Amazingly, on just his second day at work, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Their collaboration flourished as The Beatles explored the boundaries of popular music, with Emerick playing a key role in ground-breaking songs such as “Tomorrow Never Knows” — when he was asked by Lennon to make him sound like “the Dalai Lama singing on a mountain.”“Working with The Beatles was unlike working with any other artists,” Emerick wrote in his 2006 memoir I called 911, but by the time they got there, it was too late.

A lovely, quiet, unassuming man who helped change the way music was produced. London (CNN) Grammy Award-winning audio engineer Geoff Emerick, who worked on several of the Beatles' most important albums, died on Tuesday from … At the mixing desk with Beatles producer Sir George Martin “We received very sad news today, old friend, Geoff Emerick, passed away. this link is to an external site that may or may not meet accessibility guidelines. "I was becoming physically sick just thinking of going to the studio each night," "I used to love working with the band. Geoff Emerick, chief recording engineer with The Beatles and many other hitmakers, has died from a suspected heart attack.
Get push notifications with news, features and more. “He was a great engineer very helpful to all of us in the studio and with him and George Martin helped us to step up on Denny Laine, longtime member of Paul McCartney & Wings, posted a tribute on Facebook.

"After the Fab Four broke up, Emerick continued to work regularly with Paul McCartney and Wings and imparted his knowledge to studio engineers around the world. If you would like to opt out of browser push notifications, please refer to the following instructions specific to your device and browser: Beatles' Legendary Sound Engineer Geoff Emerick Dead at 72 In his 'Hurricane' alter ego, Norman Smith went on to have several solo hits as an artist in his own right.Photo: EMI "With The Beatles we're … "But I was given special permission to use the technique on the Beatles.


"I had a letter sent that I was damaging microphones because the air pressure from the bass drum was destroying the capsules of the microphone," he told US radio station NPR in 1987. "The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Internet sitesA "trade-off" may be needed in England amid a rise in cases, a scientist advising the government says. He was 72.