generation that became the band’s big breakthrough and an era-defining statement of disaffection – again, Talmy gave it a raw, almost punkish feel to match the lyrics’ snubbing of convention.
Talmy also produced The Kids Are Alright, a commercial flop on release now seen as a Who classic, as well as the album My Generation, which contained those singles as well as other Townshend originals and covers of James Brown and Bo Diddley. However, a dispute with manager and producer Kit Lambert led to a breakdown of the working relationship.
In 1965, Talmy also worked with David Bowie producing two singles with bands he fronted before his 1967 solo debut album: I Pity the Fool by the Manish Boys, and You’ve Got a Habit of Leaving by Davy Jones & the Lower Third. He also produced Top Five hits for Manfred Mann – Semi-Detached, Suburban Mr James and Ha! Ha! Said the Clown – as well as their successful cover of Bob Dylan’s Just Like a Woman.
Other Talmy-produced rock acts included the Creation – he had a hand in the innovative use of a violin bow on guitars, later saying: “As I recall, [guitarist Eddie Phillips] was practising guitar at somebody’s house and there happened to be a violin bow around, and he picked it up and started messing with it. I heard it, and I said, Christ, let’s use that. I’ve never heard that sound before.” He also produced the Andy Fairweather Low-fronted Amen Corner, while Australian group the Easybeats had a global hit in 1966 with the Talmy-produced Friday On My Mind.
Talmy also had a hand in landmark albums from the British 1960s folk revival, including the first three Pentangle LPs, and two by Roy Harper.
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