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Martin Rushent
English record producer

Martin Rushent

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
English record producer
Gender
Male
Place of birth
London Borough of Enfield, Greater London, England, United Kingdom
Age
62 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Martin Rushent (11 July 1948 – 4 June 2011) was an English record producer, best known for his work with The Human League, The Stranglers and Buzzcocks.

Early life

Rushent was born on 11 July 1948 in Enfield, Middlesex. His father was a car salesman. Rushent attended Minchenden Grammar School in Southgate, Middlesex.

Career

Early career

Rushent's first experience in a recording studio was at EMI House in London's Manchester Square, when his school band (of which he was the lead singer) had the opportunity to record a demo. After leaving school, Rushent, who had already experimented with his father's 4-track recorder, worked at a chemical factory before working for his father while applying for studio jobs. After numerous rejections, Rushent was employed by Advision Studios as a 35mm film projectionist. After approximately three months, Rushent began working in the audio department as a tape operator alongside Tony Visconti. He worked on sessions for Fleetwood Mac, T.Rex, Yes, Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Petula Clark, Jerry Lee Lewis and Osibisa. Rushent stated that while at Advision, Jerry Lee Lewis threw a tantrum as Yes had been booked into the studio when he was not ready to leave, and chased the studio staff around the complex until they locked themselves in a different studio.

Rushent progressed to senior assistant engineer, staff engineer, and eventually head engineer. He then began working freelance, where he built his reputation and was employed by United Artists (UA). While with UA, Rushent recorded sessions alongside Martin Davies, recording artists such as Shirley Bassey and Buzzcocks, as well as convincing the company to sign The Stranglers provided that he produced the band's material. Rushent produced the group's Rattus Norvegicus, No More Heroes and Black and White albums and recorded demos for Joy Division, before tiring of his commute to London and leaving UA at the end of the 1970s.

Synthpop

Rushent expressed a desire to move away from guitar bands, and bought a Linn LM-1 drum machine, Roland MC-8 Microcomposer and Jupiter-8 synthesiser to learn sequencing and synthesis techniques. Rushent set up his own studio, Genetic, with Synclavier and Fairlight CMI synthesisers and an MCI console. He spent £35,000 on air conditioning alone, and had a Mitsubishi Electric digital recorder costing £75,000.

Rushent used his Roland equipment to record Pete Shelley's first solo album, Homosapien. Originally demos for the planned fourth Buzzcocks album, Shelley and Rushent deemed the recordings releasable, and Shelley was signed to Island Records. They were heard by Simon Draper of Virgin Records, who asked Rushent to produce The Human League. Rushent's work on the group's 1981 album Dare earned him a BRIT Award in 1982 for Best British producer.

Rushent's production on Dare frustrated the group's guitarist Jo Callis, as the only guitar on the album was used to trigger a gate on the synthesiser. Singer Susanne Sulley was also frustrated by the lengthy process of Rushent's synth programming. In 1983, Rushent walked out of his own studio after Sulley made an off-the-cuff comment toward him. Also in the 1980s, Rushent worked with XTC, Generation X, Altered Images and The Go-Go's.

Rushent decided to take a break from production in 1984, and sold his assets – including Genetic Studios. He briefly took up a consultancy position with Virgin, but retired from the industry to raise his children.

Later career

Rushent returned to the music industry in the mid-1990s when he established Gush, a dance club on Greenham Common. The club's opening night was headlined by The Prodigy with support from Mad Professor and LTJ Bukem. Rushent soon began redeveloping his interest in recording, and decided to catch up on the technological advances he had missed.

Rushent built a home studio around a Mackie console, Alesis ADAT HD24 recorder and Cubase 5, with which he produced music by The Pipettes, Does It Offend You, Yeah? and Killa Kela. In 2005, he produced Hazel O'Connor's album Hidden Heart. The following year, he was involved with the BBC Electric Proms when he recorded Enid Blitz, winners in the Brighton area, at a 15th-century manor house in Brentford, using a BBC truck as the control room.

In 2007, Rushent produced the recording Cherry Vanilla by The (Fabulous) Cult of John Harley. The recording was used by the American singer and actress Cherry Vanilla in the launch of her autobiography Lick Me: How I Became Cherry Vanilla.

At the time of his death, Rushent was working on a 30th anniversary version of Dare, remixed like Love and Dancing but using musical instruments instead of synthesisers.

Personal life

In 1972, Rushent married Linda Trodd, with whom he had three children – daughter Joanne and sons Tim and James. They separated in the 1980s, and Rushent later married Ceri Davis, with whom he had a daughter named Amy. Rushent lived with Ceri and Amy in the Berkshire village of Upper Basildon. Rushent's son James is the lead singer for the dance-punk band Does It Offend You, Yeah?. Rushent died on 4 June 2011.

Discography

YearArtistRecordTypeRoleReference
1970Andrew Lloyd WebberJesus Christ SuperstarStudio albumEngineer
1971T-RexElectric WarriorStudio albumEngineer
Gentle GiantAcquiring the TasteStudio albumEngineer
CompostCompostStudio albumEngineer, producer
Stone the CrowsTeenage LicksStudio albumEngineer
Fleetwood MacFuture GamesStudio albumEngineer
1972GroundhogsHogwashStudio albumEngineer
Gentle GiantThree FriendsStudio albumEngineer
Gentle GiantOctopusStudio albumEngineer
Stone the CrowsOntinuous PerformanceStudio albumEngineer
Shirley BasseyI CapricornStudio albumEngineer
1973Curved AirAir CutStudio albumProducer
ChaosDown At The Club/You Could Be My GirlStudio singleComposer, producer
Johnny HarrisAll to Bring You MorningStudio albumEngineer, remixing
BadgerOne Live BadgerLive albumEngineer
1974Riff RaffOriginal ManStudio albumEngineer
The Sensational Alex Harvey BandThe Impossible DreamStudio albumEngineer
SnafuSituation NormalStudio albumEngineer
Premiata Forneria MarconiThe World Became the WorldStudio albumEngineer
1975Danny KirwanSecond ChapterStudio albumProducer
Banco del Mutuo SoccorsoBancoStudio albumEngineer
Shirley BasseyGood, Bad but BeautifulStudio albumEngineer
ZzebraPanicStudio albumEngineer
1976Roderick FalconerNew NationStudio albumEngineer
McKendree SpringToo Young to Feel This OldStudio albumEngineer
1977The StranglersRattus NorvegicusStudio albumProducer
The StranglersNo More HeroesStudio albumProducer
TéléphoneTéléphoneStudio albumProducer
1978The StranglersBlack and WhiteStudio albumProducer
BuzzcocksAnother Music in a Different KitchenStudio albumProducer
Generation XGeneration XStudio albumProducer
BuzzcocksLove BitesStudio albumProducer
999SeparatesStudio albumProducer
Ian GommGomm with the WindStudio albumProducer
Dr FeelgoodPrivate PracticeStudio albumProducer
Ian GommSummer HolidayStudio albumProducer
1979The StranglersLive (X Cert)Live albumProducer
TéléphoneCrache Ton VeninStudio albumProducer
BuzzcocksA Different Kind of TensionStudio albumProducer
Jean-Jacques BurnelEuroman ComethStudio albumProducer
1980TéléphoneAu Cœur De La NuitStudio albumProducer
Rachel SweetProtect the InnocentStudio albumProducer
1981The Human LeagueDareStudio albumProducer
Pete ShelleyHomosapienStudio albumProducer
The RaybeatsGuitar BeatStudio albumProducer
Altered ImagesHappy BirthdayStudio albumEngineer, producer
Deke LeonardBefore Your Very EyesStudio albumEngineer, producer
The dB'sStands for DecibelsStudio albumMixing
1982The Human LeagueLove and DancingRemix albumProducer
Altered ImagesPinky BlueStudio albumProducer
The MembersUprhythm, DownbeatStudio albumProducer
1983The Human LeagueFascination!E.P.Producer
Pete ShelleyXL1Studio albumProducer
IntaferonGet Out Of LondonSingle/12"Producer
1984The Human LeagueHysteriaStudio albumProgramming
Hazel O'ConnorSmileStudio albumProducer
The Go-Go'sTalk ShowStudio albumEngineer, producer
1985AssociatesPerhapsStudio albumProducer
1988Do-Re-MiThe Happiest Place in TownStudio albumProducer
AssociatesHeart of GlassSingleProducer
1990The Human LeagueHeart Like a WheelSingleProducer
1993FlopWhenever You're ReadyStudio albumProducer
1997Ian GommCome OnSingleProducer
2005Hazel O'ConnorHidden HeartStudio albumProducer
Carl BaratUnder the InfluenceStudio albumProducer
2009Killa KelaAmplifiedStudio AlbumProducer
2010The PipettesEarth vs. The PipettesStudio albumProducer
2011Does It Offend You, Yeah?Don't Say We Didn't Warn YouStudio albumProducer
2011The PipettesBoo ShuffleSingleProducer
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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