Sandy Pearlman
Biography
Sandy Pearlman¹s credits read like a
who¹s who of rock radio. A former
Woodrow Wilson Fellow in the History of Ideas, the Billboard Producer Directory
called Sandy the ³Hunter Thompson of rock, a gonzo producer of searing
intellect and vast vision.² As producer and writer for the Blue Oyster Cult, Sandy helped
establish the genre of Heavy Metal.
(He was one of the founders of Rock Criticism, and literally was the
first to use the phrase ³Heavy Metal² as it applied to music during his sojourn
at Crawdaddy magazine.) BOC
recorded and Sandy produced such classics as ³Don¹t Fear the Reaper, ³ ³Burning
For You,² ³Astronomy² (covered by Metallica) and ³The Red and The Black²
(covered by the legendary Minutemen).
(Sandy was even portrayed by Christopher Walken in a Saturday Night Live
parody skit of the making of ³Reaper.²)
He produced the classic second record by The Clash, Give Œem Enough
Rope, along with what was arguably the first ³punk² record, The Dictators¹ Go
Girl Crazy. Sandy worked with the
legendary Pavlov¹s Dog, who anticipated the goth movement by more than ten
years as well as the leaders of LA¹s Paisley Underground, The Dream
Syndicate. He has collaborated
with the likes of Patti Smith (who co-wrote various BOC songs), Phil Manzanera
and Andrew Mackay of Roxy Music, Bill Bruford, etc. In recognition of his work, Sandy has received 17 gold and
platinum records.
More recently, Sandy headed the alternative
label, 415 Records, whose roster included Romeo Void, Translator, Wire Train,
Red Rockers, Love Club, Manitoba¹s Wild Kingdom, etc. He acted as executive producer on much
of the later period 415 output. He
has also spent time as manager of Black Sabbath, BOC, The Dictators and Romeo
Void. Sandy was able to squeeze in
production for the second (wonderful) Space Team Electra album, The
Intergalactic Torch Song and West, Gould & FitzgeraldŒs ³So What Does It
All Mean?² from the A Walk To Remember soundtrack between his various internet
consulting gigs.
Sandy was one of the founders of
emusic, a San Francisco based multimedia/on-line music-based company that
focused on ³The Convergence of Music and Technology² (to borrow a
title from the lecture Sandy gave to the Stanford Music Department). Sandy is currently serving as the
technology mastermind to various internet companies and is a visiting scholar
at McGill University.
Sandy is considered one of the leading
experts on the intersection of multimedia and music. In addition,
he conducted a panel on the future of audio in the 21st Century at the Mill
Valley Film Festival, and has lectured at the University of California at
Monterey Film School.
Sandy has been profiled by publications/broadcasts as diverse as
The Wall Street Journal, Mondo 2000, Album Network, Mix, National Public Radio
and KIRO-TV (the CBS affiliate in Seattle).
He owns and operates Alpha & Omega, a 72 track analog recording facility (featuring a Trident 52 channel console plus an extensive ProTools recording/editing/mixing digital system) located in San Rafael, just across the Golden Gate Bridge.