Rudy Van Gelder, great jazz recording engineer – obituary
He was not on the list.
Rudy Van Gelder, pioneer recording engineer, creator of "the Blue Note sound" (and the many sounds that imitated it through the years), died at the age of 91 this week. Every true jazz fan and true audiophile has grown to venerate Van Gelder—at least the work he did in the 1950s and '60s for the innovative labels of the day: not just Blue Note but also Prestige, Impulse!, Riverside, New Jazz, and scattered others.
Van Gelder frequented the jazz clubs of New Jersey in his
youth, and his goal, once he started recording musicians, was to capture the
dynamics, warmth, and spaciousness of live music. The bands on Blue Note's
roster—many of them, quintets with two horns and drummers with a thing for the
hi-hat cymbal—showcased his techniques. The Blue Note sound, in its early
incarnation, was pretty much the live sound of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers.
But this art didn't come naturally. Van Gelder may have been
the first engineer to exploit the wonders of Neumann microphones and to push
the levels as high as the tape of his day could absorb. Through the late 1950s,
most of his albums were recorded in his parents' living room in Hackensack, New
Jersey; it may be no coincidence that many of them are among his
finest-sounding. After then he opened his own studio in nearby Englewood
Cliffs, which he tweaked to replicate the homestead's resonances.
Van Gelder was hardly the only great jazz engineer on the
scene in those days; he may not even have been the best. Other stellar figures
included Fred Plaut at Columbia, Roy DuNann at Contemporary, Val Velantin at
Verve, Roy Goodman at RCA. But the other labels didn't play up their engineers
(Columbia covers never so much as mentioned Plaut), while Alfred Lion, Blue
Note's proprietor, promoted Van Gelder's sound as a boutique blend—something of
a mystique—and the other labels who hired him followed suit, as if to boast
that they too had the special sauce.
The best Van Gelder recordings feature wonderful-sounding
brass, bass walks, and cymbal shimmers, but one instrument he rarely got right
was the piano, which, on most of his albums, sounds hooded. Some engineers
suspect this was due to reflections over the piano, brought on by the shape and
size of his parents' living room and, later, his studio. It may be significant,
in this regard, that his best-sounding album (and one of his best musically
too), Eric Dolphy's Out to Lunch, does not feature a piano. (Instead it has
Bobby Hutcherson's vibes, which ring spectacularly.)
He was always secretive about his techniques. The gateway
cover of one of his Impulse! albums, Gil Evans' Out of the Cool, features a
diagram showing the location of the instruments and the types of microphones
covering them. But when I once asked him about this, Van Gelder heatedly denied
its accuracy, saying that the label's owner, Bob Thiele, made it all up. I
don't know what's true. (Thiele had died well before this conversation.)
In the late 1960s, lured by the conveniences of new
technology, Van Gelder latched on to multi-track recorders and limiters, then,
earlier than many, digital. The quality took a dive. None of his albums sound
bad, but from this point on, few sound distinctive. (There are exceptions,
including, oddly, an obscure but terrific 1998 piano album by Chris Anderson,
Solo Ballads.) Van Gelder's CD-reissue series, known as the RVG Editions, is a
mixed bag as well.
But we come to praise Van Gelder, not to bury him, so here
are just a few of his finest albums, sonically and musically, in no particular
order. Besides Out to Lunch and Out of the Cool, there are Miles Davis' Birth
of the Cool (in this case, the RVG CD only, which is the first and only version
struck from the original master tapes), and Miles' mid-'50s quintet marathon
sessions (Walkin', Workin', , etc.); John Coltrane's Blue Train, Soultrane,
Impressions, Ballads, and A Love Supreme; Wayne Shorter's Juju and Speak No
Evil; Herbie Hancock's Maiden Voyage and Empyrean Isles; Sonny Clark's Cool
Struttin'; Sonny Rollins' Newk's Time, A Night at the Village Vanguard, and
Music from 'Alfie'; Cannonball Adderley's Somethin' Else; Oliver Nelson's The
Blues and the Abstract Truth; Lee Morgan's Vol. 3 and Search for the New Land;
Andrew Hill's Point of Departure; Larry Young's Unity; Sam Rivers' Fuchsia
Swing Song; Joe Henderson's Our Thing; Grant Green's Matador; Horace Parlan's
Speakin' My Peace; Kenny Burrell's Midnight Blue...and I'm probably leaving out
a lot.
Quite a list.
Van Gelder's death coincides with the announcement from
Music Matters—the LA-based house that reissues pristine, 180-gram vinyl
pressings of Blue Note albums exclusively—is ending operations. MMJ's
proprietors, Ron Rambach and Joe Harley, have pretty much run through the
entire Blue Note catalog. (They reissued almost all of the Blue Notes listed
above.) At first, they remastered the titles at 45rpm, the tracks spread out
across two LPs. Then, to lower expenses and price tags, they switched to
331/3rpm—though, at the same time, employing better pressing gear, to the point
where many of the slower-spinning albums sounded as good as the 45s, if not
better. I would have liked to hear what 45s on the new gear sounded like, but
we'll never know. There were nascent plans to reissue some titles as high-rez
digital downloads, but the idea fell through.
An end of an era, all round then.

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