Memphis lost another great one this week - John Fry, founder of Ardent Studios.
http://acerecords.co.uk/news/2014/john-fry
19th December 2014
John Fry, founder of the world-class, world-famous Ardent Studios in
Memphis, and the genial, self-effacing mentor of cult act Big Star died
unexpectedly yesterday at the age of 69. Alec Palao pays his respects.
JOHN FRY was a one-off. To be sure, in the annals of Memphis popular
music there are similarly important personages - Sam Phillips, Jim
Stewart, Chips Moman to name but three – and Fry stood as tall as any of
them. He was a true gent, without one iota of the high maintenance ways
peculiar to the recording industry. Anyone who ever met John could only
be struck by his warmth, generosity and genuine nature. Cordial but
never stand-offish, at times he resembled that one teacher you might
have actually liked at school, who was willing to share what they know
with you, and is completely encouraging along with it. Someone who
simply makes you want to learn from them.
What John Fry had to
share was a tremendous expertise in the art of capturing sound.
Graduates from the Ardent School of engineering include Terry Manning,
Richard Rosebrough, John Hampton (RIP) and of course Chris Bell, along
with many others who benefited from absorbing his innate attention to
detail, as well as the unprecedented opportunity to use the Ardent
facilities after-hours to experiment. Fry could recognize the qualities
within an individual whether they fit the accepted mould of the music
business or not. Hence Memphis maverick Jim Dickinson’s tenure as house
engineer at the studio’s interim National location, or Fry’s careful yet
hands-offs stewardship of Big Star, from their inception as Icewater /
Rock City to the act’s dour denouement on their third album. Indeed, Big
Star’s career is symptomatic of the Memphis/Ardent paradox. Here was
one of the most impeccably maintained recording facilities in the United
States, yet its own roster was frequently at odds with the accepted
methods of producing records, both technically and artistically.
Ultimately this dichotomy is testament to the far-sightedness and
passion of John Fry, who was young enough to identify with the
excitement that overtook rock in the mid-60s, yet smart and caring
enough to harness it in such a classy and dedicated manner, allied to a
magnanimity rarely spotted in that era.
An avid radio and
technophile at an early age, John built his first studio in the late
1950s in “Grannys sewing room” at the back of his house on Grandview in
Memphis. He and his partners recorded and released a handful of records
intermittently on Ardent over the next few years, including great items
by the Ole Miss Downbeats and Lawson & Four More, while studying
electronics at college and then running a radio station in Arkansas. Fry
opened the first proper Ardent studio on National Street in the late
spring of 1966, and soon was busy with the surfeit of work that other
local studios could not handle, including jingle and advertising dates,
and crucially, Stax overflow sessions. Ardent soon got a reputation for
its technical quality, and while the company continued to produce
masters to pitch to other companies, it was not until 1971 and a move to
the custom-built facility at 2000 Madison Avenue, where the studio
resides today, that the Ardent label was reborn with distribution by
Stax. Big Star, Cargo and the Hot Dogs constituted their small
catalogue, none of whom were successful at the time, but the powerful
legacy of Big Star – as much in part to the sonic quality of the
recordings as perhaps anything else – has made Ardent a name known
around the world. And from around the globe, musicians, fans and
aficionados have beaten a path to Ardent over the years, whether to
avail themselves of its impeccable facilities, or simply just walk those
hallowed halls.
For almost fifteen years, I have been making
regular visits there, initially to go through the Ardent label’s own
small yet fascinating catalogue for “Thank You Friends: The Ardent
Records Story”. Compiling that set was not only ear-opening but also
quite clear evidence of not only John’s technical but his leadership
abilities. Working on further Big Star, Alex Chilton and Chris Bell
projects afforded me some remarkable insights into the real lessons Fry
instilled in his engineers, as well as perhaps his own greatest skill –
that of a mixer. Jim Dickinson in particular had alerted me to this
aspect of Fry’s brilliance and what he had told me was one hundred per
cent borne out by the recorded evidence. Throw the faders up on the
multi-tracks for Third and you get a dissonant mess of alternating
rhythms and strings battling with feedback; John Fry balanced it all
with a clarity and nuance that is still, to this day, breathtaking. I
spent many, many pleasurable hours discussing audio technique with John,
and he was as open with his knowledge and opinion as he might well have
been with any of his Ardent “students.” Though he rarely engineered
after the 1970s – preferring to tend to business, as well as evolving
into a cheerleader for Memphis music in general - with these reissues,
John did some of his last remixing, such was his dedication to making
sure the legacy remained true. One of the biggest compliments I have
ever received in my professional career is when John mentioned he would
actually prefer we used a couple of mixes I had done for a Chris Bell
set.
Whenever Dean Rudland, Tony Rounce and I hit Memphis on
behalf of Ace, Ardent is always our first stop, thanks to the studio’s
handy midtown location, the always warm welcome and not least, its
incredibly high and reliable standards. I got in the habit of schlepping
master tapes from both Nashville and Muscle Shoals – two locations not
exactly without their own recording facilities - to do the transfers at
Ardent, simply because I knew I could get it right with a minimum of
fuss. Though he never could be drawn to actually engineer a session, a
particularly fun and incredibly instructive moment at Ardent occurred
when John was persuaded to set up the drum mics in Studio C, on the one
occasion I have been able actually record as a musician at the studio,
with my pal Matt Piucci of the Rain Parade. Resident engineer Adam Hill
and I were agog watching how he placed the microphone for the floor tom
about three feet behind, to the right of the drum stool. The recorded
results spoke for themselves (of course it didn’t hurt that the drum kit
- the same one heard on ‘September Gurls’ and “Third” – was being
played by its owner, Big Star’s Jody Stephens, Ardent Studios manager
and a fantastic fellow in his own right). Oh yes, and Matt used Chris
Bell’s Gibson 335. It was a true Rock’n’Roll Fantasy Camp.
On a
more serious note. I’m not really a T-shirt type of guy, but for some
reason yesterday morning I had decided to put on a blue shirt emblazoned
with the iconic 1970s “mod globe” 70s Ardent logo, that had been a
Christmas gift from Ardent in years past, and in doing so reminded
myself that I ought to give John a ring to wish him the compliments of
the season. He’d left a message with a similar Thanksgiving greeting a
few weeks earlier and when I returned the call, he wound up our chat in
typical fashion with a folksy, southern-accented “well, good deal”. That
was John – always within easy reach and unerringly gracious and
supportive. Receiving the news of his passing just a couple of hours
later was thus eerie, and really quite upsetting. John Fry taught me so
much, but most of all he showed me how you can maintain in this business
with grace and humility. Thank you, friend.
solo-1
“There are cool cats and there are cool Memphis cats but no one, not
Elvis, not Jerry Lee, not even the Wolf came close to epitomizing Memphis
and cool like Jim Dickinson did. He was the Top Cat Daddy, an
inspiration, a mentor and my friend.
If you knew his music and understood his role as one of the links between
black and white culture and between blues and rock and roll, you know what
I'm talking about. If he is unfamiliar to you, now's as good time as any
to get to know him, even though he's checked out of the motel.”
--Joe Nick Patoski
For more about Jim go to
http://www.zebraranch.com
http://joenickp.blogspot.com/2009/08/james-luther-dickinson.html
Elvis, not Jerry Lee, not even the Wolf came close to epitomizing Memphis
and cool like Jim Dickinson did. He was the Top Cat Daddy, an
inspiration, a mentor and my friend.
If you knew his music and understood his role as one of the links between
black and white culture and between blues and rock and roll, you know what
I'm talking about. If he is unfamiliar to you, now's as good time as any
to get to know him, even though he's checked out of the motel.”
--Joe Nick Patoski
For more about Jim go to
http://www.zebraranch.com
http://joenickp.blogspot.com/
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