1940s–1950s Pioneers from the 1940s include
Bill Putnam,
Les Paul, and
Tom Dowd, who each contributed to the development of common recording practices like reverb,
tape delay, and
overdubbing. Putnam was one of the first to recognize echo and reverb as elements to enhance a recording, rather than as natural byproducts of the recording space. He engineered
the Harmonicats' 1947 novelty song "
Peg o' My Heart", which was a significant chart hit and became the first popular recording to use artificial reverb for artistic effect. He began production work in 1955 at
IBC Studios in London. One of Meek's signature techniques was to overload a signal with
dynamic range compression, which was unorthodox at the time. He was antagonized by his employers for his "radical" techniques. Some of these methods, such as close-miking instruments, later became part of normal recording practice. Discussing
Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, Adam Bell describes the songwriting duo's productions for
the Coasters as "an excellent example of their pioneering practices in the emerging field of production", citing an account from Stoller in which he recalls "cutting esses off words, sticking the tape back together so you didn't notice. And sometimes if the first refrain on a take was good and the second one lousy, we'd tape another recording of the first one and stick it in place of the second one."
Phil Spector, sometimes regarded as Joe Meek's American counterpart, is also considered "important as the first star producer of popular music and its first 'auteur' ... Spector changed pop music from a performing art ... to an art which could sometimes exist only in the recording studio". His original production formula (dubbed the "
Wall of Sound") called for large ensembles (including some instruments not generally used for ensemble playing, such as
electric and
acoustic guitars), with multiple instruments doubling and even tripling many of the parts to create a fuller, richer sound. It evolved from his mid-1950s work with Leiber and Stoller during the period in which they sought a fuller sound through excessive instrumentation. Spector's 1963 production of "
Be My Baby", according to
Rolling Stone magazine, was a "
Rosetta stone for studio pioneers such as the Beatles and
Brian Wilson".
Beatles and Beach Boys The Beach Boys' producer-songwriter-singer
Brian Wilson and the Beatles' producer
George Martin are generally credited with helping to popularize the idea of the studio as an instrument used for in-studio composition, and music producers after the mid-1960s increasingly drew from their work. Although Martin was nominally the Beatles' producer, from 1964 he ceded control to the band, allowing them to use the studio as a workshop for their ideas and later as a sound laboratory. Musicologist Olivier Julien writes that the Beatles' "gradual integration of arranging and recording into one and the same process" began as early as 1963, but developed in earnest during the sessions for
Rubber Soul (1965) and
Revolver (1966) and "ultimately blossomed" during the sessions for ''
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'' (1967). Wilson, who was influenced by Spector, was another early auteur of popular music. Authors Jim Cogan and William Clark credit him as the first rock producer to use the studio as a discrete instrument. According to author David Howard, Martin's work on the Beatles' "
Tomorrow Never Knows", from
Revolver, and Spector's production of "
River Deep – Mountain High" from the same year were the two recordings that ensured that the studio "was now its own instrument". Citing composer and producer
Virgil Moorefield's book
The Producer as Composer, author Jay Hodgson highlights
Revolver as representing a "dramatic turning point" in recording history through its dedication to studio exploration over the "performability" of the songs, as this and subsequent Beatles albums reshaped listeners' preconceptions of a pop recording. According to Julien, the follow-up LP
Sgt. Pepper represents the "epitome of the transformation of the recording studio into a compositional tool", marking the moment when "popular music entered the era of phonographic composition." Composer and musicologist
Michael Hannan attributes the album's impact to Martin and his engineers, in response to the Beatles' demands, making increasingly creative use of studio equipment and originating new processes. Like
Revolver, "
Good Vibrations", which Wilson produced for the Beach Boys in 1966, was a prime proponent in revolutionizing rock from live concert performances into studio productions that could only exist on record. For the first time, Wilson limited himself to recording short interchangeable fragments (or "modules") rather than a complete song. Through the method of
tape splicing, each fragment could then be assembled into a linear sequence – as Wilson explored on subsequent recordings from this period – allowing any number of larger structures and divergent moods to be produced at a later time. Musicologist
Charlie Gillett called "Good Vibrations" "one of the first records to flaunt studio production as a quality in its own right, rather than as a means of presenting a performance", while rock critic
Gene Sculatti called it the "ultimate in-studio production trip", adding that its influence was apparent in songs such as "
A Day in the Life" from
Sgt. Pepper.
1970s–2010s at a live remix in 2012 Adam Bell credits
Brian Eno with popularizing the concept of the studio as instrument, particularly that it "did not require previous experience, and in some ways, a lack of know-how might even be advantageous to creativity", and that "such an approach was typified" by
Kraftwerk, whose members proclaimed "we play the studio". He goes on to say: Producer
Conny Plank was cited as creating "a world in sound using the studio as an instrument" producing bands such as
Can,
Cluster,
Neu!,
Kraftwerk and
Ultravox amongst many others, the studio was seen as an integral part of the music. Jamaican producer
Lee "Scratch" Perry was noted for his 70s
reggae and
dub productions, recorded at his
Black Ark studio.
David Toop commented that "at its heights, Perry's genius has transformed the recording studio" into "virtual space, an imaginary chamber over which presided the electronic wizard, evangelist, gossip columnist and Dr. Frankenstein that he became." From the late 1970s onward,
hip hop production has been strongly linked to the lineage and technique of earlier artists who used the studio as an instrument. Jazz critic
Francis Davis identified early hip-hop
DJs, including
Afrika Bambaataa and
Grandmaster Flash, as "grassroots successors to Phil Spector, Brian Wilson, and George Martin, the 1960s producers who pioneered the use of the recording studio as an instrument in its own right." performing in 2008 Beginning in the 1980s, musicians associated with the genres
dream pop and
shoegazing made innovative use of
effects pedals and recording techniques to create ethereal, "dreamy" musical atmospheres. The English-Irish shoegazing band
My Bloody Valentine, helmed by guitarist-producer
Kevin Shields, are often celebrated for their studio albums ''
Isn't Anything (1988) and Loveless (1991). Writing for The Sunday Times'',
Paul Lester said Shields is "widely accepted as shoegazing's genius", with "his astonishing wall of sound, use of the studio as instrument and dazzling reinvention of the guitar making him a sort of hydra-headed Spector-
Hendrix-Eno figure".
Chuck Eddy writes that, as the
CD era emerged in the late 1980s,
pop-metal was the first musical style to exploit contemporary recording studio techniques for "an aesthetic advantage", citing
Def Leppard's
Hysteria (1987) as a pioneering example and
Lita Ford's
Stiletto (1990) as a similar case, as both albums feature incidental
high tech "whooshes and wobbles and giggles and boinks". Similarly, Eddy cites
Kix's
Blow My Fuse (1988) as an album whose sonics embody a futuristic "digital
disco" sound, with "dub-doctored
Who synths" and a 'studiofied' production. American psychedelic rock band
The Flaming Lips earned comparisons by critics to Brian Wilson's work when discussing their albums
Zaireeka (1997) and
The Soft Bulletin (1999), which were the results of extensive studio experimentation. When asked what instrument he played, frontman
Wayne Coyne simply stated "the recording studio". ==See also==