Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Bill Price (record producer)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Birth name
  
Bill Price

Associated acts
  
Role
  
Recording Engineer

Name
  
Bill Price

Years active
  
1965 – present


Bill Price (record producer) Bill Price record producer died YouTube


Occupation(s)
  
Similar People
  
Chris Thomas, Guy Stevens, Topper Headon, Mick Jones, John Loder

Bill price record producer died


Bill Price (3 September 1944 – 22 December 2016) was an English record producer and audio engineer who worked with The Clash, The Sex Pistols, Guns N' Roses, Sparks, The Jesus and Mary Chain, The Nymphs, The Waterboys, Mott the Hoople and Simon Townshend (Pete Townshend's younger brother). He was chief engineer on the first three solo albums by Pete Townshend: including Empty Glass and White City: A Novel.

Contents

Bill Price (record producer) Revered engineer Bill Price dies aged 72 Talent Music Week

He contributed to documentaries about The Clash such as Westway To The World. Bill Price started his engineering career in the mid-60's when he was an engineer at Decca Studios in West Hampstead, recording artists such as Tom Jones.

Bill Price (record producer) dt7v1i9vyp3mfcloudfrontnetstylesnewslarges3

One of the final recordings he helped engineer at Decca before departing to Wessex Studios in November 1969 was the multi-million selling "Reflections of My Life" by The Marmalade.

Price helped build AIR studios Oxford Street, where he spent many years. During that time he engineered some of the major albums of the 1970s and 1980s including the Sex Pistols' Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols, and mixed Nilsson's "Without You".

He was the chief engineer/manager at Wessex Studios, the London studio where the Clash and the Sex Pistols recorded much of their work.

More recently he worked again with Mick Jones in his band Carbon/Silicon and mixed The Veils' albums Nux Vomica and Time Stays, We Go.

Carbon silicon the bill price mixes


References

Bill Price (record producer) Wikipedia