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He did the impossible and made John Lennon sound like the Dalai Lama

October 3, 2018 at 4:52 p.m. EDT
Ringo Starr, right, congratulates EMI recording studio audio engineer Geoff Emerick on his Grammy Award in London in March 1968. (Monti Spry/Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

John Lennon wanted to sound like “the Dalai Lama singing from a mountaintop 25 miles away from the studio.”

Luckily, the Beatles had Geoff Emerick.

The Beatles had become a phenomenon with “Rubber Soul” and “Meet the Beatles,” crafting intricate, melodic tunes, but the Fab Four were growing creatively restless. They wanted to expand the band’s sound, to push the limit of what a song could be — so by 1966, they quit touring and focused on doing just that.

And now Lennon wanted to sound like the most important Gelug monk sitting on a mountain for the psychedelic “Revolver” cut “Tomorrow Never Knows.” In today’s world, computer programs for such sonic alteration abound — just look at the rise of Auto-Tune. But at the time, the studio itself was considered a place to record musicians, not an instrument in and of itself.

Cue Emerick. He’d come to work for famed Beatles producer George Martin when he was just 15 years old. It was the start of an illustrious career. Emerick, who died on Tuesday at 72, helped redefine what it meant to be a creative engineer shaping a band’s music from behind the scenes.

“When I was asked by George Martin, ‘Do you want to do the Beatles?’ I was just terrified, and the little eeny-meeny-miney-moe thing [in my head], it stopped on ‘Yes, I’ll do it.’ … I felt really honored to be asked,” he later told CNN.

Immediately, he was assigned “Tomorrow Never Knows,” which came with Lennon’s seemingly impossible request. Nonetheless, Emerick took it to heart and began fiddling around with the equipment at Westminster’s EMI Recording Studios (later know as Abbey Road Studios).

“I was looking for something new and different all the time,” Emerick once said in an interview. “The only way that I could do that was to change the way things were done.”

He did a number of remarkable things on the song, including looping sounds such as a seagull squawking, a distorted recording of Paul McCartney’s laughter and a finger tracing the top of a wine glass.

Lennon’s voice, though, was its own challenge. First, he had Lennon double-track his vocals — meaning a performer sings along with his own prerecorded vocals, making them sound huge and alien. Then, Emerick fed the double-tracked vocals through a rotating Leslie speaker, a speaker that was more commonly found inside a Hammond organ.

As George Martin explained in “Anthology,”: “the speed at which it rotates can be varied according to a knob on the control. By putting his voice through that and then recording it again, you got a kind of intermittent vibrato effect, which is what we hear on ‘Tomorrow Never Knows.' I don’t think anyone had done that before. It was quite a revolutionary track for ‘Revolver.’”

From there, Emerick continued to innovate. Perhaps most famously, he and Martin literally cut tape containing the sounds of calliope music and fairground organs into pieces and arbitrarily taped them back together, creating the middle part of “Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!”

Emerick put microphones closer to drums and string instruments, employed vocal distortion and even used tapes that played backward: all methods that hadn’t really been used before. To him, engineering was its own art.

“The great thing about that time,” Emerick once said, “was that the application of engineering was more artistic — working with sound was working with colors painted on a canvas.”

Not all of his colleagues felt this way, however. At EMI, which often recorded classical music, engineers were expected to behave and dress a certain way.

“We had to wear collars and ties and make sure our shoes were polished, and we had to get permission to take our jackets off on a session. And to be seen without a tie — forget it,” he once said. Furthermore, they had to wear different color coats depending on their rank, and Emerick wasn’t even 21 years old when he began upending the norms. As he’s said in many interviews, he was reprimanded for his studio creativity — constantly.

But given how many of his techniques are still used today — not to mention his four Grammy Awards — it seems the engineer got the last laugh.

After his time with the Fab Four, Emerick’s career spanned decades. He continued working with McCartney and produced everyone from Art Garfunkel to Cheap Trick to Johnny Cash. He also worked closely with Elvis Costello on many of enduring albums, including his debut, “Imperial Bedroom.”

Costello mourned Emerick on Twitter Tuesday, writing, “Geoff told me once that working at Abbey Road might mean a morning recording Otto Klemperer, Judy Garland in the afternoon or The Beatles until the small hours. Nothing could confound him. How fortunate to have known and worked with him. I will miss him greatly.”

It’s true that nothing could confound Emerick. As he once said, he lived by a simple principle: “Everything was always possible. Nothing is impossible. That was always my theory.”