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Shel Talmy, Influential Rock Producer, Dies Aged 87

Written by on November 14, 2024

Shel Talmy, a prolific and influential producer who oversaw some of the most iconic songs in rock history, has died at the age of 87.

Talmy’s publicist confirmed the news, announcing that he passed away on Wednesday (Nov. 13) at his Los Angeles due to complications from a stroke.

Born Sheldon Talmy in Chicago in 1937, an early love of music saw him embark upon a career as a television recording engineer at Los Angeles’ Conway Studios. “Three or four days later I was an engineer,” he told Mix magazine in 1990. “I had always liked technical things, and I just took to it.”

Working with artists such as Gary Paxton, The Castells, and legendary The Wrecking Crew, Talmy moved to the U.K. in the early 1960s where he established himself as one of the more prominent producers in the rock genre thanks to his involvement with some of the more influential groups of the era.

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Talmy’s credits include classic singles from The Kinks (including “You Really Got Me”, “All Day and All of the Night”, and “Waterloo Sunet”), The Who (“My Generation”, “I Can’t Explain”, “The Kids Are Alright”), and Australian expats The Easybeats, helming their track “Friday on My Mind”.

Talmy’s discography also included “I Pity the Fool”, recorded by the Manish Boys, which featured an 18-year-old singer names David Jones – who would later become known better as David Bowie. Other credits include singles and albums for Manfred Mann, Roy Harper, Pentangle, Small Faces, and punk veterans The Damned.

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In 1963, Talmy also employed legendary producer Glyn Johns as an engineer, and worked with Jimmy Page as a session engineer before Page joined The Yardbirds in 1966 and co-founded Led Zeppelin in 1968.

In a statement, Talmy’s archivist and historian Alec Palao claimed he “was truly a one-off”.

“Even the briefest survey of the most essential pop and rock recordings of the 1960s would need to include something Shel produced, and that in itself is an incredibly meaningful legacy,” Palao said.

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