John Leckie

John Leckie
John Leckie, 2006
John Leckie, 2006
Background information
Birth nameJohn William Leckie
Born (1949-10-23) 23 October 1949 (age 74)
Paddington, London, England
GenresRock, pop
Occupation(s)Record producer
Years active1970–present

John William Leckie (born 23 October 1949) is an English record producer and recording engineer. His production credits include Magazine's Real Life (1978); XTC's White Music (1978); Dukes of Stratosphear's 25 O'Clock and The Fall's This Nation's Saving Grace (both 1985); the Stone Roses' The Stone Roses (1989); the Verve's A Storm in Heaven (1993); Radiohead's The Bends (1995); Cast's All Change (1995); Muse's Origin of Symmetry (2001); and the Levellers' We the Collective (2018).

Early life

Born in Paddington, London, Leckie was educated at the Quintin School, a grammar school in North West London, then Ravensbourne college of Art and Design in Bromley. After leaving school, he worked for United Motion Pictures as an audio assistant.

Career

Leckie began work at Abbey Road Studios on 15 February 1970 as a tape operator, later graduating to balance engineer and record producer. During his early career he worked as a tape operator with artists such as George Harrison (All Things Must Pass), John Lennon (John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band) and Syd Barrett (Barrett). He moved up to the desk to be balance engineer for Pink Floyd (Meddle and Wish You Were Here), for Mott The Hoople's album Mott and Paul McCartney and Wings' Red Rose Speedway and the single "Hi, Hi, Hi". Other engineering sessions at Abbey Road at this time were with Roy Harper, Soft Machine, Sammy Hagar, Jack Rieley's Western Justice album and the last recordings with Syd Barrett.

His first jobs as producer, in 1976, were Be-Bop Deluxe's third album, Sunburst Finish, and Doctors of Madness' Figments of Emancipation. His collaboration with Be-Bop Deluxe continued with Modern Music, Live! In the Air Age and Drastic Plastic. In 1977 Leckie produced the Adverts' Crossing the Red Sea with the Adverts, Magazine's Real Life,.

Leckie left Abbey Road in 1978 and produced albums for Simple Minds (Life in a Day, Real to Real Cacophony and Empires and Dance). For Be-Bop Deluxe founder Bill Nelson, he produced the Red Noise album Sound on Sound and Nelson's subsequent solo album Quit Dreaming And Get On The Beam (the latter unreleased until 1981). Leckie recorded the début single, Public Image for Public Image Ltd and produced the Human League's Holiday 80 EP. Leckie's work with XTC included producing their debut 3D single and EP, and first two studio albums, White Music and Go 2. In 1981 he worked with the legendary Irish band The Atrix on their 3rd single Procession. Later he went on to produce 25 O'Clock and Psonic Psunspot, which XTC issued under the pseudonym The Dukes of Stratosphear in the mid-1980s.

In 1989 Leckie produced the Stone Roses' debut album The Stone Roses. The album was voted the best record of all time on a music poll taken by BBC Radio 6 Music and features as Number 1 on Observer's June 2004 "100 Greatest British Albums". Some months later he produced and mixed their single "Fools Gold", which charted at No. 4 in the UK Singles Chart, and in early 1990 he produced and mixed the single "One Love" which also charted at no. 4 in UK. Leckie also worked on much of the recording the Stone Roses' album Second Coming. In 1995, Leckie produced All Change by the Liverpool band Cast, which became Polydor Records' highest-selling debut album.

Leckie produced and engineered Radiohead's second album, The Bends (1995), which garnered significant critical attention. His next projects were the first two albums by Muse, Showbiz (1999) and Origin of Symmetry (2001). The albums drew comparisons to Radiohead, which Leckie dismissed, saying: "In the late 90s, any British band that sang passionately and played guitar was going to get compared to Radiohead." He said he had been invited to produce several "Radiohead copycats" after The Bends, and chose to produce Muse because he had "intentionally looked for something different". At the 2010 Music Producers Guild Awards, where Muse's self-produced song "Uprising" was named UK Single of the Year, The songwriter, Matt Bellamy, thanked Leckie for "teaching us how to produce". In 2019, Leckie produced Dark Times, the critically acclaimed comeback album by Doctors of Madness.[citation needed]

Awards

Albums produced


This page was last updated at 2024-02-15 16:17 UTC. Update now. View original page.

All our content comes from Wikipedia and under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.


Top

If mathematical, chemical, physical and other formulas are not displayed correctly on this page, please useFirefox or Safari