fbpx

Tag Archives: Eighties

Producer/Artist Rupert Hine, Dead at 72

Rupert Hine
Ruperthine.com

United Kingdom (June 8, 2020) — Rupert Hine, best-known for his work producing a vast array of rock and pop acts during the 1980s and 90s, died at home June 4, 2020 of undisclosed causes. The announcement was made on Twitter by The Ivors Academy, where he was a board member. Hine was 72.

Born in Wimbleton in 1947, Hine started in the music business while still in his teens as part of the folk duo Rupert & David. Recording for Decca Records, the pair’s sole output was a cover of Simon & Garfunkel’s “The Sound of Silence” in 1965, featuring a pre-Led Zeppelin Jimmy Page on guitar, Herbie Flowers on bass and a 26-piece orchestra. Issued in the UK at virtually the same time as the original, both duos’ singles tanked upon release.

Producer Robert “Bobby Digital” Dixon, Dead at 59

Undaunted, Hine would go on to record six albums of his own and another three as Thinkman over the course of his career, but he first moved behind the glass as a producer in 1972, creating the novelty single, “Who Is The Doctor,” for Jon Pertwee—the actor who played the third incarnation of “The Doctor” on the BBC sci-fi series, Doctor Who. As the decade wore on, Hine recorded acts like Camel, Murray Head and Kevin Ayers, as well as bands he was a part of, like Quantum Jump.

It was the 1980s’ emergence of synth-drenched new wave and pop, however, that cemented his reputation as a go-to producer, as Hine helmed a seemingly endless string of hit albums and singles for acts like Howard Jones, The Fixx, Thompson Twins, Bob Geldof, Saga, The Members, The Waterboys, Stevie Nicks, Chris de Burgh and Underworld. Prolifically writing as well throughout the period, he scored the cult John Cusack comedy Better Off Dead (1985) and additionally saw some of his co-writes recorded by Nicks (“Alice”) and most noticeably, Tina Turner.

Working on Turner’s massive 1984 comeback album, Private Dancer, Hine co-wrote the track “I Might Have Been Queen” and produced one of the biggest hits of her career, “Better Be Good to Me.” It was the start of a long and fruitful collaboration, with the artist and producer working together on subsequent albums like 1986’s Break Every Rule (the title track of which he also co-wrote) and 1989’s Foreign Affair.

The Nineties didn’t see Hine slow down either, as he produced Rush (1989’s Presto and 1991’s Roll The Bones), Duncan Shiek, actresses Katey Sagal and Milla Jovovich and Stroke 9, while the 2000s saw him produce the likes of Amanda Ghost, Boy George, Suzanne Vega and others.

During this time, Hine additionally began working on sprawling passion projects, first with the 1990 multimedia effort, One World, One Voice, which brought together 300 musicians around the world for a “musical chain-letter” that was both released on record and aired on television to a worldwide audience of 200 million. Other projects included the compilation Songs for Tibet: The Art of Peace (2008) and Songs for Tibet II (2015).

In addition to his work with The Ivors Academy, Hine was a founding member of the UK’s Music Producers Guild and the International MIDI Association, and was also a member of the Recording Academy. In 2011, he was awarded an APRS Fellowship Award from Sir George Martin. Hine was additionally a board member and chair of the Songwriters Committee of BASCA, where he was also on the board, and The Ivor Novello Awards Committee.

Hine is survived by his wife, Fay; son, Kingsley; step-children Ann and Sam; former wife Natasha Barrault; and sister Julie Juniper.

Rupert Hine • www.ruperthine.com

Music Etc. – Huey Lewis and the News Deliver ‘Weather’ Report

The latest—and possibly last—Huey Lewis and the News album is Weather.
The latest—and possibly last—Huey Lewis and the News album is Weather. Deanne Fitzmaurice

 

Huey Lewis and the News hardly need an introduction. They first burst onto the scene in 1982 with “Do You Believe in Love,” the band’s first chart-topping single, but it was their third album, 1983’s Sports, that thrust them center stage. Certified platinum many times over, Sports generated four of the band’s career 19 top-10 singles, thanks to heavy rotation on MTV and radio. “The Power of Love,” written at the invitation of director Robert Zemeckis for his 1985 film Back to the Future, further cemented the band’s popularity, and was nominated for an Oscar.

In all, Huey Lewis and the News have sold an estimated 30 million records—but while they have continued to tour regularly, their recordings have come less frequently. In February, the band released Weather, its first collection of original songs since 2001’s Plan B. The album was recorded over the last several years, during which time Lewis was diagnosed with severe hearing loss from Meniere’s disease, forcing him off the road in 2018.

Founding member and multi-instrumentalist Johnny Colla, a principal songwriter, once again assumed the lion’s share of production and engineering roles.
Founding member and multi-instrumentalist Johnny Colla, a principal songwriter, once again assumed the lion’s share of production and engineering roles.

As with almost all of the band’s recordings, the new album was self-produced. Alongside Lewis, founding member and multi-instrumentalist Johnny Colla, a principal songwriter, once again assumed the lion’s share of production and engineering roles. Weather was recorded in Marin County, CA, at both Colla’s Morningside Studios and the band’s Trout Farm Studios, and on the road. Bob Clearmountain, who has long worked with Huey Lewis and the News, mixed the album, which was then mastered by Bob Ludwig.

Colla offered some insights into the making of Weather:

On the Genesis of Weather:

We discussed putting out a record, but we were just waiting to come up with the songs. Guys were writing demos on their own and sending mp3s around. Geographically, we’re so scattered now. Sean Hopper, our keyboard player, is in Minnesota. Huey is bouncing between Montana, the Bay Area and San Diego. Our bass player, John Pierce, is in Los Angeles. And the drummer, Bill Gibson, and I hold down the fort in Marin at the Trout Farm clubhouse.

We’d get together in different groups, and what started it for me was this charming two-part demo that Huey and Pierce had worked on. It was fresh, different than anything we’d ever done, and was a great direction for Huey and the News after all these years.

Music, Etc. – Rob Graves – Creating an Atmospheric Solstice

It probably took me close to a year to come up with what I thought was the correct third part for the tune. I took their verse and moved it to the B section, created a new verse and that became “While We’re Young.” I started overdubbing and singing on it, to make it something the band could put their teeth into. There’s a lot of editing and processing these days that can be done in the confines of your home studio with no one else around. At some point, somebody said, “This already sounds like a record.” We had a start and a direction.

On Producing and Recording:

Certain songs do call for a few of us to be in the same room at the same time, so we did get together a few times at Trout Farm. We probably only cut a few basics as four, five or six guys playing at once. Trout Farm is also where we do all of Huey’s vocals. A lot of times, I don’t play on the basic tracks. I’m trying to get the sound as both the engineering and producer roles I embrace.

We rent Trout Farm from Bob Weir [Grateful Dead]. I do like to get a room sound we can use in the final mix rather than create something later. I thought the room was too big for the type of room sound I like, so I moved Bill’s kit to a corner where the ceiling is dropped, where I could get an EMT-type plate sound from the room mics. That worked out well.

On Recording “One of the Boys”:

Huey got a call from producer Dave Cobb, who suggested we come up with a tune for Willie Nelson. Huey rattled off these lyrics and one day on the road at sound check, James Harrah, our guitar player at the time, and I really made some progress on it.

I have a travelling ‘studio in a box,’ as I like to call it; a setup with little [IK Multimedia] iLoud speakers and an interface. We pull into a town and the first thing I do is set the studio up. We had two hours to kill after sound check at one show, so I said, let’s get a drum track. The next town, I get John to lay down a bass. The next town, I get James to put a proper-sounding guitar on it in my room. I got Huey to sing a scratch vocal. I put a two-part harmony on it. We mix it and send it to Willie’s camp. Crickets.

We came home and I started to rework the song. We brought in John McFee from the Doobie Brothers and Clover [Lewis’ first band] to play pedal steel. Huey re-sang it with new lyrics, I sang my two-part and brought in another guy to sing the high part. It got real good real fast; it came together in all the right ways in all the right moments and turned out to be a very heartfelt tune on the record.

Huey Lewis and the News
Huey Lewis and the News Deanne Fitzmaurice

On Mixing with Bob Clearmountain:

When we start on a mix, I always give Bob my best, final mix-ready rough; then all my ideas are there for him to refer to. Over the years, I have grown to wear a bigger ‘hat’ on the production side, creating special moments that one hears throughout this record, and nowadays I actually track those production moments and effects, rather than try and re-create them at mixdown. Bob always has the option to ‘use ’em or lose ’em,’ and he keeps most of my production ideas, so I guess I’m doing alright.

I don’t want to fake it and make it sound like we were all in the same room, but while tracking and overdubbing, I try and give a song its own cohesiveness. There is a certain clarity—“space and air” you could say—that I aspire to, and I believe it’s also Bob’s natural style in a mix. We know we’ve done a good job when Bob says, “This record really sounds good.” That’s about as excited as Clearmountain gets!

Huey Lewis and the News • http://www.hueylewisandthenews.com/

Privacy Preference Center

Necessary

This cookie is set by Google Analytics. It stores and update a unique value for each page visited and is used to count and track pageviews.

_gid , _ga

Advertising

Used by Meta to deliver a series of advertisement products such as real time bidding from third-party advertisers

_fbp

Analytics

This cookie is set by Google Analytics. It stores and updates a unique value for each page visited and is used to count and track pageviews.

_gid , _ga

Other

Tracks when someone clicks through a Klaviyo email to your website

__kla_id

Select your currency