Saturday, January 5, 2019

This Day in Pop Music History (Birth of Phil Ramone, Go-To Producer)


Jan. 5, 1934—Phil Ramone, who cut a wide and influential swath among jazz, pop and rock ‘n’ roll musicians in the second half of the 20th century by producing records by Ray Charles, Stan Getz, Paul Simon, Bob Dylan, John Lennon, Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, and especially Billy Joel, was born in South Africa.

In the last few days, I came across a lively Facebook discussion on the career of Ramone’s near-contemporary, Phil Spector. Although I disagreed with Spector’s many detractors on the quality of his records (though not about his insanity or lack of integrity), the comments did give me a frame of reference for assessing why a music figure who started out at almost the same time as the creator of the “Wall of Sound” could have turned out so differently.

Each producer initially got a toehold in the music industry through mastery of an instrument (Spector, the guitar; Ramone, more formally trained at the Juilliard School in New York on the piano and violin).
 
The two made their marks in the exact same year, 1958: Spector, as composer of “To Know Him Is to Love Him,” and Ramone as co-founder of A & R Recording with then- business partner Jack Arnold.

By the mid-Sixties, each had produced enormous hits for other artists: Spector, “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling” for the Righteous Brothers; Ramone, “The Girl From Ipanema” for Stan Getz.

By 1967, however, with his withdrawal from his label Philles Records after the commercial failure of “River Deep, Mountain High,” Spector’s best days were behind him. Ramone, however, was only getting started. Among the records he would produce over the next four decades were:

* A Happening in Central Park, Barbra Streisand;

* Blood on the Tracks, Bob Dylan;

* Still Crazy After All These Years, Paul Simon;

* Celebrate Me Home, Kenny Loggins;

* Double Fantasy, John and Yoko Lennon; 

* Duets, Frank Sinatra; 

* The Broadway cast album for Stephen Sondheim’s Passion; and

* Genius Loves Company, Ray Charles.  

Take a look at that list again. It not only presents a staggering variety of artists and styles, but also represents many of these musicians at the height of their powers.

This may be the key difference between Spector and Ramone; while the former sought to impose his sound on each artist, the latter consistently tried to help his musicians find theirs. Often, that meant waiting patiently for a moment that made a song special.

Nowhere might this have been more vividly illustrated than in the case of Billy Joel, whom Ramone produced for nearly a decade—and, not coincidentally, in the period when the Piano Man finally broke through to a wider public. 

To start with, Spector might have wanted to import his loose collection of musicians, the Wrecking Crew, into the studio to perform most of the instruments. But Ramone readily bought into Joel’s notion that he sounded better with his own band of backup musicians.

Then, in their first collaboration together, The Stranger, Joel, trying to imagine a key instrument for the title tune, began to whistle. Ramone told him that this was the instrument he wanted, and the singer’s whistle was kept on the recorded song.

Lack of grandiosity especially distinguished Ramone from Spector. "I like to joke with people, ‘I’m the guy on the back cover,'” Spector once said. "It’s not like in the movies where it says, ‘Steven Spielberg presents Abe Lincoln.’ What I do is kind of invisible.” 

Finally: in 2009, when Spector was found guilty of second-degree murder for killing actress Lana Clarkson at his mansion, several musicians said they were not at all surprised, given Spector’s instability and use of firearms. When Ramone died in 2013, tributes came pouring forth across the entire spectrum of artists who had worked with him—or wished they could have.

(Photo of Phil Ramone was taken at the Songwriters Hall of Fame induction ceremony on June 18, 2009, by Ky1958.)

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