Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Three Turks And A Jew Walk Into A Bar....

... and some very legendary recording studios... And then contribute more to American music than Elvis could ever have hoped and most likely even more than you realize.

Arif Mardin, Partner extraordinaire with Jerry Wexler,Ahmet and Nesuhi Ertegun, died yesterday.

From The NYT:

An arranger and composer as well as a producer, Mr. Mardin was a guiding force behind hit records by many pop luminaries, most notably Aretha Franklin, the Bee Gees, Bette Midler, Chaka Khan and Norah Jones, whose careers he was instrumental in shaping. Winner of 12 Grammys, including two for best producer, nonclassical (in 1976 and 2003), he was a major architect of the pop-soul style nicknamed the Atlantic Sound in the late 1960's.


That influential style was a three-way collaboration with his fellow Atlantic Records producers Jerry Wexler and Tom Dowd; Mr. Mardin was the arranger of the three. It resulted in a series of stirring groundbreaking pop-gospel albums that catapulted the career of the young Aretha Franklin out of the doldrums and earned her the nickname Queen of Soul. The same basic formula of recording with Southern musicians was successfully applied to a number of other artists, most notably Dusty Springfield in her classic "Dusty in Memphis" album.


Out of the Atlantic Sound grew the sophisticated mainstream style of rhythm and blues made by white musicians that he developed working with artists like Daryl Hall and John Oates, Average White Band and the Bee Gees that was labeled "blue-eyed soul." His work with the Bee Gees reignited their stalled career and directly influenced their score for "Saturday Night Fever," whose soundtrack became the best-selling album of all time before being surpassed by Michael Jackson's "Thriller."


His association with Atlantic, which was founded by his fellow Turks Ahmet Ertegun and his brother Nesuhi, began in 1963, lasted for nearly four decades until he retired in 2001.




Put on Son of A Preacher Man then Read The Rest Here .

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

One quibble with the NYTimes assesment of the legendary Arif Mardin: The article states that Mardin "developed"..."blue eyed soul" working with Hall and Oates, Average White Band and the Bee Gees in the 70's and early 80's. Whether any of these artist deserve that Blue Eyed Soul label is arguable. However, Mardin could certainly be said to have been instrumental in developing the style during the mid-60's when he worked extensively with the Young Rascals.