George Martin: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|English record producer (1926–2016)}} | {{short description|English record producer (1926–2016)}} | ||
{{Other people}} | {{Other people}} | ||
{{Use British English|date= | {{Use British English|date=November 2025}} | ||
{{Use dmy dates|date= | {{Use dmy dates|date=November 2025}} | ||
{{Infobox person | {{Infobox person | ||
| honorific_prefix = Sir | | honorific_prefix = [[Sir]] | ||
| name = George Martin | | name = George Martin | ||
| honorific_suffix = {{post-nominals|country=GBR|size=100%|CBE}} | | honorific_suffix = {{post-nominals|country=GBR|size=100%|CBE}} | ||
| image = George Martin - backstage at LOVE.jpg | | image = George Martin - backstage at LOVE.jpg | ||
| alt = George Martin in 2006 | |||
| caption = Martin in 2006 | | caption = Martin in 2006 | ||
| birth_name = George Henry Martin | | birth_name = George Henry Martin | ||
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1926|1|3}} | | birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1926|1|3}} | ||
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|2016|3|8|1926|1|3}} | | death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|2016|3|8|1926|1|3}} | ||
| birth_place = [[ | | birth_place = [[Royal Northern Hospital]], London, England{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=1}} | ||
| death_place = [[Coleshill, Oxfordshire]], England | | death_place = [[Coleshill, Oxfordshire]], England | ||
| alma_mater = [[Guildhall School of Music and Drama]] | | alma_mater = [[Guildhall School of Music and Drama]] | ||
| Line 18: | Line 19: | ||
| known_for = '''Working with''':<br />{{hlist|[[The Beatles]]|[[America (band)|America]]|[[Cilla Black]]|[[Jeff Beck]]|[[Mahavishnu Orchestra]]|[[Paul McCartney]]|[[Ringo Starr]]|[[Gerry and the Pacemakers]]}} | | known_for = '''Working with''':<br />{{hlist|[[The Beatles]]|[[America (band)|America]]|[[Cilla Black]]|[[Jeff Beck]]|[[Mahavishnu Orchestra]]|[[Paul McCartney]]|[[Ringo Starr]]|[[Gerry and the Pacemakers]]}} | ||
| spouse = {{ubl|{{marriage|Sheena Chisholm|1948|1965|end=div}}|{{marriage|Judy Lockhart Smith<br />|1966}}}} | | spouse = {{ubl|{{marriage|Sheena Chisholm|1948|1965|end=div}}|{{marriage|Judy Lockhart Smith<br />|1966}}}} | ||
| children = 4, including [[Giles Martin|Giles]] and [[Gregory Paul Martin | | children = 4, including [[Giles Martin|Giles]] and [[Gregory Paul Martin]] | ||
| module = {{Infobox musical artist|embed=yes | | module = {{Infobox musical artist|embed=yes | ||
| genre = {{hlist|Rock|pop|classical|[[comedy music|comedy]]}} | | genre = {{hlist|Rock|pop|classical|[[comedy music|comedy]]}} | ||
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}} | }} | ||
'''Sir George Henry Martin''' (3 January 1926 – 8 March 2016) was an English record producer, arranger, composer, conductor, and musician. He was commonly referred to as the "[[fifth Beatle]]" because of his extensive involvement in each of [[the Beatles]]' original albums. | '''Sir George Henry Martin''' (3 January 1926 – 8 March 2016) was an English record producer, arranger, composer, conductor, and musician. He was commonly referred to as the "[[fifth Beatle]]" because of his extensive involvement in each of [[the Beatles]]' original albums. Martin's formal musical expertise and interest in novel recording practices facilitated the group's rudimentary musical education and desire for new musical sounds to record. Most of their orchestral and string arrangements were written by Martin, and he played piano or keyboards on a number of their records.{{sfn|Miles|1997|p=205}} Their collaborations resulted in popular, highly acclaimed records with innovative sounds, such as the 1967 album ''[[Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band]]''. | ||
Martin's career spanned more than sixty years in music, film, television and live performance. Before working with the Beatles and other pop musicians, he produced comedy and [[novelty record]]s in the 1950s and early 1960s as the head of [[EMI]]'s [[Parlophone]] label, working with [[Peter Sellers]], [[Spike Milligan]] and [[Bernard Cribbins]], among others. | Martin's career spanned more than sixty years in music, film, television and live performance. Before working with the Beatles and other pop musicians, he produced comedy and [[novelty record]]s in the 1950s and early 1960s as the head of [[EMI]]'s [[Parlophone]] label, working with [[Peter Sellers]], [[Spike Milligan]] and [[Bernard Cribbins]], among others. In 1965, he left EMI and formed his own production company, [[Associated Independent Recording]]. | ||
[[AllMusic]] has described Martin as the "world's most famous record producer".<ref>{{cite web |title=George Martin Biography, Songs, & Albums |publisher=AllMusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/george-martin-mn0000649950/biography |access-date=2022-08-03}}</ref> In his career, Martin produced 30 number-one hit singles in the United Kingdom and 23 number-one hits in the United States, | [[AllMusic]] has described Martin as the "world's most famous record producer".<ref>{{cite web |title=George Martin Biography, Songs, & Albums |publisher=AllMusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/george-martin-mn0000649950/biography |access-date=2022-08-03}}</ref> In his career, Martin produced 30 number-one hit singles in the [[List of one-hit wonders on the UK singles chart|United Kingdom]] and 23 number-one hits in the United States, winning six [[Grammy Awards]].<ref name="grammys"/> In recognition of his services to the music industry and popular culture, he was made a [[Knight Bachelor]] in 1996. | ||
==Early years== | ==Early years== | ||
Martin was born on 3 January 1926 | Martin was born on 3 January 1926 in [[North London]] to Henry ("Harry") and Bertha Beatrice (née Simpson) Martin.{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=1–2}} He had an older sister, Irene. In Martin's early years, the family lived modestly, first in [[Highbury]] and then [[Drayton Park]]. Harry worked as a craftsman carpenter in a small attic workshop, while Bertha cooked meals at a communal stove in their apartment building.{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=2–3}} In 1931, the family moved to Aubert Park in Highbury, where they lived with electricity for the first time.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=5}} | ||
When he was six, Martin's family acquired a piano that sparked his interest in music.{{sfn|Martin|1995|p=13}} At eight years of age, he persuaded his parents that he should take piano lessons, but those ended after only six | When he was six, Martin's family acquired a piano that sparked his interest in music.{{sfn|Martin|1995|p=13}} At eight years of age, he persuaded his parents that he should take piano lessons, but those ended after only six sessions because of a disagreement between his mother and the teacher. Martin created his first piano composition, "The Spider's Dance", at age eight.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=249}} Martin continued to learn piano on his own through his youth, building a working knowledge of [[music theory]] through his natural [[perfect pitch]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=6}} | ||
{{quote box|align=right|width=25%|I remember well the very first time I heard a symphony orchestra. I was just in my teens when Sir [[Adrian Boult]] brought the [[BBC Symphony Orchestra]] to my school for a public concert. It was absolutely magical.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/listenup/messages.shtml A lifelong love affair with the orchestra] bbc.co.uk; retrieved 21 September 2007.</ref> | {{quote box | ||
| align = right | |||
| width = 25%|I remember well the very first time I heard a symphony orchestra. I was just in my teens when Sir [[Adrian Boult]] brought the [[BBC Symphony Orchestra]] to my school for a public concert. It was absolutely magical. | |||
| author = — George Martin<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/listenup/messages.shtml A lifelong love affair with the orchestra] bbc.co.uk; retrieved 21 September 2007.</ref> | |||
}} | |||
As a child, he attended several [[Catholic Church in England and Wales|Roman Catholic]] schools, including Our Lady of Sion ([[Holloway, London|Holloway]]), St Joseph's School ([[Highgate]]), and at [[St Ignatius' College]] ([[Stamford Hill]]), where he won a scholarship.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=5}} When [[World War II]] broke out, Martin's family left London, with his being enrolled at [[Ravensbourne School (Bromley)|Bromley Grammar School]].{{sfn|Martin|1995|p=15}} At Bromley, Martin led and played piano in a locally popular dance band, the Four Tune Tellers. The pianists [[George Shearing]] and [[Meade Lux Lewis]] influenced his style.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=250}} He also took up acting in a troupe called the Quavers,{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=7}} and, with money earned from playing dances, he resumed formal piano lessons and learned [[musical notation]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=8–9}} | |||
Despite Martin's continued interest in music and "fantasies about being the next [[Sergei Rachmaninoff|Rachmaninoff]]", he did not initially choose music as a career.{{sfn|Martin|1995|p=17}} Aged 17, in 1943, Martin volunteered for the [[Fleet Air Arm]] of the [[Royal Navy]], having been spurred on by their exploits in the [[Battle of Taranto]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=11}} He trained at [[HMS St Vincent (Gosport shore establishment)|HMS ''St Vincent'']] in [[Gosport]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=11}} The war ended before Martin was involved in any combat, and he left the service in January 1947.{{sfn|Martin|1995|pp=25–28}}{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=17}} On 26 July 1945, Martin appeared on [[BBC Radio]] for the first time during a Royal Navy variety show; he played a self-composed piano piece.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=249}} As he climbed rank in the Navy, Martin consciously adopted the [[Received Pronunciation|middle-class accent]] and gentlemanly social demeanour common for officers.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=13}} | |||
Encouraged by the pianist | Encouraged by the pianist and teacher [[Sidney Harrison]], Martin used his veteran's grant to attend the [[Guildhall School of Music and Drama]] from 1947 to 1950. He studied piano as his main instrument and [[oboe]] as his secondary, being interested in the music of Sergei Rachmaninoff, [[Maurice Ravel]], and [[Cole Porter]].{{sfn|Spitz|2005|pp=296, 438}}{{sfn|Martin|1995|pp=18–25}} Martin also took courses at [[Guildhall School of Music and Drama|Guildhall]] in music composition and orchestration.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=23}} After graduating, he worked for the BBC's classical music department, also earning money as an oboe player in local bands.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=252}} | ||
==Parlophone== | ==Career== | ||
[[ | === EMI and Parlophone === | ||
Martin joined [[EMI]] in November 1950 as an assistant to Oscar Preuss,{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=25}} the head of EMI's [[Parlophone]] label. Although having been regarded by EMI as a vital German imprint in the past, it was then not taken seriously and used only for EMI's insignificant acts.{{sfn|Spitz|2005|p=296}}{{sfn|Martin|1995|pp=28–29}} Among Martin's early duties was managing Parlophone's classical records catalogue, including [[Baroque]] ensemble sessions with [[Karl Haas (conductor)|Karl Haas]]; Martin, Haas, and [[Peter Ustinov]] soon founded the London Baroque Society together.{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=26–27}} He also developed a friendship and working relationship with composer [[Sidney Torch]] and signed [[Ron Goodwin]] to a recording contract.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=28}} In 1953, Martin produced Goodwin's first record, an instrumental rendition of [[Charlie Chaplin]]'s theme from [[Limelight (1952 film)|''Limelight'']], which made it to no. 3 on the British charts.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=29}} Despite these early breakthroughs, Martin resented EMI's preference in the early 1950s for short-playing 78 [[revolutions per minute|rpm]] [[phonograph record|records]] instead of the new longer-playing {{frac|33|1|3}} and 45 rpm formats coming into fashion on other labels.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=30}} He also proved uncomfortable as a [[song plugger]] when occasionally assigned the task by Preuss, comparing himself to a "sheep among wolves".{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=35}}[[File:Abbeyroadtomswain.jpg|thumb|alt=Studio Two, Abbey Road Studios|At Parlophone, Martin recorded many of his acts in Studio Two of [[Abbey Road Studios|EMI Studios]].|left]]Preuss retired as head of Parlophone in April 1955, leaving the 29-year-old Martin to take over the label.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=36}} However, he had to fight to retain the label, as by late 1956 EMI managers considered moving Parlophone's successful artists to [[Columbia Records]] or the [[His Master's Voice (British record label)|His Master's Voice]], with Martin possibly to take a junior [[Artists and repertoire|A&R]] role at the His Master's Voice under [[Wally Ridley]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=43}} Martin staved off corporate pressure with successes in comedy records, such as a 1957 recording of the two-man show featuring [[Michael Flanders]] and [[Donald Swann]], ''[[At the Drop of a Hat]]''.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=44}} His work boosted the profile of Parlophone from a "sad little company" to a highly profitable business over time.{{sfn|Spitz|2005|p=297}} As head of Parlophone, Martin recorded classical and [[Baroque music]], [[original cast recording]]s, [[jazz]], and regional music from around Britain and Ireland.{{sfn|Martin|1995|p=63}}{{sfn|Martin|1995|pp=84–85}}{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=259}} He became the first British A&R man to capitalize on the 1956 [[skiffle]] boom when he signed [[the Vipers Skiffle Group]] after seeing them in London's [[2i's Coffee Bar]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=54}} Martin's first hit production came in 1956 in the Johnny Duckworth Band's [[jazz]] parody "The Three Blind Mice".{{sfn|Gould|2007|p=122}}<br/><br/> | |||
Martin produced numerous comedy and novelty records. His first success in the genre was the "Mock Mozart" single, performed by Peter Ustinov with [[Antony Hopkins]].{{Sfn|Womack|2017|pp=34–35}} In 1953, Martin produced [[Peter Sellers]]' debut in music, the failed single "Jakka and the Flying Saucers".{{Sfn|Sikov|2002|p=76}} Two years later, Martin worked with [[BBC]] [[radio comedy]] stars [[The Goon Show|the Goons]] on a parody version of "[[Unchained Melody]]", but the song's publishers blocked it from release.{{Sfn|Womack|2017|p=45}} The Goons subsequently left Parlophone for [[Decca Records|Decca]],{{Sfn|Womack|2017|p=45}} but Sellers, a member of the group, achieved minor success with Martin in 1957 with "Boiled Bananas and Carrots"/"[[Any Old Iron (song)|Any Old Iron]]".{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=45–46}} Recognising that Sellers was capable of "a daydreaming form of humour which could be amusing and seductive without requiring the trigger of a live audience", Martin pitched a full album to EMI.{{sfn|Hepworth|2019|p=86}} The result, ''[[The Best of Sellers]]'' (1958), has been cited by the music historian [[Mark Lewisohn]] as the first British comedy LP created in a recording studio.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=268}} Martin scored a major success in 1961 with the ''[[Beyond the Fringe]]'' show cast album, starring, among others, [[Peter Cook]] and [[Dudley Moore]]; the show catalyzed Britain's [[satire boom]] in the early 1960s.{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=49–50}}[[File:The Temperance Seven (1962).jpg|alt=The Temperance Seven|thumb|[[The Temperance Seven]], for whom Martin produced his first no. 1 composition]]Martin courted controversy in summer 1960, when he produced a cover of the teen novelty song "[[Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini]]" and released it mere days after the release of the record in the UK, opening him to public accusations of [[Music piracy|piracy]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=55}} Nonetheless, his first British no. 1 came a year later, in May 1961, with [[the Temperance Seven]]'s "[[You're Driving Me Crazy]]".{{sfn|Gould|2007|p=122}} He later earned praise from EMI chairman Sir [[Joseph Lockwood]] for his top-10 1962 hit with [[Bernard Cribbins]], "[[The Hole in the Ground (song)|The Hole in the Ground]]".{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=67}} Though Martin wanted to add [[rock and roll]] to Parlophone's repertoire, he struggled to find a "fireproof" [[hit record|hit-making]] pop artist or group.{{sfn|Miles|1997|pp=330–331}} | |||
When Martin visited [[Liverpool]] in December 1962, the Beatles' manager [[Brian Epstein]], whom he had cultivated a working relationship with,{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=117–118}} showed him successful local acts like [[Gerry and the Pacemakers]] and [[the Fourmost]]. Martin urged Epstein to audition them for EMI.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=117}} Gerry and the Pacemakers scored their first no. 1 with their version of "[[How Do You Do It?]]", which Martin produced, in April 1963.{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=132–133}} Martin also produced the Epstein-managed [[Billy J. Kramer]] and [[The Dakotas (band)|the Dakotas]],{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=134–135}} [[the Fourmost]],{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=140}} and [[Cilla Black]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=142}} Between the Beatles, Gerry and the Pacemakers, and Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas, Martin-produced and Epstein-managed acts were responsible for 37 weeks of no. 1 singles in 1963, transforming Parlophone into the leading EMI label.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=154}} His work with such [[Liverpool|Liverpudilian]] artists contributed to the development of [[beat music]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Linehan |first1=Hugh |date=10 March 2016 |title=George Martin: the man who helped make the Beatles truly great |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/music/george-martin-the-man-who-helped-make-the-beatles-truly-great-1.2566844 |access-date=17 September 2022 |newspaper=The Irish Times}}</ref> | |||
=== | ==== Rivalries and tensions at EMI ==== | ||
By the time he signed a three-year contract renewal in 1959, Martin sought, but failed, to obtain a royalty on Parlophone's record sales, a practice becoming common in the US: "I reckoned that if I was going to devote my life to building up something which wasn't mine, I deserved some form of commission", he reflected.{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=51–52}} The issue continued to linger in his mind, and Martin claimed he "nearly didn't sign" his spring 1962 contract renewal over this matter—even threatening EMI managing director L. G. ("Len") Wood that he would walk away from his job.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=629}}{{Refn|At the same time as the contract dispute, Martin even took a work trip to [[Blackpool]] with his secretary, Judy Lockhart Smith. This trip led Wood to discover that Martin had been having an affair with Smith, which further irritated Wood.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|pp=629–630}}|group=lower-alpha}} With their relationship strained, Wood exacted a measure of revenge by having Martin sign [[the Beatles]] to a record contract to appease interest from EMI's publishing arm, Ardmore & Beechwood.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|pp=629–630}}[[File:Abbey road studios.jpg|thumb|upright=0.9|[[Abbey Road Studios]], where Martin recorded Parlophone's artists|alt=Abbey Road Studios|left]]Martin also advocated that the Beatles' penny-per-record [[Royalty payment|royalty]] rate be doubled; Wood agreed to this, but only if the Beatles signed a five-year contract renewal in exchange. When Martin countered that EMI should raise the royalty without conditions. Wood grudgingly acquiesced, but Martin believed that, "from that moment on, I was considered a traitor within EMI".{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=157}}{{Refn|Martin also maintained a rivalry with fellow A&R director [[Norrie Paramor]], head of EMI's prominent [[Columbia Graphophone Company|Columbia]] label. Before Martin became one of Britain's most in-demand producers thanks to his work with the Beatles, he was envious that Paramor had produced highly successful pop acts, such as [[Cliff Richard]]. He admitted to looking with "something close to desperation" for similar success.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=52}}|group=lower-alpha}} In 1955, EMI purchased American recording company [[Capitol Records]]. Thereafter, Capitol's head of international A&R, [[Dave Dexter Jr.]], chose to issue very few British records in the US,{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=270–271, 280}} to Martin and his EMI A&R colleagues' dismay.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=423–424, 523}} Dexter passed on issuing the Beatles' first four singles in the US, driving Martin out of desperation to issue "[[She Loves You]]" on the small, independent [[Swan Records]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=143}}{{Refn|Capitol finally agreed to release the Beatles' fifth single, "[[I Want to Hold Your Hand]]", only after Wood met Capitol president [[Alan W. Livingston]] in person in November 1963.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=167}}|group=lower-alpha}} Martin and the Beatles also resented Capitol's practice of issuing records often highly divergent from British record releases, sometimes affecting album titles, cover art, songs included, and even Martin's production.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=78}} This treatment did not cease until the band signed a new contract with EMI in January 1967.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=168}} | |||
==== | ==== Separation from EMI and start of Associated Independent Recording ==== | ||
After his repeated clashes over salary terms with EMI management, Martin informed them in June 1964 that he would not renew his contract in 1965.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=212}} Though EMI managing director Len Wood attempted to persuade Martin to stay with the company, Martin continued to insist that he would not work for EMI without receiving a commission on record sales.{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=275–276}} Wood offered him a 3% commission minus "overhead costs", which would have translated to an £11,000 bonus for 1964, though, in doing so, Wood revealed to Martin that EMI had made [[Pound sterling|£]]2.2 million in net profit from Martin's records that year.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=278}} "With that simple sentence, he cut straight through whatever vestige of an umbilical cord still bound me to EMI. … I was flabbergasted", Martin observed.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=278}} As Martin exited the company in August 1965, he recruited a number of other EMI staffers, including [[Norman Newell]], [[Ron Richards (producer)|Ron Richards]], [[John Burgess (record producer)|John Burgess]], his wife, Judy, and [[Decca Records|Decca]]'s [[Peter Sullivan (record producer)|Peter Sullivan]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=279}} Artists associated with Martin's new production team included [[Adam Faith]], [[Manfred Mann]], [[Peter and Gordon]], [[The Hollies]], [[Tom Jones (singer)|Tom Jones]], and [[Engelbert Humperdinck (singer)|Engelbert Humperdinck]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=279}} | |||
Martin | Martin conceived of his new company as being modelled on the [[Associated London Scripts]] cooperative of comedy writers in the 1950s and 1960s, offering equal shares in the company to his A&R colleagues and expecting them to pay studio costs proportionate to their earnings. He named it [[Associated Independent Recording]] (AIR).{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=279}} Short of funds and with many of AIR's associated acts still under contract to EMI, Martin negotiated a business arrangement with EMI that would give EMI the right of first refusal on any AIR production. In exchange, EMI would pay a producer's royalty on all AIR records.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=280}} Martin's departure from EMI and foundation of an independent production company was major news in the music press.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=282}} Wood attempted to lure Martin back to EMI in 1969 with an offered salary of £25,000, but Martin rejected it.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=371}} | ||
Martin | === The Beatles === | ||
==== Epstein approaches EMI ==== | |||
[[File:HMV 363 Oxford Street Plaque.jpg|thumb|A plaque unveiled by Martin marking the location of a London office where [[EMI]] song publishers first heard Beatles demo recordings and pressed EMI to sign the group|alt=Plaque of London Office where EMI first heard Beatles demoes]]In November 1961, the [[The Beatles|Beatles]] manager [[Brian Epstein]] travelled to London to meet with record executives from EMI and [[Decca Records]] in the interest of obtaining a recording contract for his band.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=507}} Epstein met with EMI's general marketing director Ron White, with whom he had a longstanding business relationship, and left a copy of the Beatles' single with [[Tony Sheridan]], "[[My Bonnie Lies over the Ocean#Tony Sheridan and the Beatles|My Bonnie]]". White said he would play it for EMI's four A&R directors, including George Martin (though it later emerged that he neglected to do so, playing it only for two of them).{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=507, 527}} In mid-December, White replied that EMI was not interested in signing the Beatles.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=527}} | |||
Martin | Martin claimed that he was contacted by Sid Colman of EMI music publisher Ardmore & Beechwood at the request of Epstein,{{sfn|Spitz|2005|pp=297–298}} though Colman's colleague Kim Bennett later disputed this.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=570}} In any event, Martin arranged a meeting on 13 February 1962 with Epstein, who played for Martin the recording of the Beatles' [[The Beatles' Decca audition|failed January audition for Decca Records]].{{sfn|Spitz|2005|pp=297–298, 301}} Epstein recalled that Martin liked [[George Harrison]]'s guitar playing and preferred [[Paul McCartney]]'s singing voice to [[John Lennon]]'s, though Martin himself recalled that he "wasn't knocked out at all" by the "lousy tape".{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=571}} With Martin apparently uninterested, Ardmore & Beechwood's Colman and Bennett pressured EMI management to sign the Beatles in hopes of gaining the rights to [[Lennon–McCartney]] song publishing on Beatle records; Colman and Bennett even offered to pay for the expense of the Beatles' first EMI recordings. EMI managing director Len Wood rejected this proposal.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=572}} Nonetheless, to appease Colman's interest in the Beatles, Wood directed Martin to sign the group.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=616}} | ||
Martin | Martin met with Epstein again on 9 May at [[Abbey Road Studios|EMI Studios]] in London, and informed him he would give the Beatles a standard recording contract with Parlophone, to record a minimum of six tracks in the first year.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=622}} The royalty rate was to be one [[Penny (British pre-decimal coin)|penny]] for each record sold on 85% of records, which was to be split among the four members and Epstein.{{sfn|Spitz|2005|p=312}}{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=622}} They agreed to hold the Beatles' first recording on 6 June 1962.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=622}} | ||
==== Early Beatles sessions (1962) ==== | |||
Though Martin later called the 6 June 1962 session at EMI's studio two an "audition", as he had never seen the band play before,{{sfn|Martin|1995|pp=120–123}} the session was actually intended to record material for the first Beatles single.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|pp=642–643}} Ron Richards and his engineer [[Norman Smith (record producer)|Norman Smith]] recorded four songs: "[[Besame Mucho]]", "[[Love Me Do]]", "[[Ask Me Why]]", and "[[P.S. I Love You (Beatles song)|P.S. I Love You]]".{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=643}} Martin arrived during the recording of "Love Me Do"; between takes, he introduced himself to the Beatles and subtly changed the arrangement.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=643}} The verdict was not promising, however, as Richards and Martin complained about [[Pete Best]]'s drumming, and Martin thought their original songs were simply not good enough.{{sfn|Miles|1997|p=90}}{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=643}} In the control room, Martin asked the individual Beatles if there was anything they personally did not like, to which Harrison replied, "I don't like your tie." That was the turning point, according to Smith, as Lennon and McCartney joined in with jokes and comic wordplay, that made Martin think that he should sign them to a contract for their wit alone.{{sfn|Spitz|2005|pp=318–319}} After deliberating for a time whether to make Lennon or McCartney the lead vocalist of the group, Martin decided he would let them retain their shared lead role: "Suddenly it hit me that I had to take them as they were, which was a new thing. I was being too conventional."{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=646}}[[File:Parlophone LP PMC 1202.jpg|thumb|left|The Beatles' first [[LP record|LP]], ''[[Please Please Me]]'', produced by Martin|alt=The Beatles' first LP]]Though charmed by the Beatles' personalities, Martin was unimpressed with the musical repertoire from their first session. "I didn't think the Beatles had any song of any worth—they gave me no evidence whatsoever that they could write hit material", he claimed later.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=766}} He arranged for the Beatles to record Mitch Murray's "[[How Do You Do It?|How Do You Do It]]" at a September session, with the Beatles now featuring [[Ringo Starr]] on drums.{{Refn|However, Martin was dissatisfied with Starr's 4 September performance and resolved to use a session drummer for their next recording session.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=697}} On 11 September, the Beatles recorded "Love Me Do" again and "P.S. I Love You" for the first time with the session musician [[Andy White (drummer)|Andy White]] playing drums. Starr, instead, was asked to play tambourine and [[maracas]], and he complied.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1988|p=20}} Martin later praised Starr's drumming, calling him "probably… the finest rock drummer in the world today".<ref>{{Pop Chronicles|45}}</ref>|group=lower-alpha}} The Beatles also re-recorded "Love Me Do" and played an early version of "[[Please Please Me (song)|Please Please Me]]", which Martin thought was "dreary" and needed to be sped up.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=696}} While Martin pushed for "How Do You Do It" to be released, the band and Murray protested,{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=7}}{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=699}} so he decided to have "Love Me Do" issued as the A-side of the Beatles' first single and save "How Do You Do It" for another occasion.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=699}}{{Refn|"How Do You Do It" would be recorded by Gerry and the Pacemakers and produced by Martin in 1963; it topped the British charts.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=132}}|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
Despite Martin's doubts about the song, "Love Me Do" steadily climbed in the British charts, peaking at number 17 in November 1962. With his doubts about the Beatles' songwriting abilities now quashed, Martin told the band they should re-record "Please Please Me" and make it their second single. He also suggested the Beatles record a [[LP record|full album]], a suggestion [[Mark Lewisohn]] deems "genuinely mind-boggling", given how little exposure the Beatles had achieved so far.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|pp=764–765}} On 26 November, the Beatles attempted "Please Please Me" a third time. After the recording, Martin looked over the mixing desk and said, "Gentlemen, you have just made your first number one record".{{sfn|Spitz|2005|p=360}} | |||
==== | ==== Commercial breakout (1963–1964) ==== | ||
As Martin had predicted, "[[Please Please Me (song)|Please Please Me]]" reached no. 1 on most of the British singles charts upon its release in January 1963. "From that moment, we simply never stood still", he reflected.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=119}} For the Beatles' first LP, Martin had the group record 10 new tracks to include with the four tracks already released.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=116}} They accomplished this in one marathon recording session, on 11 February 1963, with the Beatles recording a mix of Lennon–McCartney originals and covers from their stage act. Nine days later, Martin overdubbed a piano part to the song "[[Misery (Beatles song)|Misery]]" and a [[celesta]] on "[[Baby It's You]]".{{sfn|Lewisohn|1988|p=28}} The resulting album, ''[[Please Please Me]]'', became a huge success in the UK, spending 30 consecutive weeks at top of the charts, a feat no album bar one had accomplished by then.{{sfn|Gould|2007|p=150}} | |||
{{quote box | |||
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| width = 25%|I would meet them in the studio to hear a new number. I would perch myself on a high stool and John and Paul would stand around me with their acoustic guitars and play and sing it. … Then I would make suggestions to improve it and we'd try it again. | |||
| author = — George Martin{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=130}} | |||
}} | |||
Martin | At this early stage of their working relationship, Martin played a major role in refining and arranging the Beatles' self-written songs to make them commercially appealing: "I taught them the importance of the [[hook (music)|hook]]. You had to get people's attention in the first ten seconds, and so I would generally get hold of their song and 'top and tail' it—make a beginning and end. And also make sure it ran for about two-and-a-half minutes so that it would fit DJs' programmes".{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=120}} He added that, at the beginning of his recording career with the band, his aim was to "[get] a really loud rhythm sound", manifested in "[[She Loves You]]".{{sfn|Gould|2007|pp=157–158}} The Beatles' frenetic recording schedule continued in March 1963, as they recorded "[[From Me to You]]", "[[Thank You Girl]]", and an early version of "[[One After 909]]". Martin altered the arrangement of "From Me to You", substituting the Beatles' idea for a guitar intro with a vocalized "da-da-da-da-da-dum-dum-da", backed by overdubbed harmonica.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=130}} | ||
Martin | The Beatles returned to EMI Studios on 1 July to record a new single, "She Loves You". Martin liked the song but was sceptical of its closing chord, which he found cliché.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=32}} The Beatles, now increasingly confident in their songwriting, pushed back.{{sfn|The Beatles|2000|p=96}} Martin and the recording engineer [[Norman Smith (record producer)|Norman Smith]] changed the studio microphone arrangement for the song, giving the bass and drums a more prominent sound on the record.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=136}} "She Loves You" was released in August and it would become the best-selling UK single by any artist in the 1960s.<ref>{{cite news |title=Ken Dodd 'third best-selling artist of 1960s' |agency=BBC News |date=1 June 2010 |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/10201932 |access-date=18 September 2022}}</ref> Around this time, the foundations for [[Beatlemania]] had been laid.{{sfn|Spitz|2005|p=359}} Sometime in 1963, Martin and Brian Epstein arranged a loose formula to record two Beatles albums and four singles per year.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=28}} The Beatles began work on their second LP on 18 July. Like their debut album, this record reflected the repertoire of the Beatles' contemporary stage act.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=138}} Martin played piano on several of the tracks, including "[[Money (That's What I Want)]]" and "[[Not a Second Time]]", and also played [[Hammond organ]] on "[[I Wanna Be Your Man]]".{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|pp=34–36}} ''With the Beatles'' came out in November 1963 and remained at no. 1 on the album charts for five months.{{sfn|Gould|2007|p=187}} | ||
Martin | Martin and the Beatles recorded their next single, "[[I Want to Hold Your Hand]]" on 17 October—their first recording session with [[multitrack recording|four-track recording]].{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=36}} Impressed with the song, Martin merely suggested adding handclaps and adding [[dynamic range compression|compression]] to Lennon's rhythm guitar sound to imitate the sound of an organ.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=151}} "I Want to Hold Your Hand" extended the Beatles' success to the US.{{sfn|Gould|2007|p=212}} Shortly after, he had the band record [[Komm, gib mir deine Hand / Sie liebt dich|German-language versions of "She Loves You" and "I Want to Hold Your Hand"]] for the [[West Germany|West German]] market.{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=158–159}}{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=38}} Martin travelled to New York with the Beatles on 7 February, as the band embarked on their first visit to America—including [[The Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show|landmark performances]] on ''[[The Ed Sullivan Show]]''.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=167}}[[File:Beatles and George Martin in studio 1966.JPG|thumb|Martin working with the Beatles in EMI's Studio Two during the 1964 ''[[Beatles for Sale]]'' sessions|alt=Martin during the Beatles for Sale sessions|left]]In late February, the band re-entered the studio and began recording the soundtrack album to the Beatles' upcoming untitled feature film.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=39}} The [[A Hard Day's Night (film)|film]], [[A Hard Day's Night (album)|album]], and [[A Hard Day's Night (song)|lead single]] were all titled ''A Hard Day's Night''.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=192}} In addition to producing the Beatles' songs for the album—their first not to feature any cover songs—Martin orchestrated several instrumental numbers for the film.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=195}} The film was a success, and the album and single both reached no. 1 in the UK and US in July.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=209, 212}} Martin joined them for part of their [[The Beatles' 1964 North American tour|August/September North American tour]], recording their performance at [[the Hollywood Bowl]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=209}}{{Refn|Overwhelming crowd noise made the recording unsuitable for release until, in 1977, Martin spliced some of the performances with others from their 1965 visit to the Hollywood Bowl;{{sfn|Friede|Titone|Weiner|1980|p=28}} this was issued as ''[[The Beatles at the Hollywood Bowl]]''.{{citation needed|date=November 2025}}|group=lower-alpha}} The Beatles began recording their next studio album, ''[[Beatles for Sale]]'' in August, though the sessions continued intermittently through late October and the record was released in December.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|pp=47–51}} Martin observed that the Beatles were "war weary" during many of these sessions, and the album included six covers because Lennon and McCartney had not written enough songs to fill out the record.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=231}} ''Beatles for Sale'' also featured new percussion sounds on several tracks, such as [[timpani]] and [[chocalho]].{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=49}} The album reached no. 1 in the UK but was not released in the US.<ref name="UKchart">{{cite web |date=17 October 1962 |title=The Beatles > Artists > Official Charts |url=https://www.officialcharts.com/artist/10363/beatles/ |access-date=18 December 2013 |publisher=[[UK Albums Chart]]}}</ref> | ||
==== Shift to studio experimenting (1965–1966) ==== | |||
In mid-February 1965, Martin and the Beatles began five months of sessions to record the music for their second film, ''[[Help! (film)|Help!]]''. The Beatles adopted new studio techniques for these sessions, typically [[overdubbing]] vocals and other sounds onto a carefully laid rhythm track.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=54}} The group by now had grown confident in the studio, and Martin encouraged them to explore new ideas for songs, such as an outro to "[[Ticket to Ride (song)|Ticket to Ride]]" that was at a faster tempo than the rest of song.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=248}} They continued to experiment with unusual instruments, such as an [[alto flute]] solo for "[[You've Got to Hide Your Love Away]]" scored by Martin.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=251}} It was Martin's idea to score a string quartet accompaniment for "[[Yesterday (Beatles song)|Yesterday]]" against McCartney's initial reluctance.{{sfn|Miles|1997|p=205}} Martin played the song in the style of [[Johann Sebastian Bach|Bach]] to show McCartney the [[Voicing (music)|voicings]] that were available.{{sfn|Miles|1997|p=206}} ''Help!'', again, peaked at no. 1 in the UK and the US.<ref name="UKchart" /><ref name="USchart2">{{cite magazine |title=The Beatles – Chart history |url=http://www.billboard.com/artist/383540/beatles/chart?page=5&f=305&sort=date |access-date=29 August 2016 |magazine=Billboard}}</ref> | |||
The group reconvened in October and November to record another album in time for the holiday shopping season.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=285}} ''[[Rubber Soul]]'' continued the Beatles' experimentation with new sounds and contained several groundbreaking tracks. "[[Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)]]" featured Harrison on [[sitar]], making it one of the first Western pop records to feature Indian instrumentation.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=288}} The shimmering electric guitar sound on "[[Nowhere Man (song)|Nowhere Man]]" was achieved by repeatedly reprocessing the signal to increase the [[Audio equalization|treble frequencies]], beyond the EQ limits permitted for EMI engineers.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=295}} Martin himself recorded a [[baroque music|baroque-style]] piano solo on Lennon's "[[In My Life]]", recording the tape at half-speed and playing it back at normal speed so the piano sounded like a [[harpsichord]]. Though Martin didn't play a harpsichord on the record, "In My Life" inspired other record producers to begin incorporating the instrument in their arrangements of pop records.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Myers |first1=Marc |title=Bach & Roll: How the Unsexy Harpsichord Got Hip |journal=[[The Wall Street Journal]] |date=30 October 2013 |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702304200804579163670969242120}}</ref> ''Rubber Soul'' received strong critical acclaim upon its release and proved highly influential among the Beatles' musical contemporaries, such as [[the Beach Boys]].{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=306}} Martin sensed a shift in how the group was recording albums:<blockquote>I think ''Rubber Soul'' was the first of the albums that presented a new Beatles to the world. Up to this point we had been making albums that were rather like a collection of their singles. And now, we really were beginning to think about albums as a bit of art in their own right. We were thinking about the album as an entity of its own, and ''Rubber Soul'' was the first one to emerge in this way.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=304}}</blockquote> | |||
== | {{Listen | ||
| filename = Tomorrow Never Knows (Beatles song - sample).ogg | |||
| title = "Tomorrow Never Knows" (1966) | |||
| description = The author Mark Brend writes that, with ''[[Revolver (Beatles album)|Revolver]]'', the Beatles employed the studio as "an environment for wide-ranging sonic research" that included extensive and groundbreaking experimentation.{{sfn|Brend|2005|pp=55–56}} | |||
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The Beatles re-entered EMI Studios in April 1966, with the group's exploration of recording at [[Stax Records]]' studio in [[Memphis, Tennessee|Memphis]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=21}} The sessions of the ''[[Revolver (Beatles album)|Revolver]]'' album began with a highly experimental track, "[[Tomorrow Never Knows]]"—a Lennon song inspired by [[Timothy Leary]]'s book ''[[The Psychedelic Experience]]''. The song featured several innovations in pop recording, including the use of a [[tanpura]] [[Drone (sound)|drone]] loop throughout the song, a backwards guitar solo, sped-up [[tape loop]]s, and [[Automatic double tracking|artificial double tracking]] (ADT) on Lennon's vocal.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=70, 72}}{{Refn|Martin's joking technical description of ADT to Lennon coined the term ''[[flanging]]'' in music.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=70}}|group=lower-alpha}} Martin worked closely with EMI engineers [[Geoff Emerick]] and [[Ken Townsend]] to achieve these radical effects.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=70}} For Lennon's "[[I'm Only Sleeping]]", the recording was conducted at a fast tape speed and then slowed down to achieve a drowsy, dream-like sound,{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=61}} and "[[For No One]]" featured a French horn solo scored by Martin and played by [[Alan Civil]].{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=79}} Furthermore, the ''Revolver'' sessions produced the single "[[Paperback Writer]]"/"[[Rain (Beatles song)|Rain]]",{{Sfn|Womack|2018|pp=48–50}} with the former featuring three-part [[Harmony|harmonies]] arranged by Martin and mixed to have a fluttering echo sound.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=53}} ''Revolver'' was released in August to highly favourable critical reaction, particularly in the UK.{{sfn|Rodriguez|The Beatles|2012|p=176}} Retrospective criticism has recognized it as being among the finest pop albums ever made, with numerous critics deeming it the very best.{{sfn|Rodriguez|The Beatles|2012|pp=xi–xii}} | |||
==== ''Sgt. Pepper'' (1966–1967) ==== | |||
{{quote box | |||
| align = right | |||
| width = 25%|By the time of ''Pepper'', the Beatles had immense power at Abbey Road. So did I. They used to ask for the impossible, and sometimes they would get it. At the beginning of their recording career, I used to boss them about. ... By the time we got to ''Pepper'', though, that had all changed. I was very much the collaborator. Their ideas were coming through thick and fast, and they were brilliant. All I did was help make them real. | |||
| author = — George Martin{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=186}} | |||
}}By the time the Beatles resumed recording on 24 November 1966, they had decided to discontinue touring and focus their creative energies on the recording studio. Martin reflected, "the time had come for experiment. The Beatles knew it, and I knew it."{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=145}} Their late 1966 sessions stretched into April 1967, forming what became ''[[Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band]]''—a record continuing the Beatles' and Martin's imaginative use of the studio to create new sounds on record. He was involved as an arranger throughout the album,{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=157}} except for "[[She's Leaving Home]]".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=224}}{{Refn|While this was the first Beatles song that Martin did not arrange, as he had a prior engagement,{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=224}} he still produced the recording and conducted the orchestra himself.{{sfn|Miles|1997|p=317}} Still, Martin called this "one of the biggest hurts of my life".{{sfn|Miles|1997|p=317}}|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
Martin | For "[[Within You Without You]]", Martin arranged a score that combined Indian and Western classical music.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=234}} He used [[Pitch control|vari-speed]] editing to alter the recording speed of several of the album's vocal tracks, including "[[Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds]]".{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=215, 228}} He and Geoff Emerick superimposed crowd noise sound effects onto the title track and [[fade (audio engineering)#Crossfading|crossfaded]] the song into "[[With a Little Help from My Friends]]", mimicking a live performance.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2010|p=251}} Martin also played instruments on several songs, including the piano on "[[Lovely Rita]]",{{sfn|MacDonald|1994|pp=189–190}} the [[harpsichord]] on "[[Fixing a Hole]]",{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=197}} and numerous instruments on "[[Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!]]": the [[harmonium]], [[Organ (music)|organ]], and perhaps the [[glockenspiel]].{{Sfn|MacDonald|1994|p=188}} For the song's circus-themed instrumental breaks, he had engineers cut tapes of numerous carnival-instrument recordings into tape fragments, then reassemble them at random.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=210}} Martin applied heavy [[Delay (audio effect)|tape echo]] to Lennon's voice in "[[A Day in the Life]]".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=180}} Additionally, he worked with McCartney to implement the 24-bar orchestral climaxes in the middle and end of the song, produced by instructing a 45-piece orchestra to gradually play from their instruments' lowest note to their highest.{{sfn|Miles|1997|pp=326–328}}{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=180, 198–203}} | ||
=== | ''Sgt. Pepper'' cost [[Pound sterling|£]]25,000 to produce ({{Inflation|UK|25000|1967|fmt=eq|r=-3|cursign=£}}),{{sfn|Martin|Pearson|1995|p=168}} far more than any previous Beatles record.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=212}} When the album was finally released in early June 1967, it received widespread acclaim from music critics, with a ''[[The Times|Times]]'' critic deeming it "a decisive moment in the history of Western civilisation".{{sfn|MacDonald|1994|p=198}} The Beatles historian [[Jonathan Gould]] writes that it received "the most momentous public reception that had ever been given to a popular recording."{{sfn|Gould|2007|p=396}} ''Sgt.'' ''Pepper''{{'}}s accolades also raised Martin's public profile as a record producer,{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=256}} and contemporary musicians sought to copy its production methods. This augmented the producer's role in popular music.{{sfn|Howard|2004|p=31}} Thus, Lennon and McCartney complained that Martin had received too much attention for his part in ''Sgt Pepper's'',{{sfn|Hertsgaard|1996|pp=172–73}} beginning a feeling of resentment by the band towards him.{{sfn|Gould|2007|p=489}} According to Emerick, with the album's recording sessions, McCartney emerged as the Beatles' de facto producer, as Martin was increasingly absent near the end prolonged sessions.{{sfn|Emerick|Massey|2006|p=163}} | ||
During the ''Sgt. Pepper'' sessions, the Beatles working on Lennon's, "[[Strawberry Fields Forever]]", which began as a simple arrangement of guitar, drums, and [[Mellotron]].{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=87}} They would remake the song in a new key and [[tempo]] and with much added instrumentation.{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=154–155}} Lennon asked Martin to combine takes 7 and 26 of the song, even though they were recorded at different tempos and in different keys. Martin, [[Ken Townsend]], and Emerick accomplished Lennon's unusual request by carefully speeding up take 7 and slowing down take 26 so they were nearly equal in key and tempo.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=91}}{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=159}} Martin mixed the track to include a [[false ending]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=160}} Soon after, the band began work on McCartney's "[[Penny Lane]]", which featured a [[piccolo trumpet]] solo that was requested by McCartney. McCartney hummed the melody that he wanted, and Martin notated it for the trumpeter [[David Mason (trumpeter)|David Mason]].{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=93}} Martin also orchestrated a larger brass and woodwind score with trumpets, piccolo, flutes, oboe, and [[flugelhorn]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=171–172}} In February, the group issued "Strawberry Fields Forever"/"Penny Lane" as a double [[A-side and B-side|A-side]]. The single drew critical praise for its musical and recording inventiveness, but it proved the first British Beatles single in four years not to top the charts, instead reaching no. 2.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=175}} Martin blamed himself for weakening the forthcoming album by caving in to external pressure for a standalone single and called it "the biggest mistake of my professional life".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=177}} | |||
==== ''Magical Mystery Tour'', "All You Need Is Love", and ''Yellow Submarine'' (1967–1968) ==== | |||
{{quote box | |||
| align = right | |||
| width = 25%|I tended to lay back on ''[[Magical Mystery Tour]]'' and let them have their head. Some of the sounds weren't very good. Some were brilliant, but some were bloody awful. | |||
| author = — George Martin{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=277}} | |||
}} | |||
==== | |||
{{quote box|align=right|width= | |||
Before ''Sgt Pepper'' was even released, the Beatles held several sessions from April to June 1967 to record additional songs for a yet-to-be-determined purpose: "[[Magical Mystery Tour (song)|Magical Mystery Tour]]", and "[[Baby, You're a Rich Man]]", among others.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|pp=110–112}} Martin later described many of these sessions as lacking the strong creative focus the band had displayed in recording ''Sgt. Pepper''.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=250}} Showing less interest, he came uncharacteristically unprepared for the "Magical Mystery Tour" trumpet overdub session on 3 May, forcing the session musicians to improvise a score for themselves.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=252}} On 27 August, the Beatles manager [[Brian Epstein]] died of an accidental drug overdose, devastating the band and Martin.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=122}} McCartney urged the group to focus on the ''[[Magical Mystery Tour (film)|Magical Mystery Tour]]'' film project, and they resumed recording with Lennon's "[[I Am the Walrus]]".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=276}} For this song, which Martin initially disliked but grew to appreciate,{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=277, 283}} he provided a quirky and original arrangement for brass, violins, cellos, and the [[Mike Sammes]] Singers vocal ensemble singing nonsense phrases.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=127}}{{sfn|Miles|1997|p=357}}{{sfn|MacDonald|1994|p=216}} Much of the fruit of these sessions went to ''[[Magical Mystery Tour]]'', released as an [[Extended play|EP]] in the UK in December 1967 and an [[LP record|LP]] in the US in late November; it reached no. 2 and no. 1 on those charts, respectively.{{Citation needed|date=November 2025}} | |||
The | In May 1967, Epstein agreed to have the group record a song live on the world's first live global television broadcast, ''[[Our World (1967 TV program)|Our World]]''.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=259}} The band decided to record Lennon's "[[All You Need Is Love]]" for the occasion.{{sfn|The Beatles|2000|p=257}} Martin believed it was too risky to record the entire track on the live broadcast, so he had the Beatles record a [[backing track]] on 14 June at [[Olympic Studios]]—with the unusual arrangement of Lennon on [[harpsichord]], McCartney on [[double bass]], Harrison on violin, and Starr on drums, with [[Eddie Kramer]] as audio engineer.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=116}}{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=261}} The band also asked Martin to write an orchestral score, starting with the beginning of "[[La Marseillaise]]" and ending with a fade-out with bits from [[Johann Sebastian Bach]]'s [[Inventions and Sinfonias]], "[[Greensleeves]]", and "[[In the Mood]]".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=262}} Despite some technical glitches, the Beatles, the orchestra, and the assembled crowd of Beatles friends recorded what [[Kenneth Womack]] deems a seamless live take of the song to an audience of hundreds of millions.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=267}} "All You Need Is Love" was quickly released as a single, the first Beatles single on which Martin received a written credit as producer.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=267}} | ||
In early 1967, Epstein and the media producer [[Al Brodax]] signed a contract to have the Beatles provide four original songs to support an animated feature film, ''[[Yellow Submarine (film)|Yellow Submarine]]''. The Beatles were initially contemptuous of the project, planning to relegate only their weakest songs to [[Yellow Submarine (album)|the soundtrack]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=241, 303}} Some, such as "[[All Together Now (Beatles song)|All Together Now]]", were recorded without Martin's involvement.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=250, 253, 258}} However, he did compose the film's orchestral scores, which comprises the second half of the film's soundtrack album.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=303}} He claimed to take inspiration for the score from [[Maurice Ravel]], "the musician I admire most".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=305}} The ''Yellow Submarine'' film debuted on 17 July 1968 and was favourably received by critics.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=319}}{{Refn|However, Martin chose to re-record the album's score after the film's release, delaying the soundtrack's release until January 1969.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=320}}|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
==== | ====Conflict and final years (1968–1970)==== | ||
By the time of the [[The Beatles (album)|White Album]] sessions in mid-1968, Martin found himself in competition with [[Apple Electronics]]'s eccentric inventor, [[Magic Alex]], for the Beatles' interest in studio production.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=309}} The Beatles grew increasingly hostile toward each other.{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=313, 325}} Additionally, the Beatles began recording lengthy, repetitive rehearsal tracks in the studio.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=317}} With all these disruptions to their studio dynamic, Martin consciously stayed in the background of many sessions, reading stacks of newspapers in the control booth until his guidance or assistance was sought.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=313}} For instance, when he gave McCartney suggestions for his vocal part on "[[Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da]]", and McCartney chastised him, he shouted in reply: "Then bloody sing it again! I give up. I just don't know any better how to help you".{{sfn|Sounes|2010|p=217}} Parts of the White Album sessions required Martin and his engineers to attend to simultaneous recordings in different studios, such as an occasion when Lennon was working on "[[Revolution 9]]" in Studio Three, while McCartney recorded "[[Blackbird (Beatles song)|Blackbird]]" in Studio Two.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=315}} Martin scored a [[fiddle]] arrangement on Starr's first composition, "[[Don't Pass Me By]]",{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=323}} as well as brass arrangements on "[[Revolution 1]]", "[[Honey Pie]]", "[[Savoy Truffle]]", and "[[Martha My Dear]]".{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=316, 343–344}} He also played [[celesta]] on "[[Good Night (Beatles song)|Good Night]]" and [[harmonium]] on "[[Cry Baby Cry]]".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=325}} Martin recommended the Beatles choose the best few tracks from the sessions and issue a standard LP, but they instead went with a [[double album]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=349}} The album was released in November to strong commercial and critical success, reaching no. 1 in the UK and US for eight and nine weeks, respectively.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=349}} | |||
In mid-January, the Beatles relocated their work to the basement studio of [[Apple Records]] at 3 [[Savile Row]], where their work ethic and mood improved | In early January 1969, the Beatles gathered at [[Twickenham Studios|Twickenham Film Studios]] to compose and record new material for a live album. The group sought a raw, unedited sound for the album, with Lennon telling Martin that he did not want any "production shit".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=350}} The band's working relationships faltered during these sessions, with Harrison quitting the group for several days out of frustration.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=356}}{{Refn|Martin later admitted he had contributed to Harrison's status as a "second-class" Beatle.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=356}}|group=lower-alpha}} Martin chose not to attend many of these tense, aimless sessions, leaving balance engineer [[Glyn Johns]] to act as de facto producer.{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=350–351}} In mid-January, the Beatles relocated their work to the basement studio of [[Apple Records]] at 3 [[Savile Row]], where their work ethic and mood improved.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=359}} While these so-called ''Get Back'' sessions were underway, they and the keyboardist [[Billy Preston]] [[The Beatles' rooftop concert|performed on the roof]] of Apple Records on 30 January 1969,{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=363}} which resulted in recordings of five new tracks. The next day, the band returned to the basement studio to record several more, including "[[Let It Be (song)|Let It Be]]" and "[[The Long and Winding Road]]".{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|pp=169–170}} | ||
[[File:Phil Spector in 1965.jpg|alt=Phil Spector|left|thumb|[[Phil Spector]], who altered the production of ''[[Let It Be (album)|Let It Be]]'' and is formally credited as the album's producer]] | |||
In March 1969, the Beatles rejected Glyn Johns' proposed mix for a ''Get Back'' LP, scuttling hopes for a public release in the near term.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=372}} In May, Martin and Johns worked together on another mix of ''Get Back''—which the Beatles also rejected. Martin began at this time to consider that the Beatles might be finished as a commercial act.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=373}} The Beatles rejected yet another Johns mix of the album in January 1970.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=196}} Martin supervised the final Beatles recording session (without Lennon) on 3 January 1970, when the group recorded "[[I Me Mine]]".{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=195}} In March and April 1970, [[Phil Spector]] remixed the album—now known as ''[[Let It Be (album)|Let It Be]]''—and added orchestral and choral overdubs to several tracks.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|pp=198–199}} Martin, along with McCartney, was critical of these embellishments, calling them "so uncharacteristic of the clean sounds the Beatles had always used".{{sfn|Miles|2001|p=374}} The album was finally released in May 1970, after McCartney had publicly announced he was leaving the Beatles. When EMI informed Martin that he would not get a production credit because Spector produced the final version, Martin commented, "I produced the original, and what you should do is have a credit saying 'Produced by George Martin, over-produced by Phil Spector'."{{sfn|Lewis|Spignesi|2009|p=42}} | |||
The first song for what became the ''[[Abbey Road]]'' album was recorded in February 1969 without Martin.{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=170}} The band did not inform Martin they planned to record a new album until later in the spring when McCartney asked if him would produce it for them. "Only if you let me produce it the way we used to", he replied; McCartney agreed.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=373}} In fact, the ''Abbey Road'' sessions marked Martin's return to prominence in the studio.{{sfn|Stark|2005|p=261}} Martin's first session came on 5 May, when he supervised overdubs to Harrison's "[[Something (Beatles song)|Something]]". He soon set to help the Beatles develop the second side of the album into a symphonic "[[Abbey Road#Medley|medley]]" of songs, akin to a [[rock opera]]. Martin guided the band using his knowledge of classical music to conceive a fluid, cohesive series of songs with repeating themes and motifs.{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=375–376}} Along with an [[electric harpsichord]] accompaniment to "[[Because (Beatles song)|Because]]", Martin composed and orchestrated orchestral arrangements for four of the album's songs.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=384}} In September 1969, ''Abbey Road'' was released to great commerical success{{sfn|Stark|2005|pp=262–263}} but mixed critical reception,{{sfn|Gould|2007|p=528}} partially owing to what was perceived as a synthetic sound.{{sfn|Stark|2005|p=262}} Martin took particular pride in the medley, later claiming, "There's far more of me on ''Abbey Road'' than on any of their other albums".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=393}} As notes the critic [[Ian MacDonald]], "After ''Abbey Road'', the group was effectively dead,"{{Sfn|MacDonald|1994|p=293}} and McCartney announced [[Break-up of the Beatles|the band's break-up]] a few months later.{{Sfn|MacDonald|1994|p=294}} | |||
The first song for what became the ''[[Abbey Road]]'' album | |||
Martin's first | |||
''Abbey Road'' was released | |||
===Post-breakup Beatles work=== | ===Post-breakup Beatles work=== | ||
====Beatle solo records==== | ====Beatle solo records==== | ||
Martin produced the first solo album by a member of the Beatles after | Martin produced the first solo album by a member of the Beatles after John Lennon had privately announced he was leaving the group, Ringo Starr's March 1970 [[standard (music)|standards]] album, ''[[Sentimental Journey (Ringo Starr album)|Sentimental Journey]]''.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=398}} Throughout the next three decades, he collaborated with Paul McCartney extensively for the latter's studio albums and compositions. After scoring some orchestral arrangements for the 1971 album ''[[Ram (album)|Ram]]'',<ref>{{cite web |last1=Harper |first1=Simon |title=Paul McCartney: How I made Ram |website=Classic Rock |date=25 June 2021 |url=https://www.loudersound.com/features/paul-mccartney-how-i-made-ram |access-date=24 November 2022}}</ref> Martin produced [[Paul McCartney and Wings|Wings]]' "[[Live and Let Die (song)|Live and Let Die]]" theme song for the 1973 James Bond [[Live and Let Die (film)|film of the same name]],{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=413–417}} They reunited in 1980 to record "[[We All Stand Together]]", a song for a [[Rupert Bear]] [[Rupert and the Frog Song|animated short film]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=448}} He produced the critically and commerically acclaimed ''[[Tug of War (Paul McCartney album)|Tug of War]]'' (1982),{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=446–450, 453}} as well as ''[[Pipes of Peace]]'' (1983). For the latter's lead single, "[[Say Say Say]]", Martin scored a horn arrangement.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=451}} He also produced the [[Give My Regards to Broad Street|soundtrack album]] to McCartney's 1984 film ''[[Give My Regards to Broad Street (film)|Give My Regards to Broad Street]]''. Though the film was poorly received, the soundtrack reached no. 1 in the UK.{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=458–459}} In the 1990s, he recorded orchestral overdubs for McCartney's singles "[[Put It There]]" (1990), "[[C'Mon People]]" (1993),{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=470}} and his album ''[[Flaming Pie]]'' (1997).{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=475}} In 1998, at [[Yoko Ono]]'s request, Martin scored an orchestral arrangement to the 1980 Lennon demo of "[[Grow Old with Me]]".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=475}} | ||
In 1998, at [[Yoko Ono]]'s request, Martin scored an orchestral arrangement to the 1980 | |||
====''The Beatles Anthology''==== | ====''The Beatles Anthology''==== | ||
Martin oversaw post-production on ''[[The Beatles Anthology]]'' | Martin oversaw post-production on ''[[The Beatles Anthology]]'' project in 1994 and 1995, working again with [[Geoff Emerick]].{{Sfn|The Beatles|2003|loc=starting at 00:00:10}} Martin decided to use an old 8-track analogue [[mixing console]] to mix the songs for the project instead of a modern digital console. In his view, the old console created a distinct sound which a new one could not accurately reproduce.{{Sfn|The Beatles|2003|loc=starting at 00:03:14}} He said he found the project a strange experience, as they had to listen to themselves chatting in the studio, 25 to 30 years previously.{{Sfn|The Beatles|2003|loc=starting at 00:10:24}} However, he was not involved in producing the two new songs reuniting McCartney, Harrison, and Starr: the Lennon demos "[[Free as a Bird]]" and "[[Real Love (Beatles song)|Real Love]]". Though Martin's hearing loss was publicly cited as the rationale,<ref>[http://www.4hearingloss.com/archives/2005/10/mccartney_marti.html Martin's hearing loss] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120208112934/http://www.4hearingloss.com/archives/2005/10/mccartney_marti.html |date=8 February 2012}} 4hearingloss.com. Retrieved: 23 September 2007.</ref><ref>[http://www.icons.org.uk/theicons/collection/sgt-pepper/features/beatles-producer-george-martin "handed over further duties to ELO supremo Jeff Lynne"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080607101623/http://www.icons.org.uk/theicons/collection/sgt-pepper/features/beatles-producer-george-martin |date=7 June 2008}} icons.org.uk. Retrieved: 23 September 2007.</ref> he was not asked by the band members to produce the tracks; [[Jeff Lynne]] performed these duties instead.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=474}} | ||
====Cirque du Soleil and ''Love''==== | ====Cirque du Soleil and ''Love''==== | ||
In 2006, Martin and his son, [[Giles Martin]], remixed 80 minutes of Beatles music for the Las Vegas stage performance ''[[Love (Cirque du Soleil)|Love]]'', a joint venture between [[Cirque du Soleil]] and the Beatles' [[Apple Corps]] Ltd.<ref>[ | In 2006, Martin and his son, [[Giles Martin]], remixed 80 minutes of Beatles music for the Las Vegas stage performance ''[[Love (Cirque du Soleil)|Love]]'', a joint venture between [[Cirque du Soleil]] and the Beatles' [[Apple Corps]] Ltd.<ref>[https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/6159426.stm Love unveils new angle on Beatles] BBC News; retrieved: 21 September 2007.</ref> A [[Love (Beatles album)|soundtrack album from the show]] was released that same year.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/6music/news/20061117_lovealbum.shtml Legendary producer returns to Abbey Road] BBC News; retrieved 21 September 2007.</ref> As part of his contribution to the soundtrack album, Martin orchestrated a score for a demo version of "[[While My Guitar Gently Weeps]]"; the orchestra session, recorded at [[AIR Lyndhurst Hall]], was his final orchestral production.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=487}} Martin received the 2008 [[Grammy Awards]] for Best Compilation Soundtrack Album and Best Surround Sound Album.<ref name="grammys">{{cite web |title=George Martin |publisher=Grammy Awards |url=https://www.grammy.com/artists/george-martin/4663 |access-date=19 September 2022}}</ref> | ||
=== Independent projects and work with other artists === | |||
[[File:London - Oxford Circus - View ENE.jpg|thumb|[[Oxford Circus]], where Martin's [[Associated Independent Recording|AIR]] London studio was based|alt=Martin's AIR London studio]]Martin's early work under his new [[Associated Independent Recording]] (AIR) banner included [[Cilla Black]]'s rendition of [[Burt Bacharach]]'s "[[Alfie (Burt Bacharach song)|Alfie]]", which made no. 6 in the UK, and musical scores for [[Lionel Bart]]'s much-maligned ''[[Twang!!]]'' theatrical production.{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=6–8}} He also reunited with other artists from his [[Parlophone]] days, such as [[Matt Monro]] and [[Ron Goodwin]], though these reunions often failed to produce the same success as earlier records had.{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=10–12}} Martin continued to produce novelty music acts, such as [[The Master Singers]] and [[the Scaffold]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=71}}{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=115}} Other artists that Martin worked with include the singers [[Celine Dion]],<ref name="grammys" /> [[Kenny Rogers]],<ref name="grammys" /> [[Yoshiki (musician)|Yoshiki]],<ref>{{cite news |last=Strauss |first=Neil |date=18 June 1998 |title=Article on Hideto Matsumoto's death |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D00EFD7103DF93BA25755C0A96E958260 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250704213026/https://www.nytimes.com/1998/06/18/arts/the-pop-life-end-of-a-life-end-of-an-era.html |archive-date=4 July 2025 |access-date=5 November 2025 |work=The New York Times}}</ref> and [[Neil Sedaka]],{{sfn|Martin|1995|pp=246–247}} the guitarists [[Jeff Beck]],<ref name="grammys" /> [[John McLaughlin (musician)|John McLaughlin]],{{Citation needed|date=November 2025}} and [[John Williams (guitarist)|John Williams]],{{Citation needed|date=November 2025}} and the bands [[Seatrain (band)|Seatrain]],{{sfn|Womack|2018|pp=409–411}} [[Ultravox]],<ref name="Quicksilver"/> and [[Cheap Trick]].<ref name="Quicksilver"/> Martin produced seven albums for [[America (band)|America]], which included the hits "[[Tin Man (America song)|Tin Man]]", "[[Lonely People]]", and "[[Sister Golden Hair]]". As the band's [[Gerry Beckley]] said in a 2017 interview, "He was really great at keeping us focused and moving forward."<ref>{{cite web |last=Kawashima |first=Dale |date=July 12, 2017 |title=Dewey Bunnell & Gerry Beckley of America Tell How They Wrote Their Classic Hit Songs "A Horse With No Name," "Sister Golden Hair" And Other Hits |url=https://www.songwriteruniverse.com/america-band-interview-2017.htm |access-date=December 15, 2022 |website=Songwriter Universe}}</ref> In 1997, Martin produced "[[Candle in the Wind 1997]]", [[Elton John]]'s tribute single to [[Diana, Princess of Wales]], which became the [[List of best-selling singles in the United Kingdom|best-selling British single of all time]].<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2010/08_august/31/radio2.shtml BBC – Press Office: Elton John tops million sellers chart] [[BBC Radio 2]] Official Charts Company. Retrieved 9 March 2016.</ref><ref name="Times2016">{{cite news |title=Sir George Martin |date=23 March 2016 |website=The Times |url=https://www.thetimes.com/culture/tv-radio/article/sir-george-martin-9832g6mx9 |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20251115184010/https://www.thetimes.com/culture/tv-radio/article/sir-george-martin-9832g6mx9 |archive-date=15 November 2025 |url-access=subscription}}</ref> It was also Martin's final production of a single.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=477}} | |||
In 1988, Martin produced an album version of the play ''[[Under Milk Wood]]'', with music by Martin, [[Elton John]], and [[Mark Knopfler]]; [[Anthony Hopkins]] played the part of "First Voice".{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=466}} In 1992, Martin worked with [[Pete Townshend]] on the musical stage production of ''[[The Who's Tommy]]''. The play opened on Broadway in 1993, with the original cast album being released that summer. For this, Martin won the 1993 [[Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album|Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=471}} In 1998, Martin released an album of Beatles covers titled ''[[In My Life (George Martin album)|In My Life]]''.<ref name=":0">{{cite web |title=Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum |url=http://www.rockhall.com/hof/inductee.asp?id=149 |access-date=18 February 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070202161325/http://www.rockhall.com/hof/inductee.asp?id=149 |archive-date=2 February 2007}}</ref> | |||
In | In October 1970, Martin and his AIR partners opened their [[AIR Oxford Circus|first company studio]] at the top of the [[Peter Robinson (department store)|Peter Robinson building]] in [[Oxford Circus]], London.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=369, 405}} Nine years later, he opened another studio, [[AIR Montserrat]], on the Caribbean island of [[Montserrat]]. This studio was destroyed by a hurricane ten years later.<ref>{{Cite web |title=George Martin Biography |url=http://rockhall.com/inductees/george-martin/bio/ |url-status=deviated |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120713191812/http://rockhall.com/inductees/george-martin/bio/ |archive-date=13 July 2012 |access-date=5 November 2025 |website=Rock and Roll Hall of Fame}}</ref> | ||
On 15 September 1997, Martin arranged a [[benefit concert]] for the island of [[Montserrat]], which had been devastated by volcanic activity. The event, ''[[Music for Montserrat]]'', featured Paul McCartney, Elton John, [[Sting (musician)|Sting]], [[Phil Collins]], [[Eric Clapton]], [[Jimmy Buffett]], and [[Carl Perkins]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=469}} Martin served as a consultant to the June 2002 [[Party at the Palace]] at [[Buckingham Palace Garden]] for the Queen's Golden Jubilee.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=484}} In 2010, he was the executive producer of the hard rock debut of Arms of the Sun, a project featuring [[Rex Brown]], [[King Diamond]], Lance Harvill, and Ben Bunker.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Wright |first=Michael |date=15 February 2010 |title=George Martin Project Set to Debut on ExtremeMusic.com |url=http://www.gibson.com/en-us/Lifestyle/News/arms-of-the-sun-0215/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120113050401/http://www.gibson.com/en-us/Lifestyle/News/arms-of-the-sun-0215/ |archive-date=13 January 2012 |access-date=5 November 2025 |website=Gibson}}</ref> | |||
== | ==Other work== | ||
=== Film scores === | |||
Beginning in the late 1950s, Martin began to supplement his producer income by publishing music and having his artists record it.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=273}}{{Refn|He used the pseudonyms Lezlo Anales and John Chisholm, before settling on Graham Fisher as his primary pseudonym.{{sfn|Lewisohn|2013|p=273}}|group=lower-alpha}} His second wife, Judy, whose father was chairman of the [[Film Producers Guild]], contributed to his film work.{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=26, 77}} Martin's earliest composing work was [[incidental music]] to accompany [[Peter Sellers]]' comedy records.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=47}} In 1966, he signed a long-term deal with [[United Artists]] to write instrumental music.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=113}} Martin composed, arranged, and produced film scores beginning in the early 1960s,{{Sfn|Womack|2017|pp=77–78}} including those of ''[[A Hard Day's Night (film)|A Hard Day's Night]]'' (1964),{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=206–207}} ''[[Yellow Submarine (film)|Yellow Submarine]]'' (1968),{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=303}} as well as an instrumental for [[Ferry Cross the Mersey (film)|''Ferry Cross the Mersey'']] (1965).{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=271}} Martin produced two [[James Bond music|James Bond themes]]: [[Shirley Bassey]]'s "[[Goldfinger (Shirley Bassey song)|Goldfinger]]" (1964),<ref>[http://www.georgemartin.co.uk/cdfour.html Track listing for George Martin compilation on his official site] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071216103201/http://www.georgemartin.co.uk/cdfour.html|date=16 December 2007}} georgemartin.co.uk. Accessed 29 December 2007.</ref> and [[Paul McCartney and Wings]]' "[[Live and Let Die (song)|Live and Let Die]]" (1973), as well as the [[Live and Let Die (soundtrack)|score to ''Live and Let Die'']].<ref>{{cite web |title=George Martin – film composer and Music Producer |url=http://www.mfiles.co.uk/composers/George-Martin.htm |access-date=22 September 2011 |publisher=Mfiles.co.uk}}</ref> Martin was commissioned to write an official opening theme for [[BBC Radio 1]]'s launch in September 1967. Entitled "[[Theme One]]", it was the first piece of music, but not the [[Flowers in the Rain|first record]], heard on Radio 1.<ref>{{cite news |title=50 facts about Radio 1 & 2 as they turn 50 |publisher=BBC News |date=2017-09-30 |last1=Savage |first1=Mark |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-41414837}}</ref> | |||
In November 2017, the [[Craig Leon]]-produced album ''George Martin – Film Scores and Original Orchestral Music'' was released. The album of new recordings collected a selection of Martin's compositions together, including previously unheard sketches from the feature film ''[[The Mission (1986 film)|The Mission]]'' (1986) which were not used in the original soundtrack.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Carnahan |first=Danny |date=6 February 2018 |title=George Martin: In His Own Write |url=https://www.sfcv.org/articles/feature/george-martin-his-own-write |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250321031825/https://www.sfcv.org/articles/feature/george-martin-his-own-write |archive-date=21 March 2025 |access-date=5 November 2025 |website=Classical Voice}}</ref> | |||
Martin | === Television === | ||
Martin hosted a three-part [[BBC]] co-produced documentary series titled ''The Rhythm of Life'', which aired in 1997 on [[Ovation (American TV channel)|Ovation]]. Here, he discusses various aspects of musical composition with professional musicians and singers, among them [[Brian Wilson]], [[Mark Knopfler]], and [[Burt Bacharach]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Kuzmyk |first=Jenn |date=1 January 2000 |title=The Rhythm of Life strikes a sweet note with Ovation |url=https://realscreen.com/2000/01/01/27819-20000101/ |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220928090152/https://realscreen.com/2000/01/01/27819-20000101/ |archive-date=28 September 2022 |access-date=5 November 2025 |website=Realscreen}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Lucas |first=Michael P. |date=13 April 1997 |title=All You Need Is… ‘The Rhythm of Life' |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-04-13-ca-48162-story.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240514205437/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-04-13-ca-48162-story.html |archive-date=14 May 2024 |access-date=5 November 2025 |work=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> In April 2011, a 90-minute documentary feature film co-produced by the BBC ''[[Arena (UK TV series)|Arena]]'' team, ''[[Produced by George Martin]]'', aired to critical acclaim for the first time in the UK. It tells the life story of how Martin, a schoolboy growing up in the [[Great Depression in the United Kingdom|Great Depression]], grew up to become a legendary music producer. [[Mark Lewisohn]] curated an accompanying six-volume musical box set.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=483}} He also contributed to the 2016 documentary ''[[Soundbreaking]]'', a history of recorded music featuring over 160 interviews with influential artists and producers.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Goodman |first=Tim |date=14 November 2016 |title='Soundbreaking: Stories From the Cutting Edge of Recorded Music': TV Review |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-reviews/soundbreaking-stories-cutting-edge-recorded-music-review-947134/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241216163557/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-reviews/soundbreaking-stories-cutting-edge-recorded-music-review-947134/ |archive-date=16 December 2024 |access-date=5 November 2025 |website=The Hollywood Reporter}}</ref> | |||
== Artistry and legacy == | |||
{{Expand section|date=November 2025}} | |||
[[File:George Martin.jpg|thumb|Martin in 2007|left|alt=Martin in 2007]] | |||
In his [[Parlophone]] days, Martin frequently used comedy records to experiment with recording techniques and motifs used later on musical records, such as recording [[magnetic tape]] at half-speed and then playing it back at normal speed.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=48}} He would use this effect on several Beatles records, such as his sped-up piano solo on "[[In My Life]]".{{sfn|Lewisohn|1990|p=65}} In particular, Martin was curious to see how tape offered advantages over existing technologies favoured by EMI: "It was still in its infancy, and a lot of people at the studio regarded tape with suspicion. But we gradually learnt all about it, and working with the likes of Sellers and Milligan was very useful, because, as it wasn't music, you could experiment. ... We made things out of tape loops, slowed things down, and banged on piano lids."{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=50}} | |||
Martin was one of a handful of producers to have number-one records in three or more consecutive decades (1960s, 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s).{{sfn|Bronson|2003|pp=106–128}} | |||
===With the Beatles=== | |||
[[BBC News]] notes that Martin's formal musical expertise and interest in novel recording practices facilitated the group's rudimentary musical education and desire for new musical sounds to record.<ref name=":1">{{cite news |date=9 March 2016 |title=Obituary: Sir George Martin |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-20449870 |access-date=17 September 2022 |agency=BBC News}}</ref> | |||
Martin | Martin's contribution to the Beatles' led to him being described as the "[[fifth Beatle]]".<ref>{{cite news |date=9 March 2016 |title=Sir George Martin, the Fifth Beatle, dies aged 90 – reaction |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/12188339/George-Martin-the-Fifth-Beatle-dies-age-latest.html |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220111/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/12188339/George-Martin-the-Fifth-Beatle-dies-age-latest.html |archive-date=11 January 2022 |access-date=9 March 2016 |work=The Daily Telegraph}}{{cbignore}}</ref> In 2016, Paul McCartney wrote that "If anyone earned the title of the fifth Beatle it was George".<ref>{{cite web |title=Paul McCartney – I'm so sad to hear the news of the... |url=https://www.facebook.com/PaulMcCartney/photos/a.488766413312.281294.182736663312/10154098987943313/ |url-access=limited |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/iarchive/facebook/182736663312/10154098987943313 |archive-date=2022-02-26 |access-date=10 March 2016 |work=facebook.com}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Rushton |first=Katherine |date=24 April 2012 |title='Fifth Beatle' Sir George Martin believes EMI break-up 'the worst thing music has ever faced' |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/mediatechnologyandtelecoms/media/9224588/Fifth-Beatle-Sir-George-Martin-believes-EMI-break-up-the-worst-thing-music-has-ever-faced.html |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220111/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/mediatechnologyandtelecoms/media/9224588/Fifth-Beatle-Sir-George-Martin-believes-EMI-break-up-the-worst-thing-music-has-ever-faced.html |archive-date=11 January 2022 |access-date=5 September 2013 |newspaper=Daily Telegraph}}{{cbignore}}</ref> [[Julian Lennon]] called Martin "the fifth Beatle, without question".<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/julianlennonofficial/posts/10153793802326117 Julian Lennon. So Sad to hear the News of George's Passing...], facebook.com; accessed 10 March 2016.</ref> In the immediate aftermath of the Beatles' break-up, a time when he made many angry utterances, John Lennon trivialised Martin's importance to the Beatles' music and claimed that he took too much credit for the Beatles' music.<ref name="music.yahoo.com" /> In a 1971 letter to McCartney, Lennon wrote, "When people ask me questions about 'What did George Martin really do for you?,' I have only one answer, 'What does he do now?' I noticed you had no answer for that!"<ref name="music.yahoo.com">{{cite web |last=Willman |first=Chris |date=8 October 2012 |title='John Lennon Letters' Reveal Bitterness Toward George Martin As Well as McCartney |url=https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/blogs/stop-the-presses/john-lennon-letters-reveal-bitterness-toward-george-martin-192300104.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240423033436/https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/blogs/stop-the-presses/john-lennon-letters-reveal-bitterness-toward-george-martin-192300104.html |archive-date=23 April 2024 |access-date=30 July 2014 |work=Yahoo Entertainment}}</ref> However, that same year, Lennon said, "George Martin made us what we were in the studio. He helped us develop a language to talk to other musicians."<ref>[https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/beatles-producer-george-martin-dead-at-90-240603/ "Beatles Producer George Martin Dead At 90"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170820045047/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/beatles-producer-george-martin-dead-at-90-20160309#ixzz42OratF5K|date=20 August 2017}}, ''Rolling Stone'', 9 March 2016; retrieved 9 March 2016.</ref> | ||
In | == Personal life == | ||
In 1946, Martin met Jean ("Sheena") Chisholm, a fellow member of the [[Royal Navy]]'s choir. They bonded over their mutual love of music.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=16}} Martin's mother, Bertha, strongly disapproved of Chisholm as a partner for Martin, fuelling early strain in the relationship.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=20}} Nevertheless, they were married at the [[University of Aberdeen]] on 3 January 1948.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=21}} Bertha died three weeks later of a [[Intracerebral hemorrhage|brain haemorrhage]], and Martin felt responsible for his mother's death.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=21}} They had two children, Alexis (born 1953){{sfn|Womack|2017|p=37}} and [[Gregory Paul Martin|Gregory Paul]] (born 1957).{{Sfn|Womack|2017|p=60}} Around 1955, the Martins moved from London and bought a home in the [[New towns in the United Kingdom|development town]] of [[Hatfield, Hertfordshire]], some 20 miles north.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=37}} By the early 1960s, Martin pleaded Chisholm for a divorce and moved out of their home, but she refused, citing her childcare needs.{{sfn|Womack|2017|pp=75–76}} Their divorce was finalized in February 1965.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=255}} | |||
On his first day of work at EMI Studios in 1950, Martin met Judy Lockhart Smith, a secretary to Parlophone director Oscar Preuss.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=25}} Martin chose to retain her as a secretary when he assumed the direction of Parlophone in 1955, and they commuted together from Hatfield each day.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=43}} Martin and Lockhart Smith began a discreet affair in the late 1950s.{{sfn|Womack|2017|p=75}} They married on 24 June 1966 at the [[Marylebone Town Hall|Marylebone Registry Office]],{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=107}} and had two children, Lucie (born 1967) and [[Giles Martin|Giles]] (born 1969).{{Citation needed|date=November 2025}} | |||
Martin was firm friends with [[Spike Milligan]], and was best man at Milligan's second wedding: "I loved ''[[The Goon Show]]'', and issued an album of it on my label Parlophone, which is how I got to know Spike."{{sfn|Ventham|2002|p=62}} The album was ''[[Bridge on the River Wye]]'', a spoof of the film ''[[The Bridge on the River Kwai]]'', being based on the 1957 ''Goon Show'' episode "An African Incident".{{sfn|Sikov|2002|p=257}} | |||
In | In the mid-1970s, Martin's hearing started to decline;<ref name="Yahoo 2018">{{cite news |last1=Yahoo Music |title=Giles Martin on father George Martin's hearing loss: 'I became his ears when I was quite young' |url=https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/giles-martin-father-george-martins-hearing-loss-became-ears-quite-young-193540603.html |access-date=24 July 2024 |work=Y! Entertainment |date=2 August 2018 |ref=Yahoo 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231117091404/https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/giles-martin-father-george-martins-hearing-loss-became-ears-quite-young-193540603.html |archive-date=17 November 2023}}</ref> in an interview with the Institute of Professional Sound, he stated that he first noticed it when realizing that he couldn't detect high frequencies that an engineer was using to evaluate [[tonality]].<ref name="Dimond 2014">{{cite web |last1=Dimond |first1=Dawn |title=George Martin – "In My Life" |url=https://ips.org.uk/2014/03/george-martin-in-my-life/ |website=Institute of Professional Sound |access-date=24 July 2024 |ref=Dimond 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240520130324/https://ips.org.uk/2014/03/george-martin-in-my-life/ |archive-date=20 May 2024 |date=10 March 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> Giles consequently served as an impromptu assistant and helped George hide the condition as it worsened over the next two decades.<ref name="Yahoo 2018"/> Martin attributed his hearing loss to his constant production work, stating that "I was in the studio for 14 hours at a stretch, and never let my ears repair. There's no question that listening to loud music was a major contribution to my hearing loss."<ref name="Dimond 2014"/> By 2014, he relied on a combination of hearing aids and lip-reading to communicate face to face.<ref name="Dimond 2014"/> | ||
Martin spent his later years with Lockhart Smith at their home in [[Coleshill, Oxfordshire]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=481}} He died there on 8 March 2016, aged 90.<ref name="ODNB">{{cite ODNB |title=Martin, Sir George Henry (1926–2016), record producer |last=Martin |first=Spencer |year=2020 |doi=10.1093/odnb/9780198614128.013.111156}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |title=Beatles Producer George Martin Dead at 90 |magazine=Rolling Stone |date=9 March 2016 |author=Andy Greene |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/beatles-producer-george-martin-dead-at-90-20160309 |access-date=9 March 2016 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309100022/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/beatles-producer-george-martin-dead-at-90-20160309 |archive-date=9 March 2016}}</ref> While the cause of his death was not immediately disclosed,<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Beatles Producer George Martin Dies Aged 90 |magazine=Time |date=9 March 2016 |author=Jennifer Frederick |url=https://time.com/4252140/george-martin-producer-beatles-dies/ |access-date=9 March 2016}}</ref> his biographer, [[Kenneth Womack]], later attributed it to complications from [[stomach cancer]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=491 <!-- "He had ultimately died from complications associated with stomach cancer" -->}} He was buried near All Saints Church in Coleshill. A memorial service was held on 11 May at [[St Martin-in-the-Fields]], attended by, among others, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, [[Yoko Ono]], [[Olivia Harrison]], [[Elton John]], [[Bernard Cribbins]], and former colleagues.{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=491}} | |||
Martin spent his later years with Lockhart Smith at their home in [[Coleshill, Oxfordshire]].{{sfn|Womack|2018|p=481}} | |||
==Awards and recognition== | ==Awards and recognition== | ||
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" | |||
|- | |||
! scope="col" | Organisation | |||
! scope="col" | Year | |||
! scope="col" | Honour | |||
! scope="col" | Result | |||
! scope="col" class="unsortable"| Ref. | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Grammy Award]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1967 | |||
| Best Contemporary Album{{Refn|As producer of ''[[Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band]]''|name=1967Grammy|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
| {{won}} | |||
| <ref name="Grammy1967">{{cite web |title=1967 Grammy Winners |url=https://www.grammy.com/awards/10th-annual-grammy-awards |access-date=10 November 2025 |website=Grammy Awards}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Grammy Award]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1967 | |||
| [[Grammy Award for Album of the Year|Album of the Year]]{{Refn|name=1967Grammy|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
| {{won}} | |||
| <ref name="Grammy1967"/> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Grammy Award]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1973 | |||
| [[Grammy Award for Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals|Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals]]{{Refn|As arranger of "[[Live and Let Die (song)|Live and Let Die]]"|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
| {{won}} | |||
| <ref name="Grammy1973">{{cite web |title=1973 Grammy Winners |url=https://www.grammy.com/awards/16th-annual-grammy-awards |access-date=15 November 2025 |website=Grammy Awards}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[BRIT Awards]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1977 | |||
| [[Brit Award for British Producer of the Year|Best British Producer]] of the past 25 years | |||
| {{won}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite web |title=Why the very first Brit Awards were a bit… different |website=BBC Bitesize |access-date=15 November 2025 |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/zk99p9q |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250228140612/https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/zk99p9q |archive-date=28 February 2025}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[BRIT Awards]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1984 | |||
| [[Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music|Outstanding Contribution to Music]] | |||
| {{won}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite web |title=The BRIT Awards 1984 |url=http://brits.co.uk/winners/1984/ |website=BRIT Awards |access-date=18 February 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070216063758/http://brits.co.uk/winners/1984/ |archive-date=16 February 2007}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | Queen [[Elizabeth II]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1988 | |||
| [[Order of the British Empire|Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire]] | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref name="NYTObit">{{cite news |last=Kozinn |first=Alan |date=9 March 2016 |title=George Martin, Redefining Producer Who Guided the Beatles, Dies at 90 |website=New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/10/arts/music/george-martin-producer-of-the-beatles-dies-at-90.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250825050525/https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/10/arts/music/george-martin-producer-of-the-beatles-dies-at-90.html |archive-date=25 August 2025 |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live |url-access=subscription}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Berklee College of Music]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1989 | |||
| Honorary [[Doctor of Music|Doctorate in Music]] | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite web |title=Commencement Address |date=13 April 1989 |website=Berklee College of Music |url=https://college.berklee.edu/commencement/past/1989 |access-date=15 November 2025 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250210063737/https://college.berklee.edu/commencement/past/1989 |archive-date=10 February 2025 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Grammy Award]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1993 | |||
| [[Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album|Best Musical Show Album]]{{Refn|As arranger of ''[[The Who's Tommy]]''|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
| {{won}} | |||
| <ref name="Grammy1993">{{cite web |title=1993 Grammy Winners |url=https://www.grammy.com/awards/36th-annual-grammy-awards |access-date=15 November 2025 |website=Grammy Awards}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | Queen [[Elizabeth II]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1996 | |||
| [[Knight Bachelor|Knighted]] | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref name="NYTObit"/> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[British Phonographic Industry]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1998 | |||
| Man of the Year | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref name="Quicksilver">{{cite web |title=A Day In The Life: A Biography of Sir George Martin |website=A Quicksilver Mind |url=https://members.pcug.org.au/~jhenry/biography.html |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20251115175545/https://members.pcug.org.au/~jhenry/biography.html |archive-date=15 November 2025}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 1999 | |||
| Inducted into the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref name=":0"/> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Confédération Internationale des Sociétés d'Auteurs et Compositeurs]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2002 | |||
| Gold Medal | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite website |title=2002 CISAC World Congress Photos |date=26 September 2002 |website=BMI |url=https://www.bmi.com/news/entry/20020927_2002_cisac_world_congress_photos |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241203062809/https://www.bmi.com/news/entry/20020927_2002_cisac_world_congress_photos |archive-date=3 December 2024}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[World Soundtrack Awards]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2002 | |||
| [[World Soundtrack Award – Lifetime Achievement|World Soundtrack Lifetime Achievement Award]] | |||
| {{won}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite website |title=Shore grabs two World Soundtrack Awards |date=19 October 2002 |website=Film Fest Gent |url=https://www.filmfestival.be/en/news/shore-grabs-two-world-soundtrack-awards |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250907014904/https://www.filmfestival.be/en/news/shore-grabs-two-world-soundtrack-awards |archive-date=7 September 2025}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[College of Arms]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2004 | |||
| [[Coat of arms]] | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite web |title=The Arms, Crest and Badge of Sir George Martin – College of Arms |website=College of Arms |url=https://www.college-of-arms.gov.uk/news-grants/grants/item/66-george-martin |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240805062747/https://www.college-of-arms.gov.uk/news-grants/grants/item/66-george-martin |archive-date=5 August 2024 |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Leeds Beckett University]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2006 | |||
| Honorary [[Doctor of Music|Doctorate in Music]] | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite web |title=Tribute to Leeds Beckett honorary graduate |date=9 March 2016 |website=Leeds Beckett University |url=https://www.leedsbeckett.ac.uk/news/0316-tribute-to-leeds-beckett-honorary-graduate/ |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241220085117/https://www.leedsbeckett.ac.uk/news/0316-tribute-to-leeds-beckett-honorary-graduate/ |archive-date=20 December 2024}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[UK Music Hall of Fame]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2006 | |||
| Inducted into the [[UK Music Hall of Fame]] | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite news |title='Fifth Beatle' gets UK Music Hall Of Fame honour |date=15 November 2006 |website=NME |url=https://www.nme.com/news/music/the-beatles-380-1344139 |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20251115181619/https://www.nme.com/news/music/the-beatles-380-1344139 |archive-date=15 November 2025}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Grammy Award]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2007 | |||
| [[Grammy Award for Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media|Best Compilation Soundtrack Album For Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media]]{{Refn|As producer of ''[[Love (Beatles album)|Love]]'', shared with [[Giles Martin]]|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
| {{won}} | |||
| <ref name="Grammy2007">{{cite web |title=2007 Grammy Winners |url=https://www.grammy.com/awards/50th-annual-grammy-awards |access-date=15 November 2025 |website=Grammy Awards}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Grammy Award]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2007 | |||
| [[Grammy Award for Best Immersive Audio Album|Best Surround Sound Album]]{{Refn|As [[surround sound|surround producer]] of ''[[Love (Beatles album)|Love]]'', shared with [[Giles Martin]], [[Paul Hicks (musician)|Paul Hicks]], and Tim Young|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
| {{won}} | |||
| <ref name="Grammy2007"/> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Literary and Historical Society (University College Dublin)|Literary and Historical Society of University College Dublin]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2008 | |||
| [[James Joyce Award]] | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite news |title=The 'fifth Beatle' to get Joyce honour |date=25 September 2008 |website=Irish Independent |url=https://www.independent.ie/entertainment/music/the-lsquofifth-beatlersquo-to-get-joyce-honour-1481861.html |access-date=29 September 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080929194142/https://www.independent.ie/entertainment/music/the-lsquofifth-beatlersquo-to-get-joyce-honour-1481861.html |archive-date=29 September 2008}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Lund University]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2010 | |||
| Honorary [[Doctor of Music|Doctorate in Music]] | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite website |title=Honorary Doctor Sir George Martin dies at the age of 90 |date=10 March 2016 |website=Lund University |url=https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/honorary-doctor-sir-george-martin-dies-age-90 |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250807185931/https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/honorary-doctor-sir-george-martin-dies-age-90 |archive-date=7 August 2025}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[Audio Engineering Society]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2010 | |||
| Honorary membership | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite web |title=Distinguished Guests Prepare For AES London |date=18 May 2010 |website=Audio Engineering Society |url=https://www.aes.org/events/128/press/?ID=75 |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250909193624/https://www.aes.org/events/128/press/?ID=75 |archive-date=9 September 2025}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[University of Oxford]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2011 | |||
| Honorary [[Doctor of Music|Doctorate in Music]] | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite web |title=Congregation |date=23 June 2011 |website=Leeds Beckett University |url=https://www.ox.ac.uk/gazette/2010-2011/23june2011-no4958/congregation/ |access-date=29 June 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120930195236/http://www.ox.ac.uk/gazette/2010-2011/23june2011-no4958/congregation/ |archive-date=30 September 2012}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope = "row", rowspan=1 | [[British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors]] | |||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2012 | |||
| Gold Badge Award | |||
| {{honoured}} | |||
| <ref>{{cite web |last=Awbi |first=Anita |title=Sir George Martin receives Gold Badge Award today |date=17 October 2012 |website=PRS for Music |url=https://www.prsformusic.com/m-magazine/news/sir-george-martin-to-receive-gold-badge-award |access-date=15 November 2025 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20251115204518/https://www.prsformusic.com/m-magazine/news/sir-george-martin-to-receive-gold-badge-award |archive-date=15 November 2025}}</ref> | |||
|} | |||
{{Emblem table | |||
|image = George Martin Shield.png | |||
|badgeimage = <!-- Add badge image here, if available --> | |||
|crest = (upon a Helm with a wreath Argent and Azure): A House Martin proper holding under the sinister wing a Recorder in bend sinister mouthpiece downwards Or. | |||
|escutcheon = Azure on a Fess nebuly Argent between three Stag Beetles Or five Barrulets Sable. | |||
|badge = A Zebra statant proper supporting with the dexter foreleg over the shoulder an Abbot's Crozier Or.<!-- this text will not show unless |badgeimage is also specified --> | |||
}} | |||
==Selected discography == | |||
{{See also|The Beatles discography|Paul McCartney discography}} | |||
Over his career, Martin produced 30 number-one singles and 16 number-one albums in the UK, in addition to a then-record 23 number-one singles and 19 number-one albums in the US (most of which were by [[the Beatles]]).<ref>{{cite web |title=George Martin – Biography |website=[[William Morris Agency]] |url=http://www.wma.com/sir_george_martin/bio/GEORGE_MARTIN.pdf |access-date=6 August 2022 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070710001752/http://www.wma.com/sir_george_martin/bio/GEORGE_MARTIN.pdf |archive-date=10 July 2007}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |last1=Trust |first1=Gary |title=Ariana Grande's 'Yes, And?' Debuts at No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100 |magazine=[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]] |publisher=[[Penske Media]] |url=https://www.billboard.com/music/chart-beat/ariana-grande-yes-and-hot-100-number-one-debut-2-1235586226/ |access-date=18 January 2024 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240418003457/https://www.billboard.com/music/chart-beat/ariana-grande-yes-and-hot-100-number-one-debut-2-1235586226/ |archive-date=18 April 2024}}</ref> | |||
Over his career, Martin produced 30 number-one singles and 16 number-one albums in the UK | |||
{{ | === Non-Beatles works produced or co-produced === | ||
* "[[You' | {{Refbegin|30em}} | ||
* "[[My Kind of Girl (Matt Monro song)|My Kind of Girl]]", [[Matt Monro]] ( | * "[[Barwick Green]]", [[Sidney Torch]] (1951) | ||
* "[[ | * "The White Suit Samba", [[Jack Parnell]] (1951) | ||
* "[[ | * "[[Ae Fond Kiss (song)|Ae Fond Kiss]]", [[Kenneth McKellar (singer)|Kenneth McKellar]] (1952) | ||
* "[[ | * "Bluebell Polka", [[Jimmy Shand]] (1952) | ||
* "[[Bad to Me]]", Billy J. Kramer with the Dakotas ( | * "Melody on the Move", [[Tommy Reilly (harmonica player)|Tommy Reilly]] (1952) | ||
* "[[Hello Little Girl]]", [[The Fourmost]] ( | * "Mock Mozart", [[Peter Ustinov]] (1952) | ||
* "[[ | * ''[[The Lark Ascending (Vaughan Williams)|The Lark Ascending]]'', [[Adrian Boult]] / [[Jean Pougnet]] / [[London Philharmonic Orchestra]] (1952) | ||
* "[[Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying]]", [[Gerry and the Pacemakers]] ( | * "[[Arrivederci Roma|Arrivederci Darling]]", [[Edna Savage]] (1955) | ||
* "[[ | * "[[Earth Angel]]", [[The Southlanders]] (1955) | ||
* "Walk Away", Matt Monro ( | * "Pickin' a Chicken", [[Eve Boswell]] (1955) | ||
* "[[ | * "Robin Hood", [[Dick James]] (1956) | ||
* "[[I'll Be There (Bobby Darin song)|I'll Be There]]", Gerry & the Pacemakers ( | * "[[Rock-A-Beatin' Boogie]]", [[Ivor Kirchin|The Ivor and Basil Kirchin Band]] (1956) | ||
* "[[ | * "Experiments With Mice", [[John Dankworth]] (1956) | ||
* | * "[[Glendora (song)|Glendora]]", [[Glen Mason (singer)|Glen Mason]] (1956) | ||
* "[[Alfie (Burt Bacharach song)|Alfie]]", Cilla Black ( | * "[[Nellie the Elephant]]", [[Mandy Miller]] (1956) | ||
* "London By George", (1968 | * "Smiley", [[Shirley Abicair]] (1956) | ||
* "[[Step Inside Love]]", Cilla Black ( | * "The Shifting Whispering Sands", [[Eamonn Andrews]] (1956) | ||
* "[[Live and Let Die (song)|Live and Let Die]]", [[Paul McCartney]] | * "Be My Girl", [[Jim Dale]] (1957) | ||
* | * "Don't You Rock Me Daddy-O", [[The Vipers Skiffle Group]] (1957) | ||
* "[[Lonely People]]", America ( | * "The Hippopotamus Song", [[Ian Wallace (bass-baritone)|Ian Wallace]] (1957) | ||
* "[[Sister Golden Hair]]", America ( | * [[Charlie Drake]], "[[Splish Splash (song)|Splish Splash]]" (1958) | ||
* "[[Oh! Darling]]", [[Robin Gibb]] ( | * ''[[The Best of Sellers]]'', [[Peter Sellers]] (1958) | ||
* "The Night Owls", [[Little River Band]] (1981, | * "I'm in Charge", [[Bruce Forsyth]] (1959) | ||
* "[[Ebony and Ivory]]", Paul McCartney & [[Stevie Wonder]] ( | * "Saturday Jump", [[Humphrey Lyttelton]] (1959) | ||
* "[[Say Say Say]]", Paul McCartney & Michael Jackson ( | * ''[[Songs for Swingin' Sellers]]'', Peter Sellers (1959) | ||
* "[[No More Lonely Nights]]", Paul McCartney ( | * "[[Goodness Gracious Me (song)|Goodness Gracious Me]]", Peter Sellers & [[Sophia Loren]] (1960) | ||
* "[[Morning Desire]]", Kenny Rogers ( | * "[[Portrait of My Love]]", Matt Monro (1960) | ||
* "[[The Man I Love (song)|The Man I Love]]", [[Kate Bush]] & [[Larry Adler]] ( | * ''[[Beyond the Fringe]]'' (original cast recording) (1961) | ||
* "[[Candle in the Wind 1997]]", [[Elton John]] ( | * "[[My Boomerang Won't Come Back]]", [[Charlie Drake]] (1961) | ||
* "[[My Kind of Girl (Matt Monro song)|My Kind of Girl]]", [[Matt Monro]] (1961) | |||
* "Strictly for the Birds", [[Dudley Moore]] (1961) | |||
* "[[You're Driving Me Crazy]]", [[The Temperance Seven]] (1961) | |||
* "[[Right Said Fred (song)|Right Said Fred]]", [[Bernard Cribbins]] (1962) | |||
* "Football Results", [[Michael Bentine]] (1962) | |||
* "[[Gossip Calypso]]", Bernard Cribbins (1962) | |||
* "[[The Hole in the Ground (song)|Hole in the Ground]]", Bernard Cribbins (1962) | |||
* "Morse Code Melody", [[The Alberts]] (1962) | |||
* "My Brother", [[Terry Scott]] (1962) | |||
* "[[Sun Arise]]", [[Rolf Harris]] (1962) | |||
* "[[Bad to Me]]", [[Billy J. Kramer|Billy J. Kramer with the Dakotas]] (1963) | |||
* ''[[Cambridge Footlights Revue|Cambridge Circus]]'' (original cast recording) (1963) | |||
* "[[Hello Little Girl]]", [[The Fourmost]] (1963) | |||
* "[[How Do You Do It?]]", [[Gerry and the Pacemakers]] (1963) | |||
* "[[I (Who Have Nothing)]]", [[Shirley Bassey]] (1963) | |||
* "If This Should Be a Dream", [[Christine Campbell (singer)|Christine Campbell]] (1963) | |||
* "Oh Not Again Ken", [[Joan Sims]] (1963) | |||
* ''[[At the Drop of Another Hat]]'', [[Flanders and Swann]] (1964) | |||
* "[[Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying]]", Gerry and the Pacemakers (1964) | |||
* "[[Goldfinger (Shirley Bassey song)|Goldfinger]]", Shirley Bassey (1964) | |||
* "[[I Like It (Gerry and the Pacemakers song)|I Like It]]", Gerry & the Pacemakers (1964) | |||
* "It's You", [[Alma Cogan]] (1964) | |||
* "[[Little Children (song)|Little Children]]", Billy J. Kramer with the Dakotas (1964) | |||
* "Nothing Better To Do", [[Bill Oddie]] (1964) | |||
* "[[Warum nur, warum?|Walk Away]]", Matt Monro (1964) | |||
* "[[You're My World]]", [[Cilla Black]] (1964) | |||
* "[[Ferry Cross the Mersey]]", Gerry & the Pacemakers (1965) | |||
* "[[I'll Be There (Bobby Darin song)|I'll Be There]]", Gerry & the Pacemakers (1965) | |||
* "2 Day's Monday", [[The Scaffold]] (1966) | |||
* ''Adventure'', [[Ron Goodwin]] (1966) | |||
* "[[Alfie (Burt Bacharach song)|Alfie]]", Cilla Black (1966) | |||
* ''[[Ludo (Ivor Cutler album)|Ludo]]'', [[Ivor Cutler]] (1967) | |||
* "London By George", (1968) | |||
* "[[Step Inside Love]]", Cilla Black (1968) | |||
* ''Edwards Hand'', [[Edwards Hand]] (1969) | |||
* ''[[Marrakesh Express (album)|Marrakesh Express]]'', [[Stan Getz]] (1970) | |||
* ''Seatrain'', [[Seatrain (band)|Seatrain]] (1970) | |||
* ''[[Sentimental Journey (Ringo Starr album)|Sentimental Journey]]'', [[Ringo Starr]] (1970) | |||
* ''[[The Marblehead Messenger]]'', [[Seatrain (band)|Seatrain]] (1971) | |||
* ''[[Icarus (Paul Winter Consort album)|Icarus]]'', [[Paul Winter Consort]] (1972) | |||
* ''The King's Singers Collection'', [[The King's Singers]] (1972) | |||
* ''A French Collection'', The King's Singers (1973) | |||
* "Deck the Hall", The King's Singers (1973) | |||
* "[[Live and Let Die (song)|Live and Let Die]]", [[Paul McCartney and Wings]] (1973) | |||
* ''The Height Below'', [[John Williams (guitarist)|John Williams]] (1973) | |||
* ''[[Apocalypse (Mahavishnu Orchestra album)|Apocalypse]]'', [[Mahavishnu Orchestra]] (1974) | |||
* ''[[Holiday (America album)|Holiday]]'', [[America (band)|America]] (1974) | |||
* "[[Lonely People]]", America (1974) | |||
* ''My Life, My Song'', [[Tommy Steele]] (1974) | |||
* ''[[The Man in the Bowler Hat]]'', [[Stackridge]] (1974){{Refn|Released as ''Pinafore Days'' in the US and Canada.|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
* "[[Tin Man (America song)|Tin Man]]", America (1974) | |||
* ''[[Blow by Blow]]'', [[Jeff Beck]] (1975) | |||
* ''[[Hearts (America album)|Hearts]]'', America (1975) | |||
* "[[Sister Golden Hair]]", America (1975) | |||
* ''American Flyer'', [[American Flyer (band)|American Flyer]] (1976) | |||
* ''Born On a Friday'', [[Cleo Laine]] (1976) | |||
* ''[[Hideaway (America album)|Hideaway]]'', America (1976) | |||
* ''[[Wired (Jeff Beck album)|Wired]]'', Jeff Beck (1976) | |||
* ''[[A Song]]'', [[Neil Sedaka]] (1977) | |||
* ''[[El Mirage (album)|El Mirage]]'', [[Jimmy Webb]] (1977) | |||
* ''[[Harbor (America album)|Harbor]]'', America (1977) | |||
* "[[Oh! Darling#Robin Gibb, Bee Gees version|Oh! Darling]]", [[Robin Gibb]] (1978) | |||
* ''[[Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (soundtrack)|Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band]]'' (1978, original soundtrack) | |||
* ''No More Fear of Flying'', [[Gary Brooker]] (1979) | |||
* ''[[Silent Letter]]'', America (1979) | |||
* ''[[All Shook Up (Cheap Trick album)|All Shook Up]]'', [[Cheap Trick]] (1980) | |||
* ''[[No Place to Run (album)|No Place to Run]]'', [[UFO (band)|UFO]] (1980) | |||
* "[[The Night Owls (song)|The Night Owls]]", [[Little River Band]] (1981) | |||
* ''[[Time Exposure (Little River Band album)|Time Exposure]]'', [[Little River Band]] (1981) | |||
* "[[Ebony and Ivory]]", [[Paul McCartney]] & [[Stevie Wonder]] (1982) | |||
* ''[[Quartet (Ultravox album)|Quartet]]'', [[Ultravox]] (1982) | |||
* ''[[Tug of War (Paul McCartney album)|Tug of War]]'', Paul McCartney (1982) | |||
* ''[[Pipes of Peace]]'', Paul McCartney (1983) | |||
* "[[Say Say Say]]", Paul McCartney & [[Michael Jackson]] (1983) | |||
* ''[[Give My Regards to Broad Street]]'', Paul McCartney (1984) | |||
* "[[No More Lonely Nights]]", Paul McCartney (1984) | |||
* "[[Morning Desire]]", [[Kenny Rogers]] (1985) | |||
* ''[[The Heart of the Matter (Kenny Rogers album)|The Heart of the Matter]]'', Kenny Rogers (1985) | |||
* ''[[Quiet Storm (Peabo Bryson album)|Quiet Storm]]'', [[Peabo Bryson]] (1986) | |||
* ''[[Positive (Peabo Bryson album)|Positive]]'', Peabo Bryson (1988) | |||
* ''Say Something'', [[Andy Leek]] (1988) | |||
* ''[[Eternal Melody]]'', [[Yoshiki (musician)|Yoshiki]] (1993) | |||
* ''[[The Who's Tommy|Tommy]]'' (original cast recording) (1993) | |||
* ''[[The Glory of Gershwin]]'', [[Larry Adler]] (1994) | |||
* "[[The Man I Love (song)|The Man I Love]]", [[Kate Bush]] & [[Larry Adler]] (1994) | |||
* "[[Candle in the Wind 1997]]", [[Elton John]] (1997) | |||
* "[[The Reason (Celine Dion song)|The Reason]]", [[Celine Dion]] (1997) | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
== | === Solo works === | ||
* ''[[Off the Beatle Track]]'' (1964 | {{Refbegin|30em}} | ||
* ''By Popular Demand, A Hard Day's Night: Instrumental Versions of the Motion Picture Score'' ( | * ''[[Off the Beatle Track]]'' (1964) | ||
* ''By Popular Demand, A Hard Day's Night: Instrumental Versions of the Motion Picture Score'' (1964) | |||
* ''George Martin Scores Instrumental Versions of the Hits'' (1965) | * ''George Martin Scores Instrumental Versions of the Hits'' (1965) | ||
* ''[[Help! (George Martin album)|Help!]]'' (1965 | * ''[[Help! (George Martin album)|Help!]]'' (1965) | ||
* ''..and I Love Her'' (1966 | * ''..and I Love Her'' (1966) | ||
* ''[[George Martin Instrumentally Salutes The Beatle Girls]]'' (1966) | * ''[[George Martin Instrumentally Salutes The Beatle Girls]]'' (1966) | ||
* ''[[The Family Way (soundtrack)|The Family Way]]'' (1967) | * ''[[The Family Way (soundtrack)|The Family Way]]'' (1967) | ||
* ''British Maid'' (1968 | * ''British Maid'' (1968){{Refn|Released in the US as ''London by George''|group=lower-alpha}} | ||
* ''[[Yellow Submarine (album)|Yellow Submarine]]'' ( | * ''[[Yellow Submarine (album)|Yellow Submarine]]'' (1969){{Refn|Specifically, side two of the album, credited to the George Martin Orchestra|group=lower-alpha}} | ||
* ''By George!'' (1970 | * ''By George!'' (1970) | ||
* ''Beatles to Bond and Bach'' (1974) | * ''Beatles to Bond and Bach'' (1974) | ||
* ''[[In My Life (George Martin album)|In My Life]]'' (1998) | * ''[[In My Life (George Martin album)|In My Life]]'' (1998) | ||
* ''[[Produced by George Martin]]'' (2001) | * ''[[Produced by George Martin]]'' (2001) | ||
* ''The Family Way'' (2003) | * ''The Family Way'' (2003) | ||
{{Refend}} | |||
{{ | |||
}} | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* [[Outline of the Beatles]] | * [[Outline of the Beatles]] | ||
* [[Recording practices of the Beatles]] | |||
* [[The Beatles timeline]] | * [[The Beatles timeline]] | ||
== | ==References== | ||
== | === Notes === | ||
{{Notelist|group=lower-alpha}} | |||
=== Citations === | |||
{{Reflist|20em}} | |||
==Bibliography == | |||
{{Refbegin|30em}} | |||
* {{cite book |author=The Beatles |author-link=The Beatles |title=The Beatles Anthology |date=2000 |publisher=Chronicle Books |isbn=978-0-8118-2684-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HWuQu8EMDKcC}} | * {{cite book |author=The Beatles |author-link=The Beatles |title=The Beatles Anthology |date=2000 |publisher=Chronicle Books |isbn=978-0-8118-2684-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HWuQu8EMDKcC}} | ||
* {{cite video |author=The Beatles |title=The Beatles Anthology (DVD) |publisher= | * {{cite video |author=The Beatles |title=The Beatles Anthology (DVD) |publisher=Apple Records |year=2003 |id=ASIN: B00008GKEG |title-link=The Beatles Anthology}} | ||
* {{cite book |last= | * {{cite book |last=Brend |first=Mark |title=Strange Sounds: Offbeat Instruments and Sonic Experiments in Pop |publisher=Backbeat Books |location=San Francisco, California |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-879308551}} | ||
* {{cite book | | * {{cite book |last=Bronson |first=Fred |author-link=Fred Bronson |title=Billboard's Hottest Hot 100 Hits |edition=3 |year=2003 |publisher=Billboard Books |url=https://books.google.com.mt/books/about/Billboard_s_Hottest_Hot_100_Hits.html?id=mEIfDZtsVyAC&redir_esc=y |isbn=9780823077380}} | ||
* {{cite book | | * {{cite book |last1=Emerick |first1=Geoff |year=2006 |author-link=Geoff Emerick |last2=Massey |first2=Howard |title=Here, There and Everywhere: My Life Recording the Music of The Beatles |publisher=Penguin Books |location=New York City, New York |url=https://archive.org/details/herethereeverywh0000emer |isbn=1-59240-179-1}} | ||
* {{cite book |author=MacDonald | * {{cite book |last1=Friede |first1=Goldie |last2=Titone |first2=Robin |last3=Weiner |first3=Sue |title=The Beatles A to Z |date=1980 |publisher=Methuen |isbn=978-0-416-00781-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i8siAQAAIAAJ}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Gould |first=Jonathan |title=Can't Buy Me Love The Beatles, Britain and America |year=2007 |publisher=Random House Digital |isbn=978-0-307-35338-2 |url=https://archive.org/details/cantbuymelovebea0000goul}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Hepworth |first1=David |title=A Fabulous Creation: How the LP Saved Our Lives |date=2019 |publisher=Bantam |isbn=978-1-7841-6208-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WH1lDwAAQBAJ&dq=songs+for+swingin+sellers&pg=PT86}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Hertsgaard |first=Mark |author-link=Mark Hertsgaard |title=A Day in the Life: The Music and Artistry of the Beatles |publisher=Pan Books |location=London, England |year=1996 |isbn=0-330-33891-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/dayinlifemusicar0000hert}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Howard |first=David N. |year=2004 |title=Sonic Alchemy: Visionary Music Producers and Their Maverick Recordings |publisher=Hal Leonard |location=Milwaukee, Wisconsin |isbn=978-0-634-05560-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/sonicalchemyvisi0000howa}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Lewis |first1=Michael |last2=Spignesi |first2=Stephen J. |title=100 Best Beatles Songs: A Passionate Fan's Guide |year=2009 |publisher=Hachette Books |isbn=9781603762656 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3R1_REbXry8C&pg=PT42}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Lewisohn |first=Mark |author-link=Mark Lewisohn |title=The Beatles Recording Sessions |year=1988 |publisher=Harmony Books |location=New York City, New York |url=https://archive.org/details/the-beatles-recording-sessions/mode/2up |isbn=0-517-57066-1}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Lewisohn |first=Mark |title=The Beatles: Recording Sessions |publisher=Three Rivers Press; Reprint edition |year=1990 |isbn=978-0-517-58182-7}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Lewisohn |first1=Mark |title=The Complete Beatles Chronicle: The Definitive Day-by-day Guide to the Beatles' Entire Career |date=2010 |publisher=Chicago Review Press |isbn=978-1-56976-534-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7D1mRwAACAAJ}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Lewisohn |first=Mark |title=The Beatles: All These Years: Volume I: Tune In |publisher=Crown Archetype |year=2013 |url=https://archive.org/details/beatlesallthesey0000lewi |isbn=978-1-4000-8305-3}} | |||
* {{cite book |author=MacDonald |first=Ian |author-link=Ian MacDonald |url=https://archive.org/details/revolutioninhead0000macd |title=Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties |publisher=Henry Holt and Company |location=New York |year=1994 |isbn=978-0-8050-2780-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Martin |first=George |title=Making Music |year=1983 |publisher=William Morrow and Company |location=New York |isbn=978-0-688-01465-0}} | * {{cite book |last=Martin |first=George |title=Making Music |year=1983 |publisher=William Morrow and Company |location=New York |isbn=978-0-688-01465-0}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Martin |first=George |title=All You Need Is Ears |year=1995 |publisher=St. Martin's Press |location=New York |isbn=978-0-312-11482-4}} | * {{cite book |last=Martin |first=George |title=All You Need Is Ears |year=1995 |publisher=St. Martin's Press |location=New York |isbn=978-0-312-11482-4}} | ||
* {{cite book |last1=Martin |first1=George |last2=Pearson |first2=William |title=Summer of Love: The Making of Sgt. Pepper |year=1995 |publisher=Pan Books |location=London |isbn=978-0-330-34210-0}} | * {{cite book |last1=Martin |first1=George |last2=Pearson |first2=William |title=Summer of Love: The Making of Sgt. Pepper |year=1995 |publisher=Pan Books |location=London |isbn=978-0-330-34210-0}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Martin |first=George |title=Playback: An Illustrated Memoir |year=2002 |publisher=Genesis Publications |location=Guildford |isbn=978-0-904-35182-8}} | * {{cite book |last=Martin |first=George |title=Playback: An Illustrated Memoir |year=2002 |publisher=Genesis Publications |location=Guildford |isbn=978-0-904-35182-8}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Miles |first=Barry |year=1997 |author-link=Barry Miles |title=Paul McCartney: Many Years from Now |publisher= | * {{cite book |last=Miles |first=Barry |year=1997 |author-link=Barry Miles |title=Paul McCartney: Many Years from Now |publisher=Henry Holt and Company |location=New York |isbn=978-0-8050-5249-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/paulmccartneyman00unse}} | ||
* {{cite book | | * {{cite book |last1=Miles |first1=Barry |title=The Beatles Diary Volume 1: The Beatles Years |date=2001 |publisher=Omnibus Press |isbn=978-0-85712-000-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/beatlesdiaryvolu0000mile}} | ||
* {{cite book | | * {{cite book |last1=Rodriguez |first1=Robert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=farlJScWrTMC |title=Revolver: How the Beatles Re-Imagined Rock 'n' Roll |last2=The Beatles |year=2012 |publisher=Backbeat Books |isbn=978-1-4768-1355-4}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Spitz |first=Bob |author-link=Bob Spitz |title=The Beatles | * {{cite book |last=Sikov |first=Ed |url=https://archive.org/details/mrstrangelovebio0000siko |title=Mr. Strangelove: A Biography of Peter Sellers |date=2002 |publisher=Hachette Books |isbn=978-0-7868-6664-9}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Spitz |first=Bob |author-link=Bob Spitz |title=The Beatles – The Biography |publisher=Little, Brown and Company |location=New York City, New York |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-316-80352-6 |url=https://archive.org/details/beatlesbiography00spit}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Sounes |first=Howard |author-link=Howard Sounes |title=Fab: An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney |publisher=HarperCollins |location=London, England |year=2010 |isbn=978-0-00-723705-0 |url=https://archive.org/details/fabintimatelifeo0000soun}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Stark |first=Steven D. |author-link=Steven D. Stark |title=Meet the Beatles: A Cultural History of the Band That Shook Youth, Gender, and the World |url=https://archive.org/details/meetbeatlescultu0000star |year=2005 |publisher=HarperCollins |isbn=978-0-06-184252-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Ventham |first=Maxine |title=Spike Milligan: His Part In Our Lives |publisher=Robson |location=London |year=2002 |isbn=978-1-86105-530-9}} | * {{cite book |last=Ventham |first=Maxine |title=Spike Milligan: His Part In Our Lives |publisher=Robson |location=London |year=2002 |isbn=978-1-86105-530-9}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Womack |first=Kenneth |year=2014 |title=The Beatles Encyclopedia: Everything Fab Four |publisher=ABC-CLIO |location=Santa Barbara, CA |isbn=978-0-313-39171-2}} | * {{cite book |last=Womack |first=Kenneth |year=2014 |author-link=Kenneth Womack |title=The Beatles Encyclopedia: Everything Fab Four |publisher=ABC-CLIO |location=Santa Barbara, CA |isbn=978-0-313-39171-2}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Womack |first=Kenneth | * {{cite book |last=Womack |first=Kenneth |title=Maximum Volume: The Life of Beatles Producer George Martin (The Early Years, 1926–1966) |publisher=Chicago Review Press |location=Chicago |year=2017 |isbn=978-1-61373-189-5}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Womack |first=Kenneth | * {{cite book |last=Womack |first=Kenneth |title=Sound Pictures: The Life of Beatles Producer George Martin (The Later Years, 1966–2016) |publisher=Chicago Review Press |location=Chicago |year=2018 |isbn=978-0-91277-774-0}} | ||
{{Refend}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
| Line 587: | Line 546: | ||
* {{NPG name}} | * {{NPG name}} | ||
* [https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/03/15/arts/music/george-martin-fifth-beatle.html George Martin & The Beatles – All Songs & Performers] ([[NYT]]; 15 March 2016). | * [https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/03/15/arts/music/george-martin-fifth-beatle.html George Martin & The Beatles – All Songs & Performers] ([[NYT]]; 15 March 2016). | ||
* [http://www.hit-channel.com/sir-george-martin-the-beatles-producer/20373 Interview at Hit Channel] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140803121520/http://www.hit-channel.com/sir-george-martin-the-beatles-producer/20373 |date=3 August 2014}} | * [http://www.hit-channel.com/sir-george-martin-the-beatles-producer/20373 Interview at Hit Channel] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140803121520/http://www.hit-channel.com/sir-george-martin-the-beatles-producer/20373 |date=3 August 2014}} | ||
* [https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p009mkj8 George Martin] interview on BBC Radio 4 ''[[Desert Island Discs]]'', 6 August 1982 | * [https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p009mkj8 George Martin] interview on BBC Radio 4 ''[[Desert Island Discs]]'', 6 August 1982 | ||
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[[Category:English conductors (music)]] | [[Category:English conductors (music)]] | ||
[[Category:English deaf people]] | |||
[[Category:English harpsichordists]] | [[Category:English harpsichordists]] | ||
[[Category:English pop keyboardists]] | [[Category:English pop keyboardists]] | ||
Latest revision as of 21:07, 18 November 2025
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Sir George Henry Martin (3 January 1926 – 8 March 2016) was an English record producer, arranger, composer, conductor, and musician. He was commonly referred to as the "fifth Beatle" because of his extensive involvement in each of the Beatles' original albums. Martin's formal musical expertise and interest in novel recording practices facilitated the group's rudimentary musical education and desire for new musical sounds to record. Most of their orchestral and string arrangements were written by Martin, and he played piano or keyboards on a number of their records.Template:Sfn Their collaborations resulted in popular, highly acclaimed records with innovative sounds, such as the 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.
Martin's career spanned more than sixty years in music, film, television and live performance. Before working with the Beatles and other pop musicians, he produced comedy and novelty records in the 1950s and early 1960s as the head of EMI's Parlophone label, working with Peter Sellers, Spike Milligan and Bernard Cribbins, among others. In 1965, he left EMI and formed his own production company, Associated Independent Recording.
AllMusic has described Martin as the "world's most famous record producer".[1] In his career, Martin produced 30 number-one hit singles in the United Kingdom and 23 number-one hits in the United States, winning six Grammy Awards.[2] In recognition of his services to the music industry and popular culture, he was made a Knight Bachelor in 1996.
Early years
Martin was born on 3 January 1926 in North London to Henry ("Harry") and Bertha Beatrice (née Simpson) Martin.Template:Sfn He had an older sister, Irene. In Martin's early years, the family lived modestly, first in Highbury and then Drayton Park. Harry worked as a craftsman carpenter in a small attic workshop, while Bertha cooked meals at a communal stove in their apartment building.Template:Sfn In 1931, the family moved to Aubert Park in Highbury, where they lived with electricity for the first time.Template:Sfn
When he was six, Martin's family acquired a piano that sparked his interest in music.Template:Sfn At eight years of age, he persuaded his parents that he should take piano lessons, but those ended after only six sessions because of a disagreement between his mother and the teacher. Martin created his first piano composition, "The Spider's Dance", at age eight.Template:Sfn Martin continued to learn piano on his own through his youth, building a working knowledge of music theory through his natural perfect pitch.Template:Sfn
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I remember well the very first time I heard a symphony orchestra. I was just in my teens when Sir Adrian Boult brought the BBC Symphony Orchestra to my school for a public concert. It was absolutely magical.
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As a child, he attended several Roman Catholic schools, including Our Lady of Sion (Holloway), St Joseph's School (Highgate), and at St Ignatius' College (Stamford Hill), where he won a scholarship.Template:Sfn When World War II broke out, Martin's family left London, with his being enrolled at Bromley Grammar School.Template:Sfn At Bromley, Martin led and played piano in a locally popular dance band, the Four Tune Tellers. The pianists George Shearing and Meade Lux Lewis influenced his style.Template:Sfn He also took up acting in a troupe called the Quavers,Template:Sfn and, with money earned from playing dances, he resumed formal piano lessons and learned musical notation.Template:Sfn
Despite Martin's continued interest in music and "fantasies about being the next Rachmaninoff", he did not initially choose music as a career.Template:Sfn Aged 17, in 1943, Martin volunteered for the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy, having been spurred on by their exploits in the Battle of Taranto.Template:Sfn He trained at HMS St Vincent in Gosport.Template:Sfn The war ended before Martin was involved in any combat, and he left the service in January 1947.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On 26 July 1945, Martin appeared on BBC Radio for the first time during a Royal Navy variety show; he played a self-composed piano piece.Template:Sfn As he climbed rank in the Navy, Martin consciously adopted the middle-class accent and gentlemanly social demeanour common for officers.Template:Sfn
Encouraged by the pianist and teacher Sidney Harrison, Martin used his veteran's grant to attend the Guildhall School of Music and Drama from 1947 to 1950. He studied piano as his main instrument and oboe as his secondary, being interested in the music of Sergei Rachmaninoff, Maurice Ravel, and Cole Porter.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Martin also took courses at Guildhall in music composition and orchestration.Template:Sfn After graduating, he worked for the BBC's classical music department, also earning money as an oboe player in local bands.Template:Sfn
Career
EMI and Parlophone
Martin joined EMI in November 1950 as an assistant to Oscar Preuss,Template:Sfn the head of EMI's Parlophone label. Although having been regarded by EMI as a vital German imprint in the past, it was then not taken seriously and used only for EMI's insignificant acts.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Among Martin's early duties was managing Parlophone's classical records catalogue, including Baroque ensemble sessions with Karl Haas; Martin, Haas, and Peter Ustinov soon founded the London Baroque Society together.Template:Sfn He also developed a friendship and working relationship with composer Sidney Torch and signed Ron Goodwin to a recording contract.Template:Sfn In 1953, Martin produced Goodwin's first record, an instrumental rendition of Charlie Chaplin's theme from Limelight, which made it to no. 3 on the British charts.Template:Sfn Despite these early breakthroughs, Martin resented EMI's preference in the early 1950s for short-playing 78 rpm records instead of the new longer-playing <templatestyles src="Fraction/styles.css" />33+1⁄3 and 45 rpm formats coming into fashion on other labels.Template:Sfn He also proved uncomfortable as a song plugger when occasionally assigned the task by Preuss, comparing himself to a "sheep among wolves".Template:Sfn
Preuss retired as head of Parlophone in April 1955, leaving the 29-year-old Martin to take over the label.Template:Sfn However, he had to fight to retain the label, as by late 1956 EMI managers considered moving Parlophone's successful artists to Columbia Records or the His Master's Voice, with Martin possibly to take a junior A&R role at the His Master's Voice under Wally Ridley.Template:Sfn Martin staved off corporate pressure with successes in comedy records, such as a 1957 recording of the two-man show featuring Michael Flanders and Donald Swann, At the Drop of a Hat.Template:Sfn His work boosted the profile of Parlophone from a "sad little company" to a highly profitable business over time.Template:Sfn As head of Parlophone, Martin recorded classical and Baroque music, original cast recordings, jazz, and regional music from around Britain and Ireland.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn He became the first British A&R man to capitalize on the 1956 skiffle boom when he signed the Vipers Skiffle Group after seeing them in London's 2i's Coffee Bar.Template:Sfn Martin's first hit production came in 1956 in the Johnny Duckworth Band's jazz parody "The Three Blind Mice".Template:Sfn
Martin produced numerous comedy and novelty records. His first success in the genre was the "Mock Mozart" single, performed by Peter Ustinov with Antony Hopkins.Template:Sfn In 1953, Martin produced Peter Sellers' debut in music, the failed single "Jakka and the Flying Saucers".Template:Sfn Two years later, Martin worked with BBC radio comedy stars the Goons on a parody version of "Unchained Melody", but the song's publishers blocked it from release.Template:Sfn The Goons subsequently left Parlophone for Decca,Template:Sfn but Sellers, a member of the group, achieved minor success with Martin in 1957 with "Boiled Bananas and Carrots"/"Any Old Iron".Template:Sfn Recognising that Sellers was capable of "a daydreaming form of humour which could be amusing and seductive without requiring the trigger of a live audience", Martin pitched a full album to EMI.Template:Sfn The result, The Best of Sellers (1958), has been cited by the music historian Mark Lewisohn as the first British comedy LP created in a recording studio.Template:Sfn Martin scored a major success in 1961 with the Beyond the Fringe show cast album, starring, among others, Peter Cook and Dudley Moore; the show catalyzed Britain's satire boom in the early 1960s.Template:Sfn
Martin courted controversy in summer 1960, when he produced a cover of the teen novelty song "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini" and released it mere days after the release of the record in the UK, opening him to public accusations of piracy.Template:Sfn Nonetheless, his first British no. 1 came a year later, in May 1961, with the Temperance Seven's "You're Driving Me Crazy".Template:Sfn He later earned praise from EMI chairman Sir Joseph Lockwood for his top-10 1962 hit with Bernard Cribbins, "The Hole in the Ground".Template:Sfn Though Martin wanted to add rock and roll to Parlophone's repertoire, he struggled to find a "fireproof" hit-making pop artist or group.Template:Sfn
When Martin visited Liverpool in December 1962, the Beatles' manager Brian Epstein, whom he had cultivated a working relationship with,Template:Sfn showed him successful local acts like Gerry and the Pacemakers and the Fourmost. Martin urged Epstein to audition them for EMI.Template:Sfn Gerry and the Pacemakers scored their first no. 1 with their version of "How Do You Do It?", which Martin produced, in April 1963.Template:Sfn Martin also produced the Epstein-managed Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas,Template:Sfn the Fourmost,Template:Sfn and Cilla Black.Template:Sfn Between the Beatles, Gerry and the Pacemakers, and Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas, Martin-produced and Epstein-managed acts were responsible for 37 weeks of no. 1 singles in 1963, transforming Parlophone into the leading EMI label.Template:Sfn His work with such Liverpudilian artists contributed to the development of beat music.[4]
Rivalries and tensions at EMI
By the time he signed a three-year contract renewal in 1959, Martin sought, but failed, to obtain a royalty on Parlophone's record sales, a practice becoming common in the US: "I reckoned that if I was going to devote my life to building up something which wasn't mine, I deserved some form of commission", he reflected.Template:Sfn The issue continued to linger in his mind, and Martin claimed he "nearly didn't sign" his spring 1962 contract renewal over this matter—even threatening EMI managing director L. G. ("Len") Wood that he would walk away from his job.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn With their relationship strained, Wood exacted a measure of revenge by having Martin sign the Beatles to a record contract to appease interest from EMI's publishing arm, Ardmore & Beechwood.Template:Sfn
Martin also advocated that the Beatles' penny-per-record royalty rate be doubled; Wood agreed to this, but only if the Beatles signed a five-year contract renewal in exchange. When Martin countered that EMI should raise the royalty without conditions. Wood grudgingly acquiesced, but Martin believed that, "from that moment on, I was considered a traitor within EMI".Template:SfnTemplate:Refn In 1955, EMI purchased American recording company Capitol Records. Thereafter, Capitol's head of international A&R, Dave Dexter Jr., chose to issue very few British records in the US,Template:Sfn to Martin and his EMI A&R colleagues' dismay.Template:Sfn Dexter passed on issuing the Beatles' first four singles in the US, driving Martin out of desperation to issue "She Loves You" on the small, independent Swan Records.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn Martin and the Beatles also resented Capitol's practice of issuing records often highly divergent from British record releases, sometimes affecting album titles, cover art, songs included, and even Martin's production.Template:Sfn This treatment did not cease until the band signed a new contract with EMI in January 1967.Template:Sfn
Separation from EMI and start of Associated Independent Recording
After his repeated clashes over salary terms with EMI management, Martin informed them in June 1964 that he would not renew his contract in 1965.Template:Sfn Though EMI managing director Len Wood attempted to persuade Martin to stay with the company, Martin continued to insist that he would not work for EMI without receiving a commission on record sales.Template:Sfn Wood offered him a 3% commission minus "overhead costs", which would have translated to an £11,000 bonus for 1964, though, in doing so, Wood revealed to Martin that EMI had made £2.2 million in net profit from Martin's records that year.Template:Sfn "With that simple sentence, he cut straight through whatever vestige of an umbilical cord still bound me to EMI. … I was flabbergasted", Martin observed.Template:Sfn As Martin exited the company in August 1965, he recruited a number of other EMI staffers, including Norman Newell, Ron Richards, John Burgess, his wife, Judy, and Decca's Peter Sullivan.Template:Sfn Artists associated with Martin's new production team included Adam Faith, Manfred Mann, Peter and Gordon, The Hollies, Tom Jones, and Engelbert Humperdinck.Template:Sfn
Martin conceived of his new company as being modelled on the Associated London Scripts cooperative of comedy writers in the 1950s and 1960s, offering equal shares in the company to his A&R colleagues and expecting them to pay studio costs proportionate to their earnings. He named it Associated Independent Recording (AIR).Template:Sfn Short of funds and with many of AIR's associated acts still under contract to EMI, Martin negotiated a business arrangement with EMI that would give EMI the right of first refusal on any AIR production. In exchange, EMI would pay a producer's royalty on all AIR records.Template:Sfn Martin's departure from EMI and foundation of an independent production company was major news in the music press.Template:Sfn Wood attempted to lure Martin back to EMI in 1969 with an offered salary of £25,000, but Martin rejected it.Template:Sfn
The Beatles
Epstein approaches EMI
In November 1961, the Beatles manager Brian Epstein travelled to London to meet with record executives from EMI and Decca Records in the interest of obtaining a recording contract for his band.Template:Sfn Epstein met with EMI's general marketing director Ron White, with whom he had a longstanding business relationship, and left a copy of the Beatles' single with Tony Sheridan, "My Bonnie". White said he would play it for EMI's four A&R directors, including George Martin (though it later emerged that he neglected to do so, playing it only for two of them).Template:Sfn In mid-December, White replied that EMI was not interested in signing the Beatles.Template:Sfn
Martin claimed that he was contacted by Sid Colman of EMI music publisher Ardmore & Beechwood at the request of Epstein,Template:Sfn though Colman's colleague Kim Bennett later disputed this.Template:Sfn In any event, Martin arranged a meeting on 13 February 1962 with Epstein, who played for Martin the recording of the Beatles' failed January audition for Decca Records.Template:Sfn Epstein recalled that Martin liked George Harrison's guitar playing and preferred Paul McCartney's singing voice to John Lennon's, though Martin himself recalled that he "wasn't knocked out at all" by the "lousy tape".Template:Sfn With Martin apparently uninterested, Ardmore & Beechwood's Colman and Bennett pressured EMI management to sign the Beatles in hopes of gaining the rights to Lennon–McCartney song publishing on Beatle records; Colman and Bennett even offered to pay for the expense of the Beatles' first EMI recordings. EMI managing director Len Wood rejected this proposal.Template:Sfn Nonetheless, to appease Colman's interest in the Beatles, Wood directed Martin to sign the group.Template:Sfn
Martin met with Epstein again on 9 May at EMI Studios in London, and informed him he would give the Beatles a standard recording contract with Parlophone, to record a minimum of six tracks in the first year.Template:Sfn The royalty rate was to be one penny for each record sold on 85% of records, which was to be split among the four members and Epstein.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They agreed to hold the Beatles' first recording on 6 June 1962.Template:Sfn
Early Beatles sessions (1962)
Though Martin later called the 6 June 1962 session at EMI's studio two an "audition", as he had never seen the band play before,Template:Sfn the session was actually intended to record material for the first Beatles single.Template:Sfn Ron Richards and his engineer Norman Smith recorded four songs: "Besame Mucho", "Love Me Do", "Ask Me Why", and "P.S. I Love You".Template:Sfn Martin arrived during the recording of "Love Me Do"; between takes, he introduced himself to the Beatles and subtly changed the arrangement.Template:Sfn The verdict was not promising, however, as Richards and Martin complained about Pete Best's drumming, and Martin thought their original songs were simply not good enough.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the control room, Martin asked the individual Beatles if there was anything they personally did not like, to which Harrison replied, "I don't like your tie." That was the turning point, according to Smith, as Lennon and McCartney joined in with jokes and comic wordplay, that made Martin think that he should sign them to a contract for their wit alone.Template:Sfn After deliberating for a time whether to make Lennon or McCartney the lead vocalist of the group, Martin decided he would let them retain their shared lead role: "Suddenly it hit me that I had to take them as they were, which was a new thing. I was being too conventional."Template:Sfn
Though charmed by the Beatles' personalities, Martin was unimpressed with the musical repertoire from their first session. "I didn't think the Beatles had any song of any worth—they gave me no evidence whatsoever that they could write hit material", he claimed later.Template:Sfn He arranged for the Beatles to record Mitch Murray's "How Do You Do It" at a September session, with the Beatles now featuring Ringo Starr on drums.Template:Refn The Beatles also re-recorded "Love Me Do" and played an early version of "Please Please Me", which Martin thought was "dreary" and needed to be sped up.Template:Sfn While Martin pushed for "How Do You Do It" to be released, the band and Murray protested,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn so he decided to have "Love Me Do" issued as the A-side of the Beatles' first single and save "How Do You Do It" for another occasion.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn
Despite Martin's doubts about the song, "Love Me Do" steadily climbed in the British charts, peaking at number 17 in November 1962. With his doubts about the Beatles' songwriting abilities now quashed, Martin told the band they should re-record "Please Please Me" and make it their second single. He also suggested the Beatles record a full album, a suggestion Mark Lewisohn deems "genuinely mind-boggling", given how little exposure the Beatles had achieved so far.Template:Sfn On 26 November, the Beatles attempted "Please Please Me" a third time. After the recording, Martin looked over the mixing desk and said, "Gentlemen, you have just made your first number one record".Template:Sfn
Commercial breakout (1963–1964)
As Martin had predicted, "Please Please Me" reached no. 1 on most of the British singles charts upon its release in January 1963. "From that moment, we simply never stood still", he reflected.Template:Sfn For the Beatles' first LP, Martin had the group record 10 new tracks to include with the four tracks already released.Template:Sfn They accomplished this in one marathon recording session, on 11 February 1963, with the Beatles recording a mix of Lennon–McCartney originals and covers from their stage act. Nine days later, Martin overdubbed a piano part to the song "Misery" and a celesta on "Baby It's You".Template:Sfn The resulting album, Please Please Me, became a huge success in the UK, spending 30 consecutive weeks at top of the charts, a feat no album bar one had accomplished by then.Template:Sfn
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I would meet them in the studio to hear a new number. I would perch myself on a high stool and John and Paul would stand around me with their acoustic guitars and play and sing it. … Then I would make suggestions to improve it and we'd try it again.
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At this early stage of their working relationship, Martin played a major role in refining and arranging the Beatles' self-written songs to make them commercially appealing: "I taught them the importance of the hook. You had to get people's attention in the first ten seconds, and so I would generally get hold of their song and 'top and tail' it—make a beginning and end. And also make sure it ran for about two-and-a-half minutes so that it would fit DJs' programmes".Template:Sfn He added that, at the beginning of his recording career with the band, his aim was to "[get] a really loud rhythm sound", manifested in "She Loves You".Template:Sfn The Beatles' frenetic recording schedule continued in March 1963, as they recorded "From Me to You", "Thank You Girl", and an early version of "One After 909". Martin altered the arrangement of "From Me to You", substituting the Beatles' idea for a guitar intro with a vocalized "da-da-da-da-da-dum-dum-da", backed by overdubbed harmonica.Template:Sfn
The Beatles returned to EMI Studios on 1 July to record a new single, "She Loves You". Martin liked the song but was sceptical of its closing chord, which he found cliché.Template:Sfn The Beatles, now increasingly confident in their songwriting, pushed back.Template:Sfn Martin and the recording engineer Norman Smith changed the studio microphone arrangement for the song, giving the bass and drums a more prominent sound on the record.Template:Sfn "She Loves You" was released in August and it would become the best-selling UK single by any artist in the 1960s.[5] Around this time, the foundations for Beatlemania had been laid.Template:Sfn Sometime in 1963, Martin and Brian Epstein arranged a loose formula to record two Beatles albums and four singles per year.Template:Sfn The Beatles began work on their second LP on 18 July. Like their debut album, this record reflected the repertoire of the Beatles' contemporary stage act.Template:Sfn Martin played piano on several of the tracks, including "Money (That's What I Want)" and "Not a Second Time", and also played Hammond organ on "I Wanna Be Your Man".Template:Sfn With the Beatles came out in November 1963 and remained at no. 1 on the album charts for five months.Template:Sfn
Martin and the Beatles recorded their next single, "I Want to Hold Your Hand" on 17 October—their first recording session with four-track recording.Template:Sfn Impressed with the song, Martin merely suggested adding handclaps and adding compression to Lennon's rhythm guitar sound to imitate the sound of an organ.Template:Sfn "I Want to Hold Your Hand" extended the Beatles' success to the US.Template:Sfn Shortly after, he had the band record German-language versions of "She Loves You" and "I Want to Hold Your Hand" for the West German market.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Martin travelled to New York with the Beatles on 7 February, as the band embarked on their first visit to America—including landmark performances on The Ed Sullivan Show.Template:Sfn
In late February, the band re-entered the studio and began recording the soundtrack album to the Beatles' upcoming untitled feature film.Template:Sfn The film, album, and lead single were all titled A Hard Day's Night.Template:Sfn In addition to producing the Beatles' songs for the album—their first not to feature any cover songs—Martin orchestrated several instrumental numbers for the film.Template:Sfn The film was a success, and the album and single both reached no. 1 in the UK and US in July.Template:Sfn Martin joined them for part of their August/September North American tour, recording their performance at the Hollywood Bowl.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn The Beatles began recording their next studio album, Beatles for Sale in August, though the sessions continued intermittently through late October and the record was released in December.Template:Sfn Martin observed that the Beatles were "war weary" during many of these sessions, and the album included six covers because Lennon and McCartney had not written enough songs to fill out the record.Template:Sfn Beatles for Sale also featured new percussion sounds on several tracks, such as timpani and chocalho.Template:Sfn The album reached no. 1 in the UK but was not released in the US.[6]
Shift to studio experimenting (1965–1966)
In mid-February 1965, Martin and the Beatles began five months of sessions to record the music for their second film, Help!. The Beatles adopted new studio techniques for these sessions, typically overdubbing vocals and other sounds onto a carefully laid rhythm track.Template:Sfn The group by now had grown confident in the studio, and Martin encouraged them to explore new ideas for songs, such as an outro to "Ticket to Ride" that was at a faster tempo than the rest of song.Template:Sfn They continued to experiment with unusual instruments, such as an alto flute solo for "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away" scored by Martin.Template:Sfn It was Martin's idea to score a string quartet accompaniment for "Yesterday" against McCartney's initial reluctance.Template:Sfn Martin played the song in the style of Bach to show McCartney the voicings that were available.Template:Sfn Help!, again, peaked at no. 1 in the UK and the US.[6][7]
The group reconvened in October and November to record another album in time for the holiday shopping season.Template:Sfn Rubber Soul continued the Beatles' experimentation with new sounds and contained several groundbreaking tracks. "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)" featured Harrison on sitar, making it one of the first Western pop records to feature Indian instrumentation.Template:Sfn The shimmering electric guitar sound on "Nowhere Man" was achieved by repeatedly reprocessing the signal to increase the treble frequencies, beyond the EQ limits permitted for EMI engineers.Template:Sfn Martin himself recorded a baroque-style piano solo on Lennon's "In My Life", recording the tape at half-speed and playing it back at normal speed so the piano sounded like a harpsichord. Though Martin didn't play a harpsichord on the record, "In My Life" inspired other record producers to begin incorporating the instrument in their arrangements of pop records.[8] Rubber Soul received strong critical acclaim upon its release and proved highly influential among the Beatles' musical contemporaries, such as the Beach Boys.Template:Sfn Martin sensed a shift in how the group was recording albums:
I think Rubber Soul was the first of the albums that presented a new Beatles to the world. Up to this point we had been making albums that were rather like a collection of their singles. And now, we really were beginning to think about albums as a bit of art in their own right. We were thinking about the album as an entity of its own, and Rubber Soul was the first one to emerge in this way.Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "Listen". The Beatles re-entered EMI Studios in April 1966, with the group's exploration of recording at Stax Records' studio in Memphis.Template:Sfn The sessions of the Revolver album began with a highly experimental track, "Tomorrow Never Knows"—a Lennon song inspired by Timothy Leary's book The Psychedelic Experience. The song featured several innovations in pop recording, including the use of a tanpura drone loop throughout the song, a backwards guitar solo, sped-up tape loops, and artificial double tracking (ADT) on Lennon's vocal.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn Martin worked closely with EMI engineers Geoff Emerick and Ken Townsend to achieve these radical effects.Template:Sfn For Lennon's "I'm Only Sleeping", the recording was conducted at a fast tape speed and then slowed down to achieve a drowsy, dream-like sound,Template:Sfn and "For No One" featured a French horn solo scored by Martin and played by Alan Civil.Template:Sfn Furthermore, the Revolver sessions produced the single "Paperback Writer"/"Rain",Template:Sfn with the former featuring three-part harmonies arranged by Martin and mixed to have a fluttering echo sound.Template:Sfn Revolver was released in August to highly favourable critical reaction, particularly in the UK.Template:Sfn Retrospective criticism has recognized it as being among the finest pop albums ever made, with numerous critics deeming it the very best.Template:Sfn
Sgt. Pepper (1966–1967)
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By the time of Pepper, the Beatles had immense power at Abbey Road. So did I. They used to ask for the impossible, and sometimes they would get it. At the beginning of their recording career, I used to boss them about. ... By the time we got to Pepper, though, that had all changed. I was very much the collaborator. Their ideas were coming through thick and fast, and they were brilliant. All I did was help make them real.
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".By the time the Beatles resumed recording on 24 November 1966, they had decided to discontinue touring and focus their creative energies on the recording studio. Martin reflected, "the time had come for experiment. The Beatles knew it, and I knew it."Template:Sfn Their late 1966 sessions stretched into April 1967, forming what became Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band—a record continuing the Beatles' and Martin's imaginative use of the studio to create new sounds on record. He was involved as an arranger throughout the album,Template:Sfn except for "She's Leaving Home".Template:SfnTemplate:Refn
For "Within You Without You", Martin arranged a score that combined Indian and Western classical music.Template:Sfn He used vari-speed editing to alter the recording speed of several of the album's vocal tracks, including "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds".Template:Sfn He and Geoff Emerick superimposed crowd noise sound effects onto the title track and crossfaded the song into "With a Little Help from My Friends", mimicking a live performance.Template:Sfn Martin also played instruments on several songs, including the piano on "Lovely Rita",Template:Sfn the harpsichord on "Fixing a Hole",Template:Sfn and numerous instruments on "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!": the harmonium, organ, and perhaps the glockenspiel.Template:Sfn For the song's circus-themed instrumental breaks, he had engineers cut tapes of numerous carnival-instrument recordings into tape fragments, then reassemble them at random.Template:Sfn Martin applied heavy tape echo to Lennon's voice in "A Day in the Life".Template:Sfn Additionally, he worked with McCartney to implement the 24-bar orchestral climaxes in the middle and end of the song, produced by instructing a 45-piece orchestra to gradually play from their instruments' lowest note to their highest.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Sgt. Pepper cost £25,000 to produce (Template:Inflation),Template:Sfn far more than any previous Beatles record.Template:Sfn When the album was finally released in early June 1967, it received widespread acclaim from music critics, with a Times critic deeming it "a decisive moment in the history of Western civilisation".Template:Sfn The Beatles historian Jonathan Gould writes that it received "the most momentous public reception that had ever been given to a popular recording."Template:Sfn Sgt. PepperTemplate:'s accolades also raised Martin's public profile as a record producer,Template:Sfn and contemporary musicians sought to copy its production methods. This augmented the producer's role in popular music.Template:Sfn Thus, Lennon and McCartney complained that Martin had received too much attention for his part in Sgt Pepper's,Template:Sfn beginning a feeling of resentment by the band towards him.Template:Sfn According to Emerick, with the album's recording sessions, McCartney emerged as the Beatles' de facto producer, as Martin was increasingly absent near the end prolonged sessions.Template:Sfn
During the Sgt. Pepper sessions, the Beatles working on Lennon's, "Strawberry Fields Forever", which began as a simple arrangement of guitar, drums, and Mellotron.Template:Sfn They would remake the song in a new key and tempo and with much added instrumentation.Template:Sfn Lennon asked Martin to combine takes 7 and 26 of the song, even though they were recorded at different tempos and in different keys. Martin, Ken Townsend, and Emerick accomplished Lennon's unusual request by carefully speeding up take 7 and slowing down take 26 so they were nearly equal in key and tempo.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Martin mixed the track to include a false ending.Template:Sfn Soon after, the band began work on McCartney's "Penny Lane", which featured a piccolo trumpet solo that was requested by McCartney. McCartney hummed the melody that he wanted, and Martin notated it for the trumpeter David Mason.Template:Sfn Martin also orchestrated a larger brass and woodwind score with trumpets, piccolo, flutes, oboe, and flugelhorn.Template:Sfn In February, the group issued "Strawberry Fields Forever"/"Penny Lane" as a double A-side. The single drew critical praise for its musical and recording inventiveness, but it proved the first British Beatles single in four years not to top the charts, instead reaching no. 2.Template:Sfn Martin blamed himself for weakening the forthcoming album by caving in to external pressure for a standalone single and called it "the biggest mistake of my professional life".Template:Sfn
Magical Mystery Tour, "All You Need Is Love", and Yellow Submarine (1967–1968)
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I tended to lay back on Magical Mystery Tour and let them have their head. Some of the sounds weren't very good. Some were brilliant, but some were bloody awful.
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Before Sgt Pepper was even released, the Beatles held several sessions from April to June 1967 to record additional songs for a yet-to-be-determined purpose: "Magical Mystery Tour", and "Baby, You're a Rich Man", among others.Template:Sfn Martin later described many of these sessions as lacking the strong creative focus the band had displayed in recording Sgt. Pepper.Template:Sfn Showing less interest, he came uncharacteristically unprepared for the "Magical Mystery Tour" trumpet overdub session on 3 May, forcing the session musicians to improvise a score for themselves.Template:Sfn On 27 August, the Beatles manager Brian Epstein died of an accidental drug overdose, devastating the band and Martin.Template:Sfn McCartney urged the group to focus on the Magical Mystery Tour film project, and they resumed recording with Lennon's "I Am the Walrus".Template:Sfn For this song, which Martin initially disliked but grew to appreciate,Template:Sfn he provided a quirky and original arrangement for brass, violins, cellos, and the Mike Sammes Singers vocal ensemble singing nonsense phrases.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Much of the fruit of these sessions went to Magical Mystery Tour, released as an EP in the UK in December 1967 and an LP in the US in late November; it reached no. 2 and no. 1 on those charts, respectively.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
In May 1967, Epstein agreed to have the group record a song live on the world's first live global television broadcast, Our World.Template:Sfn The band decided to record Lennon's "All You Need Is Love" for the occasion.Template:Sfn Martin believed it was too risky to record the entire track on the live broadcast, so he had the Beatles record a backing track on 14 June at Olympic Studios—with the unusual arrangement of Lennon on harpsichord, McCartney on double bass, Harrison on violin, and Starr on drums, with Eddie Kramer as audio engineer.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The band also asked Martin to write an orchestral score, starting with the beginning of "La Marseillaise" and ending with a fade-out with bits from Johann Sebastian Bach's Inventions and Sinfonias, "Greensleeves", and "In the Mood".Template:Sfn Despite some technical glitches, the Beatles, the orchestra, and the assembled crowd of Beatles friends recorded what Kenneth Womack deems a seamless live take of the song to an audience of hundreds of millions.Template:Sfn "All You Need Is Love" was quickly released as a single, the first Beatles single on which Martin received a written credit as producer.Template:Sfn
In early 1967, Epstein and the media producer Al Brodax signed a contract to have the Beatles provide four original songs to support an animated feature film, Yellow Submarine. The Beatles were initially contemptuous of the project, planning to relegate only their weakest songs to the soundtrack.Template:Sfn Some, such as "All Together Now", were recorded without Martin's involvement.Template:Sfn However, he did compose the film's orchestral scores, which comprises the second half of the film's soundtrack album.Template:Sfn He claimed to take inspiration for the score from Maurice Ravel, "the musician I admire most".Template:Sfn The Yellow Submarine film debuted on 17 July 1968 and was favourably received by critics.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn
Conflict and final years (1968–1970)
By the time of the White Album sessions in mid-1968, Martin found himself in competition with Apple Electronics's eccentric inventor, Magic Alex, for the Beatles' interest in studio production.Template:Sfn The Beatles grew increasingly hostile toward each other.Template:Sfn Additionally, the Beatles began recording lengthy, repetitive rehearsal tracks in the studio.Template:Sfn With all these disruptions to their studio dynamic, Martin consciously stayed in the background of many sessions, reading stacks of newspapers in the control booth until his guidance or assistance was sought.Template:Sfn For instance, when he gave McCartney suggestions for his vocal part on "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da", and McCartney chastised him, he shouted in reply: "Then bloody sing it again! I give up. I just don't know any better how to help you".Template:Sfn Parts of the White Album sessions required Martin and his engineers to attend to simultaneous recordings in different studios, such as an occasion when Lennon was working on "Revolution 9" in Studio Three, while McCartney recorded "Blackbird" in Studio Two.Template:Sfn Martin scored a fiddle arrangement on Starr's first composition, "Don't Pass Me By",Template:Sfn as well as brass arrangements on "Revolution 1", "Honey Pie", "Savoy Truffle", and "Martha My Dear".Template:Sfn He also played celesta on "Good Night" and harmonium on "Cry Baby Cry".Template:Sfn Martin recommended the Beatles choose the best few tracks from the sessions and issue a standard LP, but they instead went with a double album.Template:Sfn The album was released in November to strong commercial and critical success, reaching no. 1 in the UK and US for eight and nine weeks, respectively.Template:Sfn
In early January 1969, the Beatles gathered at Twickenham Film Studios to compose and record new material for a live album. The group sought a raw, unedited sound for the album, with Lennon telling Martin that he did not want any "production shit".Template:Sfn The band's working relationships faltered during these sessions, with Harrison quitting the group for several days out of frustration.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn Martin chose not to attend many of these tense, aimless sessions, leaving balance engineer Glyn Johns to act as de facto producer.Template:Sfn In mid-January, the Beatles relocated their work to the basement studio of Apple Records at 3 Savile Row, where their work ethic and mood improved.Template:Sfn While these so-called Get Back sessions were underway, they and the keyboardist Billy Preston performed on the roof of Apple Records on 30 January 1969,Template:Sfn which resulted in recordings of five new tracks. The next day, the band returned to the basement studio to record several more, including "Let It Be" and "The Long and Winding Road".Template:Sfn
In March 1969, the Beatles rejected Glyn Johns' proposed mix for a Get Back LP, scuttling hopes for a public release in the near term.Template:Sfn In May, Martin and Johns worked together on another mix of Get Back—which the Beatles also rejected. Martin began at this time to consider that the Beatles might be finished as a commercial act.Template:Sfn The Beatles rejected yet another Johns mix of the album in January 1970.Template:Sfn Martin supervised the final Beatles recording session (without Lennon) on 3 January 1970, when the group recorded "I Me Mine".Template:Sfn In March and April 1970, Phil Spector remixed the album—now known as Let It Be—and added orchestral and choral overdubs to several tracks.Template:Sfn Martin, along with McCartney, was critical of these embellishments, calling them "so uncharacteristic of the clean sounds the Beatles had always used".Template:Sfn The album was finally released in May 1970, after McCartney had publicly announced he was leaving the Beatles. When EMI informed Martin that he would not get a production credit because Spector produced the final version, Martin commented, "I produced the original, and what you should do is have a credit saying 'Produced by George Martin, over-produced by Phil Spector'."Template:Sfn
The first song for what became the Abbey Road album was recorded in February 1969 without Martin.Template:Sfn The band did not inform Martin they planned to record a new album until later in the spring when McCartney asked if him would produce it for them. "Only if you let me produce it the way we used to", he replied; McCartney agreed.Template:Sfn In fact, the Abbey Road sessions marked Martin's return to prominence in the studio.Template:Sfn Martin's first session came on 5 May, when he supervised overdubs to Harrison's "Something". He soon set to help the Beatles develop the second side of the album into a symphonic "medley" of songs, akin to a rock opera. Martin guided the band using his knowledge of classical music to conceive a fluid, cohesive series of songs with repeating themes and motifs.Template:Sfn Along with an electric harpsichord accompaniment to "Because", Martin composed and orchestrated orchestral arrangements for four of the album's songs.Template:Sfn In September 1969, Abbey Road was released to great commerical successTemplate:Sfn but mixed critical reception,Template:Sfn partially owing to what was perceived as a synthetic sound.Template:Sfn Martin took particular pride in the medley, later claiming, "There's far more of me on Abbey Road than on any of their other albums".Template:Sfn As notes the critic Ian MacDonald, "After Abbey Road, the group was effectively dead,"Template:Sfn and McCartney announced the band's break-up a few months later.Template:Sfn
Post-breakup Beatles work
Beatle solo records
Martin produced the first solo album by a member of the Beatles after John Lennon had privately announced he was leaving the group, Ringo Starr's March 1970 standards album, Sentimental Journey.Template:Sfn Throughout the next three decades, he collaborated with Paul McCartney extensively for the latter's studio albums and compositions. After scoring some orchestral arrangements for the 1971 album Ram,[9] Martin produced Wings' "Live and Let Die" theme song for the 1973 James Bond film of the same name,Template:Sfn They reunited in 1980 to record "We All Stand Together", a song for a Rupert Bear animated short film.Template:Sfn He produced the critically and commerically acclaimed Tug of War (1982),Template:Sfn as well as Pipes of Peace (1983). For the latter's lead single, "Say Say Say", Martin scored a horn arrangement.Template:Sfn He also produced the soundtrack album to McCartney's 1984 film Give My Regards to Broad Street. Though the film was poorly received, the soundtrack reached no. 1 in the UK.Template:Sfn In the 1990s, he recorded orchestral overdubs for McCartney's singles "Put It There" (1990), "C'Mon People" (1993),Template:Sfn and his album Flaming Pie (1997).Template:Sfn In 1998, at Yoko Ono's request, Martin scored an orchestral arrangement to the 1980 Lennon demo of "Grow Old with Me".Template:Sfn
The Beatles Anthology
Martin oversaw post-production on The Beatles Anthology project in 1994 and 1995, working again with Geoff Emerick.Template:Sfn Martin decided to use an old 8-track analogue mixing console to mix the songs for the project instead of a modern digital console. In his view, the old console created a distinct sound which a new one could not accurately reproduce.Template:Sfn He said he found the project a strange experience, as they had to listen to themselves chatting in the studio, 25 to 30 years previously.Template:Sfn However, he was not involved in producing the two new songs reuniting McCartney, Harrison, and Starr: the Lennon demos "Free as a Bird" and "Real Love". Though Martin's hearing loss was publicly cited as the rationale,[10][11] he was not asked by the band members to produce the tracks; Jeff Lynne performed these duties instead.Template:Sfn
Cirque du Soleil and Love
In 2006, Martin and his son, Giles Martin, remixed 80 minutes of Beatles music for the Las Vegas stage performance Love, a joint venture between Cirque du Soleil and the Beatles' Apple Corps Ltd.[12] A soundtrack album from the show was released that same year.[13] As part of his contribution to the soundtrack album, Martin orchestrated a score for a demo version of "While My Guitar Gently Weeps"; the orchestra session, recorded at AIR Lyndhurst Hall, was his final orchestral production.Template:Sfn Martin received the 2008 Grammy Awards for Best Compilation Soundtrack Album and Best Surround Sound Album.[2]
Independent projects and work with other artists
Martin's early work under his new Associated Independent Recording (AIR) banner included Cilla Black's rendition of Burt Bacharach's "Alfie", which made no. 6 in the UK, and musical scores for Lionel Bart's much-maligned Twang!! theatrical production.Template:Sfn He also reunited with other artists from his Parlophone days, such as Matt Monro and Ron Goodwin, though these reunions often failed to produce the same success as earlier records had.Template:Sfn Martin continued to produce novelty music acts, such as The Master Singers and the Scaffold.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Other artists that Martin worked with include the singers Celine Dion,[2] Kenny Rogers,[2] Yoshiki,[14] and Neil Sedaka,Template:Sfn the guitarists Jeff Beck,[2] John McLaughlin,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". and John Williams,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". and the bands Seatrain,Template:Sfn Ultravox,[15] and Cheap Trick.[15] Martin produced seven albums for America, which included the hits "Tin Man", "Lonely People", and "Sister Golden Hair". As the band's Gerry Beckley said in a 2017 interview, "He was really great at keeping us focused and moving forward."[16] In 1997, Martin produced "Candle in the Wind 1997", Elton John's tribute single to Diana, Princess of Wales, which became the best-selling British single of all time.[17][18] It was also Martin's final production of a single.Template:Sfn
In 1988, Martin produced an album version of the play Under Milk Wood, with music by Martin, Elton John, and Mark Knopfler; Anthony Hopkins played the part of "First Voice".Template:Sfn In 1992, Martin worked with Pete Townshend on the musical stage production of The Who's Tommy. The play opened on Broadway in 1993, with the original cast album being released that summer. For this, Martin won the 1993 Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album.Template:Sfn In 1998, Martin released an album of Beatles covers titled In My Life.[19]
In October 1970, Martin and his AIR partners opened their first company studio at the top of the Peter Robinson building in Oxford Circus, London.Template:Sfn Nine years later, he opened another studio, AIR Montserrat, on the Caribbean island of Montserrat. This studio was destroyed by a hurricane ten years later.[20]
On 15 September 1997, Martin arranged a benefit concert for the island of Montserrat, which had been devastated by volcanic activity. The event, Music for Montserrat, featured Paul McCartney, Elton John, Sting, Phil Collins, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Buffett, and Carl Perkins.Template:Sfn Martin served as a consultant to the June 2002 Party at the Palace at Buckingham Palace Garden for the Queen's Golden Jubilee.Template:Sfn In 2010, he was the executive producer of the hard rock debut of Arms of the Sun, a project featuring Rex Brown, King Diamond, Lance Harvill, and Ben Bunker.[21]
Other work
Film scores
Beginning in the late 1950s, Martin began to supplement his producer income by publishing music and having his artists record it.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn His second wife, Judy, whose father was chairman of the Film Producers Guild, contributed to his film work.Template:Sfn Martin's earliest composing work was incidental music to accompany Peter Sellers' comedy records.Template:Sfn In 1966, he signed a long-term deal with United Artists to write instrumental music.Template:Sfn Martin composed, arranged, and produced film scores beginning in the early 1960s,Template:Sfn including those of A Hard Day's Night (1964),Template:Sfn Yellow Submarine (1968),Template:Sfn as well as an instrumental for Ferry Cross the Mersey (1965).Template:Sfn Martin produced two James Bond themes: Shirley Bassey's "Goldfinger" (1964),[22] and Paul McCartney and Wings' "Live and Let Die" (1973), as well as the score to Live and Let Die.[23] Martin was commissioned to write an official opening theme for BBC Radio 1's launch in September 1967. Entitled "Theme One", it was the first piece of music, but not the first record, heard on Radio 1.[24]
In November 2017, the Craig Leon-produced album George Martin – Film Scores and Original Orchestral Music was released. The album of new recordings collected a selection of Martin's compositions together, including previously unheard sketches from the feature film The Mission (1986) which were not used in the original soundtrack.[25]
Television
Martin hosted a three-part BBC co-produced documentary series titled The Rhythm of Life, which aired in 1997 on Ovation. Here, he discusses various aspects of musical composition with professional musicians and singers, among them Brian Wilson, Mark Knopfler, and Burt Bacharach.[26][27] In April 2011, a 90-minute documentary feature film co-produced by the BBC Arena team, Produced by George Martin, aired to critical acclaim for the first time in the UK. It tells the life story of how Martin, a schoolboy growing up in the Great Depression, grew up to become a legendary music producer. Mark Lewisohn curated an accompanying six-volume musical box set.Template:Sfn He also contributed to the 2016 documentary Soundbreaking, a history of recorded music featuring over 160 interviews with influential artists and producers.[28]
Artistry and legacy
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In his Parlophone days, Martin frequently used comedy records to experiment with recording techniques and motifs used later on musical records, such as recording magnetic tape at half-speed and then playing it back at normal speed.Template:Sfn He would use this effect on several Beatles records, such as his sped-up piano solo on "In My Life".Template:Sfn In particular, Martin was curious to see how tape offered advantages over existing technologies favoured by EMI: "It was still in its infancy, and a lot of people at the studio regarded tape with suspicion. But we gradually learnt all about it, and working with the likes of Sellers and Milligan was very useful, because, as it wasn't music, you could experiment. ... We made things out of tape loops, slowed things down, and banged on piano lids."Template:Sfn
Martin was one of a handful of producers to have number-one records in three or more consecutive decades (1960s, 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s).Template:Sfn
With the Beatles
BBC News notes that Martin's formal musical expertise and interest in novel recording practices facilitated the group's rudimentary musical education and desire for new musical sounds to record.[29]
Martin's contribution to the Beatles' led to him being described as the "fifth Beatle".[30] In 2016, Paul McCartney wrote that "If anyone earned the title of the fifth Beatle it was George".[31][32] Julian Lennon called Martin "the fifth Beatle, without question".[33] In the immediate aftermath of the Beatles' break-up, a time when he made many angry utterances, John Lennon trivialised Martin's importance to the Beatles' music and claimed that he took too much credit for the Beatles' music.[34] In a 1971 letter to McCartney, Lennon wrote, "When people ask me questions about 'What did George Martin really do for you?,' I have only one answer, 'What does he do now?' I noticed you had no answer for that!"[34] However, that same year, Lennon said, "George Martin made us what we were in the studio. He helped us develop a language to talk to other musicians."[35]
Personal life
In 1946, Martin met Jean ("Sheena") Chisholm, a fellow member of the Royal Navy's choir. They bonded over their mutual love of music.Template:Sfn Martin's mother, Bertha, strongly disapproved of Chisholm as a partner for Martin, fuelling early strain in the relationship.Template:Sfn Nevertheless, they were married at the University of Aberdeen on 3 January 1948.Template:Sfn Bertha died three weeks later of a brain haemorrhage, and Martin felt responsible for his mother's death.Template:Sfn They had two children, Alexis (born 1953)Template:Sfn and Gregory Paul (born 1957).Template:Sfn Around 1955, the Martins moved from London and bought a home in the development town of Hatfield, Hertfordshire, some 20 miles north.Template:Sfn By the early 1960s, Martin pleaded Chisholm for a divorce and moved out of their home, but she refused, citing her childcare needs.Template:Sfn Their divorce was finalized in February 1965.Template:Sfn
On his first day of work at EMI Studios in 1950, Martin met Judy Lockhart Smith, a secretary to Parlophone director Oscar Preuss.Template:Sfn Martin chose to retain her as a secretary when he assumed the direction of Parlophone in 1955, and they commuted together from Hatfield each day.Template:Sfn Martin and Lockhart Smith began a discreet affair in the late 1950s.Template:Sfn They married on 24 June 1966 at the Marylebone Registry Office,Template:Sfn and had two children, Lucie (born 1967) and Giles (born 1969).Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Martin was firm friends with Spike Milligan, and was best man at Milligan's second wedding: "I loved The Goon Show, and issued an album of it on my label Parlophone, which is how I got to know Spike."Template:Sfn The album was Bridge on the River Wye, a spoof of the film The Bridge on the River Kwai, being based on the 1957 Goon Show episode "An African Incident".Template:Sfn
In the mid-1970s, Martin's hearing started to decline;[36] in an interview with the Institute of Professional Sound, he stated that he first noticed it when realizing that he couldn't detect high frequencies that an engineer was using to evaluate tonality.[37] Giles consequently served as an impromptu assistant and helped George hide the condition as it worsened over the next two decades.[36] Martin attributed his hearing loss to his constant production work, stating that "I was in the studio for 14 hours at a stretch, and never let my ears repair. There's no question that listening to loud music was a major contribution to my hearing loss."[37] By 2014, he relied on a combination of hearing aids and lip-reading to communicate face to face.[37]
Martin spent his later years with Lockhart Smith at their home in Coleshill, Oxfordshire.Template:Sfn He died there on 8 March 2016, aged 90.[38][39] While the cause of his death was not immediately disclosed,[40] his biographer, Kenneth Womack, later attributed it to complications from stomach cancer.Template:Sfn He was buried near All Saints Church in Coleshill. A memorial service was held on 11 May at St Martin-in-the-Fields, attended by, among others, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono, Olivia Harrison, Elton John, Bernard Cribbins, and former colleagues.Template:Sfn
Awards and recognition
Selected discography
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Over his career, Martin produced 30 number-one singles and 16 number-one albums in the UK, in addition to a then-record 23 number-one singles and 19 number-one albums in the US (most of which were by the Beatles).[59][60]
Non-Beatles works produced or co-produced
- "Barwick Green", Sidney Torch (1951)
- "The White Suit Samba", Jack Parnell (1951)
- "Ae Fond Kiss", Kenneth McKellar (1952)
- "Bluebell Polka", Jimmy Shand (1952)
- "Melody on the Move", Tommy Reilly (1952)
- "Mock Mozart", Peter Ustinov (1952)
- The Lark Ascending, Adrian Boult / Jean Pougnet / London Philharmonic Orchestra (1952)
- "Arrivederci Darling", Edna Savage (1955)
- "Earth Angel", The Southlanders (1955)
- "Pickin' a Chicken", Eve Boswell (1955)
- "Robin Hood", Dick James (1956)
- "Rock-A-Beatin' Boogie", The Ivor and Basil Kirchin Band (1956)
- "Experiments With Mice", John Dankworth (1956)
- "Glendora", Glen Mason (1956)
- "Nellie the Elephant", Mandy Miller (1956)
- "Smiley", Shirley Abicair (1956)
- "The Shifting Whispering Sands", Eamonn Andrews (1956)
- "Be My Girl", Jim Dale (1957)
- "Don't You Rock Me Daddy-O", The Vipers Skiffle Group (1957)
- "The Hippopotamus Song", Ian Wallace (1957)
- Charlie Drake, "Splish Splash" (1958)
- The Best of Sellers, Peter Sellers (1958)
- "I'm in Charge", Bruce Forsyth (1959)
- "Saturday Jump", Humphrey Lyttelton (1959)
- Songs for Swingin' Sellers, Peter Sellers (1959)
- "Goodness Gracious Me", Peter Sellers & Sophia Loren (1960)
- "Portrait of My Love", Matt Monro (1960)
- Beyond the Fringe (original cast recording) (1961)
- "My Boomerang Won't Come Back", Charlie Drake (1961)
- "My Kind of Girl", Matt Monro (1961)
- "Strictly for the Birds", Dudley Moore (1961)
- "You're Driving Me Crazy", The Temperance Seven (1961)
- "Right Said Fred", Bernard Cribbins (1962)
- "Football Results", Michael Bentine (1962)
- "Gossip Calypso", Bernard Cribbins (1962)
- "Hole in the Ground", Bernard Cribbins (1962)
- "Morse Code Melody", The Alberts (1962)
- "My Brother", Terry Scott (1962)
- "Sun Arise", Rolf Harris (1962)
- "Bad to Me", Billy J. Kramer with the Dakotas (1963)
- Cambridge Circus (original cast recording) (1963)
- "Hello Little Girl", The Fourmost (1963)
- "How Do You Do It?", Gerry and the Pacemakers (1963)
- "I (Who Have Nothing)", Shirley Bassey (1963)
- "If This Should Be a Dream", Christine Campbell (1963)
- "Oh Not Again Ken", Joan Sims (1963)
- At the Drop of Another Hat, Flanders and Swann (1964)
- "Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying", Gerry and the Pacemakers (1964)
- "Goldfinger", Shirley Bassey (1964)
- "I Like It", Gerry & the Pacemakers (1964)
- "It's You", Alma Cogan (1964)
- "Little Children", Billy J. Kramer with the Dakotas (1964)
- "Nothing Better To Do", Bill Oddie (1964)
- "Walk Away", Matt Monro (1964)
- "You're My World", Cilla Black (1964)
- "Ferry Cross the Mersey", Gerry & the Pacemakers (1965)
- "I'll Be There", Gerry & the Pacemakers (1965)
- "2 Day's Monday", The Scaffold (1966)
- Adventure, Ron Goodwin (1966)
- "Alfie", Cilla Black (1966)
- Ludo, Ivor Cutler (1967)
- "London By George", (1968)
- "Step Inside Love", Cilla Black (1968)
- Edwards Hand, Edwards Hand (1969)
- Marrakesh Express, Stan Getz (1970)
- Seatrain, Seatrain (1970)
- Sentimental Journey, Ringo Starr (1970)
- The Marblehead Messenger, Seatrain (1971)
- Icarus, Paul Winter Consort (1972)
- The King's Singers Collection, The King's Singers (1972)
- A French Collection, The King's Singers (1973)
- "Deck the Hall", The King's Singers (1973)
- "Live and Let Die", Paul McCartney and Wings (1973)
- The Height Below, John Williams (1973)
- Apocalypse, Mahavishnu Orchestra (1974)
- Holiday, America (1974)
- "Lonely People", America (1974)
- My Life, My Song, Tommy Steele (1974)
- The Man in the Bowler Hat, Stackridge (1974)Template:Refn
- "Tin Man", America (1974)
- Blow by Blow, Jeff Beck (1975)
- Hearts, America (1975)
- "Sister Golden Hair", America (1975)
- American Flyer, American Flyer (1976)
- Born On a Friday, Cleo Laine (1976)
- Hideaway, America (1976)
- Wired, Jeff Beck (1976)
- A Song, Neil Sedaka (1977)
- El Mirage, Jimmy Webb (1977)
- Harbor, America (1977)
- "Oh! Darling", Robin Gibb (1978)
- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1978, original soundtrack)
- No More Fear of Flying, Gary Brooker (1979)
- Silent Letter, America (1979)
- All Shook Up, Cheap Trick (1980)
- No Place to Run, UFO (1980)
- "The Night Owls", Little River Band (1981)
- Time Exposure, Little River Band (1981)
- "Ebony and Ivory", Paul McCartney & Stevie Wonder (1982)
- Quartet, Ultravox (1982)
- Tug of War, Paul McCartney (1982)
- Pipes of Peace, Paul McCartney (1983)
- "Say Say Say", Paul McCartney & Michael Jackson (1983)
- Give My Regards to Broad Street, Paul McCartney (1984)
- "No More Lonely Nights", Paul McCartney (1984)
- "Morning Desire", Kenny Rogers (1985)
- The Heart of the Matter, Kenny Rogers (1985)
- Quiet Storm, Peabo Bryson (1986)
- Positive, Peabo Bryson (1988)
- Say Something, Andy Leek (1988)
- Eternal Melody, Yoshiki (1993)
- Tommy (original cast recording) (1993)
- The Glory of Gershwin, Larry Adler (1994)
- "The Man I Love", Kate Bush & Larry Adler (1994)
- "Candle in the Wind 1997", Elton John (1997)
- "The Reason", Celine Dion (1997)
Solo works
- Off the Beatle Track (1964)
- By Popular Demand, A Hard Day's Night: Instrumental Versions of the Motion Picture Score (1964)
- George Martin Scores Instrumental Versions of the Hits (1965)
- Help! (1965)
- ..and I Love Her (1966)
- George Martin Instrumentally Salutes The Beatle Girls (1966)
- The Family Way (1967)
- British Maid (1968)Template:Refn
- Yellow Submarine (1969)Template:Refn
- By George! (1970)
- Beatles to Bond and Bach (1974)
- In My Life (1998)
- Produced by George Martin (2001)
- The Family Way (2003)
See also
References
Notes
Citations
Bibliography
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External links
- Sir George Martin CBE – C A Management
- Template:Rockhall
- Template:Trim/ Template:PAGENAMEBASE at IMDbTemplate:EditAtWikidataScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
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- George Martin & The Beatles – All Songs & Performers (NYT; 15 March 2016).
- Interview at Hit Channel Template:Webarchive
- George Martin interview on BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs, 6 August 1982
Template:Portal bar Template:The Beatles Template:Brit British Producer Template:1999 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Template:WSA – Lifetime Achievement Template:Authority control
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ A lifelong love affair with the orchestra bbc.co.uk; retrieved 21 September 2007.
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- ↑ Martin's hearing loss Template:Webarchive 4hearingloss.com. Retrieved: 23 September 2007.
- ↑ "handed over further duties to ELO supremo Jeff Lynne" Template:Webarchive icons.org.uk. Retrieved: 23 September 2007.
- ↑ Love unveils new angle on Beatles BBC News; retrieved: 21 September 2007.
- ↑ Legendary producer returns to Abbey Road BBC News; retrieved 21 September 2007.
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- ↑ BBC – Press Office: Elton John tops million sellers chart BBC Radio 2 Official Charts Company. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
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- ↑ Track listing for George Martin compilation on his official site Template:Webarchive georgemartin.co.uk. Accessed 29 December 2007.
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- ↑ Julian Lennon. So Sad to hear the News of George's Passing..., facebook.com; accessed 10 March 2016.
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ "Beatles Producer George Martin Dead At 90" Template:Webarchive, Rolling Stone, 9 March 2016; retrieved 9 March 2016.
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