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Kit Lambert

 
Artist: Kit Lambert

Worked With:

Formal Connection With:

Chris Stamp, The Who
  • Born: May 11, 1935
  • Died: April 07, 1981
  • Active: '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Producer

Biography

Far more influential than many realize, Kit Lambert played a key role in shaping the sound and image of the group he managed, the Who. It was Lambert who suggested Pete Townshend's trademark "windmill" strumming style and who was also a strong creative force behind Tommy, writing one of the earliest scripts of the famous rock opera. Perhaps most notably, the lackluster sound of the Who after Lambert left in 1975 is the true testimony to his creative influence and importance to the band.

The son of famous English composer Constant Lambert, Kit was born into a talented, artistic family which also included painter George Lambert. Although his father played an absentee role for most of the Kit's life, his artistic background and socialite reputation would have great affect on the boy. Attending Lansing Public School, Kit displayed not only a flair for the dramatic, but a decadent self-destructive side as well. This tendency culminated when, in 1961, after spending time at both Trinity College in Oxford and the University of Paris film department, Kit ventured to Brazil in an attempt to map the longest undescended river in the world, the Iriri. The expedition ended in disaster when a close friend was killed by a cannibalistic tribe. Kit returned to London and for the next few years held various jobs, working half-heartedly as a director's assistant on films such as From Russia with Love and The Guns of Navarone.

In 1963, after meeting a fellow movie assistant, Chris Stamp, Lambert hatched the idea that the two should capitalize on Britian's recent rock craze by finding a young unsigned group and making a film about them. Intense scouring of the London clubs ensued, and Lambert's future was changed when one day he walked into the Railway Hotel and found the High Numbers performing loudly to a crowd of mod youth. Lambert and Stamp quickly ousted the group's management, changed the group's name to the Who, and set about turning them into pop stars. These embryonic days of the Who may very well serve as Lambert's legacy, as it was he who encouraged Pete Townshend's songwriting; Lambert also, sensing their young, largely male audience, cultivated the angry, sexually frustrated image of the Who.

By 1966, with several successful singles accredited to the group, Lambert ousted producer Shel Talmy and, after setting up Track Records, took over the producing reigns of the Who. Acting as Townshend's Svengali, the two learned the skill of production together, setting about the task of capturing the Who's raw live show on tape. Always capable of understanding the minds of the youth culture, Lambert convinced Townshend to write about deeper issues than the typical boy-meets-girl fare of other British groups. The results were a brand of tough, gutsy songs ("I Can See for Miles") and startingly original mini-operas ("A Quick One While He's Away") that would culminate in the phenomenally successful 1969 rock opera Tommy.

Though Lambert's contribution to the concept and production of Tommy was widely acknowledged, the success created a situation where the group no longer needed or relied on his close influence, leaving him to slowly wean himself away from his beloved Who. In the '70s Lambert continued to produce and manage the group, but to a much lesser extent than he had done in the early days. He traveled to New York to produce Labelle and in 1975, along with longtime partner Chris Stamp, was officially ousted by the Who in favor of manager Bill Curbishley. Lambert went on to produce some early punk bands in the mid-'70s, but heroin addiction curtailed much of his activities, and Track Records, the label he had founded and which had released the earliest efforts of Jimi Hendrix, folded in 1976. Lambert died in 1981 of a brain hemorrhage. ~ Steve Kurutz, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Kit Lambert
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Kit Lambert
Birth name Christopher Sebastian Lambert
Born 11 May 1935(1935-05-11)
Died 7 April 1981 (aged 45)
Occupations Record producer
Years active 1964–1976
Labels Track Records
Associated acts Jimi Hendrix
The Who
Crazy World of Arthur Brown
Golden Earring
Labelle

Christopher "Kit" Sebastian Lambert (11 May 19357 April 1981) was a record producer and the manager for The Who.

Contents

Early life

Kit Lambert was the son of noted composer, Constant Lambert. Constant Lambert was the son of George Washington Lambert, a sculptor and painter who was an official war artist for the Australian government at Gallipoli during World War I.

Career

Lambert served in the British Army after studying at Oxford University. After his service, he returned to Britain and became assistant director for the films The Guns of Navarone and From Russia with Love. He and fellow director Chris Stamp decided to make a film that would feature an unknown pop group; the group that they chose was The High Numbers (previously The Who), who later became The Who once again. Lambert eventually abandoned the film and became The Who's manager. He also replaced Shel Talmy as the group's producer in 1966. While mainly associated with The Who, he also worked with other bands, and produced Arthur Brown's "Fire" in 1968.

Lambert convinced Pete Townshend to move away from simple songs on their earlier albums and to produce more mature fare. This encouraged The Who to progress from the more quirky sound of The Who Sell Out to the deeper themes of Tommy. Pete Townshend has acknowledged that it was Lambert who influenced The Who to combine rock music and opera with the rock/opera Tommy as the result.

While the Who was struggling to articulate Townshend's Lifehouse concept, Lambert shopped a film version of Tommy without the band's authorization. This led to significant differences between him and the group, and he was fired in 1971. The band reached out to Lambert in 1973 during the recording of Quadrophenia, but his drug abuse - and allegations of missing funds - stalled the reunion. In the late 1970s he went on to produce some early punk bands, but with little success.

"Ward of the Court"

At the peak of Lambert's success he owned a house in Knightsbridge, London and the Palazzo Dario on the Grand Canal in Venice, where he was known as Baron Lamberti. However, excessive drug taking brought him to the attention of the British police and he was arrested and charged with drug offences. As a defence, and one rarely used, a lawyer convinced Lambert to become a Ward Of The Court whereby he would avoid charges and a prison sentence while the Official Solicitor would take charge of his affairs and give him a stipend out of his own money to live on each week. Meanwhile royalties from the albums Lambert produced for The Who and Jimi Hendrix were steadily increasing each year. When Lambert died in 1981 his estate was worth over £490,000. Since he died the royalties that have flowed in from his various works to his inheritors have been over a million pounds.

Book, demise and death

In 1980 Lambert assisted by filmmaker Jon Lindsay began writing a book on his life, of how he found The Who and with many never told stories about his contemporaries The Beatles, Rolling Stones, Brian Epstein, Jimi Hendrix and friends like Princess Margaret and Liberace. Days before Lambert was to sign a publishing deal, the publisher was contacted by the Official Solicitor who was in charge of Lambert's life, and who said all monies must be paid into the court to be doled out to Lambert. This was the beginning of a downward spiral for Kit Lambert. On the night of his death he was seen drinking heavily at a popular London gay nightclub El Sombrero in Kensington.

Lambert died of a cerebral hemorrhage after falling down the stairs of his mother's house in 1981, and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.[1]

Some material compiled by Lambert was included in a book The Lamberts by writer and poet Andrew Motion, Poet Laureate of United Kingdom (1999—2009). In 1986 The Lamberts won the Somerset Maugham Award literary prize. The tapes numbered up to 20 hours in length and became an important historical reference of the era of pop and rock music as well as Lambert's own tumultumous life. On the tapes Lambert dispelled some of the popular rumors that he had purposely perpetuated himself to generate publicity about his charges, only to reveal the real truth for the first time. Ironically,in reality Lambert's methods in promoting groups like The Who were far more eccentric and strange than popularly believed, marking him out as one of the most gifted and original showmen of the era.

References


 
 

 

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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