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Tom Wilson

 
Artist: Tom Wilson

Worked With:

Thom Wilson, Gary Kellgren, Val Valentin, Bob Johnston, Benny Golson, Rudy Van Gelder, Frank Zappa, Cecil Taylor, Nico, Bob Dylan

Formal Connection With:

See Tom Wilson Lyrics
  • Born: March 25, 1931
  • Died: September 06, 1978, Los Angeles, CA
  • Active: '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Producer

Biography

Although he originally came to prominence in the recording industry as a jazz producer, Tom Wilson made his mark with folk-rock and psychedelic music in the mid-to-late 1960s. His list of credits during that approximately five-year period is astonishing, including important albums by Bob Dylan, Simon & Garfunkel, the Velvet Underground, and the Mothers of Invention, as well as lesser-known but significant artists such as the Blues Project, Nico, and the Soft Machine. Wilson is not often mentioned as one of the most important producers of the 1960s, but judged sheerly by the discs attached to his name alone, he's got a fair claim to notice as one of the greats.

Wilson might be known today only to jazz scholars if not for an unexpected twist of fate that put him square in the pop and rock world. Graduating from Harvard in economics, he made his initial reputation as a producer with progressive jazz artists of the late 1950s and early 1960s, working on albums by Cecil Taylor, John Coltrane, Sun Ra, and others; he also wrote liner notes for several jazz releases during this period. In early 1963, Columbia Records, as a result of pressure from Bob Dylan's manager Albert Grossman, removed John Hammond from his position as Dylan's producer. As his replacement, they suggested Wilson. Wilson candidly admitted later that he didn't even like folk music, but was impressed enough by Dylan to complete the sessions for the singer's second album, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan.

Wilson would be Dylan's producer through mid-1965, and would be an important figure in Dylan's transition to folk-rock by the time 1965 dawned. In December 1964, Wilson took the unusual step of overdubbing electric instruments on three songs that Dylan had recorded in 1961 or 1962, including "House of the Rising Sun." It's not known for sure what Wilson had in mind, but it's likely he was trying to demonstrate, to Dylan and possibly others, what kind of results could be achieved by Dylan recording in a rock style. These were never released or intended for release, although the overdubbed "House of the Rising Sun" appeared on Dylan's Highway 61 Interactive CD-ROM, and was initially falsely claimed to be an early-sixties recording. Wilson produced Dylan's first official rock sessions (discounting his 1962 rock single "Mixed Up Confusion") on 1965's Bringing It All Back Home, and made an unexpected left-field contribution to "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream," which leads off with a false start and Wilson's high-pitched laughter. Wilson was also responsible for choosing most of the musicians who accompanied Dylan on Bringing It All Back Home; he would use some of the same musicians on other important early folk-rock records by Simon & Garfunkel and (most likely) Dion.

Wilson was also at the helm of Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone" single. The famous spontaneous, almost accidental contributions of Al Kooper on organ for this track would never have happened but for the fact that he was a good friend of Wilson, who invited Kooper to the session to watch. Despite the undisputed commercial and musical success of "Like a Rolling Stone," it would be the last thing Wilson and Dylan did together. Dylan had become dissatisfied with Wilson, who was replaced, for reasons that have never been fully explained. But Wilson had learned a lot about folk-rock along the way, and applied a similar strategy to electrifying Simon & Garfunkel, who in 1965 had all but broken up after a flop acoustic LP on Columbia. Wilson took a track from that album, "Sounds of Silence," and overdubbed electric guitars and drums, just as he had done to old Dylan tracks on those experimental recordings of late 1964. The result was a #1 hit and instant stardom for Simon & Garfunkel, who may not even had continued as a duo if not for Wilson's "Sounds of Silence" treatment. Also at Columbia, Wilson produced some underrated, overlooked folk-rock cuts with Dion in late 1965 that sounded as though they benefited from some of the same backup musicians that Dylan had used. Overall, Wilson's stay at Columbia had turned into one of those "only in America, and only in rock and roll" scenarios: an African-American jazz producer, who professed not even to like folk music when he began recording it, turned out to be a main agent of folk's transition into folk-rock.

In late 1965, Wilson became the East Coast director of A&R for Verve Records. Immediately he became a key figure in the evolution of rock into something artier and more experimental than it had ever been before, signing the Mothers of Invention and the Velvet Underground. Frank Zappa sometimes gave the impression that Wilson had thought the Mothers of Invention were a White R&B band of sorts when he signed them, which is doubtful; he was probably one of the few major label execs around at that time who was hip enough to have an idea of where they were coming from. Wilson produced their first two albums, Freak Out and Absolutely Free, and is listed as "executive producer" on We're Only in It for the Money. It's likely that even on the first two albums, Zappa was the main force as far as musical direction and arranging went, but Wilson was undeniably helpful in getting Zappa the time and budget to do a debut double LP, Freak Out, that included lots of orchestral musicians--no small risk for a group's first album. Wilson also had Zappa do some arranging for an Animals album Tom was producing, Animalization, although that didn't work out too well.

Wilson's role in the Velvet Underground's career was more avuncular. He produced only one track on their classic first album, "Sunday Morning." The rest of the production was credited to Andy Warhol, although as Wilson supervised the remixing and editing, one might deduce that he had a more significant musical role in the proceedings than Warhol did. Wilson produced the group's second LP, White Light/White Heat, and also did Nico's first album, which benefited from some unusual string and wind arrangements, although Nico would later be quite critical of Wilson's use of flute in particular. Wilson also produced the best album (Projections) and single ("No Time Like the Right Time") by New York folk-blues-rock group the Blues Project, featuring his friend Al Kooper on keyboards, and did the first album by the Soft Machine in 1968.

With both the Mothers and the Velvets, Wilson's role seems not so much to have been musical as artistically supportive. Not many labels, let alone big ones like Verve, would have been happy to let Zappa and the Mothers do ambitious suite parodies of hippie counterculture, or let the Velvets sing about sex and drugs and record overdistorted tracks with the needle way in the red on White Light/White Heat. Some of the musicians he worked with have recalled that Wilson was not terribly involved in the sessions themselves. Kevin Ayers of the Soft Machine, for instance, remembered that Wilson was on the phone to girlfriends most of the time when the Softs' debut LP was cut, and John Cale of the Velvet Underground recalled that Wilson "had this parade of beautiful girls coming through all the time" in the liner notes to the Velvets' Peel Slowly and See box set. But Wilson did know enough to let the artists play and release controversial, brilliant material their way without unduly interfering--which is just as important a contribution on a producer's part as the more widely hailed methods of shaping and arranging a performer's material.

After the late 1960s Wilson was not heavily involved in record production, dying in 1978 in Los Angeles. This was before rock scholarship had reached an intense level, and it's a deep loss to history that he was not interviewed at length about his associations with, and contributions to, several of the biggest giants of 1960s rock music. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Tom Wilson (producer)
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Tom Wilson

Tom Wilson with Bob Dylan, recording Like A Rolling Stone, 1965
Background information
Birth name Thomas Blanchard Wilson Jr.
Born March 25, 1931(1931-03-25)
Origin Waco, Texas, USA
Died September 6, 1978 (aged 47)
Genres Rock, Jazz
Occupations Record producer
Years active 1956–1978
Labels Transition
Savoy Records
Columbia Records
Verve
Associated acts The Velvet Underground
Bob Dylan
Sun Ra
Cecil Taylor
Frank Zappa

Thomas Blanchard Wilson Jr. (March 25, 1931September 6, 1978) was an American record producer best known for his work in the 1960s with Bob Dylan, Frank Zappa, Simon and Garfunkel and The Velvet Underground. He has become most famous for his work in the 1960s[1], though he made his first mark in the mid-50s.

Contents

Biography

Starting out

Wilson was born in 1931 to Tom and Fannie Wilson. He grew up in Waco, Texas, where he attended A.J. Moore High School, and was a member of New Hope Baptist Church. Tom was known by his initials, T.B. in his youth. While attending Fisk University, Wilson was invited to Harvard where he became involved with the Harvard New Jazz Society and radio station WHRB; to the latter he later credited all of his success in the music business.[citation needed]

On graduating from Harvard, he borrowed $900 to set up Transition Records, having a goal in mind of setting up a record label and recording the most advanced jazz musicians of the day.[2] The label did release several albums, including Sun Ra's Jazz By Sun Ra (or Sun Song) (which was Ra's first LP, though a second LP of material was unreleased until 1968) and the album Jazz Advance by Cecil Taylor.

His work with Transition Records helped him obtain a job with United Artists Records in 1957.[3] He went on to work as a producer for various jazz labels, including Savoy Records, for whom he again recorded Sun Ra in 1961.[4]

Columbia Records

As a staff producer at Columbia Records Wilson was one of the "midwives" of folk-rock, producing three of Bob Dylan's key 1960s albums: The Times They Are a-Changin', Another Side of Bob Dylan, and Bringing It All Back Home, along with the 1965 single, "Like A Rolling Stone." Wilson also produced the final four tracks Dylan recorded for The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, after he replaced John Hammond as Dylan's producer in 1963.[5]

Wilson produced Simon & Garfunkel's 1964 debut LP Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M. which included "The Sounds of Silence". Seizing on local radio interest in the song in Florida and inspired by the huge success of The Byrds' folk-rock version of Dylan's "Mr Tambourine Man", Wilson took the duo's original acoustic track and, without Simon or Garfunkel's knowledge, overdubbed electric instruments, turning the track into a #1 pop hit, helping to launch the folk-rock genre. Simon and Garfunkel, who had already split, re-united after the hit and went on to greater success.

After working with Wilson, both Dylan and Simon & Garfunkel went on to work with another Columbia staff producer, Bob Johnston, who produced several albums for both acts.

Verve Records

In 1966 he signed the Mothers of Invention to Verve Records and was credited as producer on the group's seminal debut album Freak Out! although it is widely believed that Frank Zappa, the leader of the group, did most of the real production work.

Tom Wilson also produced The Velvet Underground, featuring Lou Reed, John Cale, and Nico. Another of his Verve production credits was The Blues Project's first studio album Projections (1966) featuring Al Kooper as vocalist and keyboard player. Wilson co-produced the Soft Machine's eponympous first album with Chas Chandler in 1968.

Wilson died of a heart attack in Los Angeles in 1978.

Achievements

Wilson was an important producer (alongside his contemporaries Phil Spector, George Martin, Brian Wilson and Teo Macero) of the 1960s. He has been said to have had the skill of "putting the right people together for the right projects".[6]

Wilson made an important contribution to Dylan's rock and roll sound, producing his first rock recordings on Bringing It All Back Home. In the 1969 Rolling Stone Interview, Jann Wenner asked, "There's been some articles on Wilson and he says that he's the one that gave you the rock and roll sound. Is that true?" Dylan: "Did he say that? Well if he said it... [laughs] more power to him.[laughs] He did to a certain extent. That is true. He did. He had a sound in mind".[7]

Frank Zappa paid this tribute:"Tom Wilson was a great guy. He had vision, you know? And he really stood by us ... I remember the first thing that we recorded was 'Any Way the Wind Blows,' and that was okay. Then we did 'Who Are the Brain Police?' and I saw him through the glass and he was on the phone immediately to New York going, 'I don't know!' Trying to break it to 'em easy, I guess." "Wilson was sticking his neck out. He laid his job on the line by producing the album."[8]

Selected discography

References

  1. ^ All Music Guide
  2. ^ Szwed, John (1997). Space is the Place. Payback Press. ISBN 0-86241-722-8. , page 154
  3. ^ Szwed, p159
  4. ^ Szwed, p185-186
  5. ^ Heylin, 1996, Bob Dylan: A Life In Stolen Moments, pp. 42–43.
  6. ^ Langhorne, Bruce. "Bruce Langhorne Interview by Richie Unterberger". http://www.richieunterberger.com/langhorne3.html. Retrieved 2008-11-24. 
  7. ^ Rolling Stone, November 29, 1969. Reprinted in Cott (ed.), Dylan on Dylan: The Essential Interviews, p. 142.
  8. ^ Kurt Loder, Bat Chain Puller, 2002, Rowman & Littlefield ISBN 9780815412250

 
 

 

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