Andrew Loog Oldham (born 29 January 1944) is an English record producer, talent manager, impresario and author. He was manager and producer of the Rolling Stones from 1963 to 1967, and was noted for his flamboyant style.

Early life

Oldham's father, Andrew Loog, was a United States Army Air Force lieutenant, a New Orleanian of German descent, who served with the Eighth Air Force. Loog was killed in June 1943 when his B-17 bomber was shot down over the English Channel, and he was buried at the Ardennes American Cemetery and Memorial in Belgium. Oldham's Australian-born mother, Celia Oldham, was a nurse and comptometer operator. Oldham attended the Aylesbury School for Boys, Cokethorpe School in Oxfordshire, St Marylebone Grammar School and Wellingborough School in Northamptonshire.

A self-proclaimed hustler, Oldham spent teenage summers swindling tourists in French towns.

  • encouraging Mick Jagger to be the front man, and to take the spotlight off leader Brian Jones.
  • bringing John Lennon and Paul McCartney to the recording studio, which led to their song "I Wanna Be Your Man" becoming the Rolling Stones' second single;
  • encouraging Mick Jagger and Keith Richards to start writing their own songs ("As Tears Go By" was their first);
  • promoting a "bad boy" image for the Rolling Stones, in contrast to the Beatles. Oldham generated widely reprinted headlines like "Would You Let Your Sister Go with a Rolling Stone?" and provocative album-cover notes, such as a satirical incitement to fans to mug a blind beggar for funds to buy the album: This quote can be found on the top right on the back of some issues of The Rolling Stones No. 2 LP.

Oldham and Eric Easton negotiated a recording contract which was very favourable to themselves. Instead of having the Stones sign directly with Decca they set up a company, Impact Sound, which retained ownership of the group's master tapes, which were then leased to an idea learned from Phil Spector. Impact Sound received a 14% royalty from Decca but paid only 6% to the Stones, out of which Oldham and Eric Easton received a 25% management fee.

Oldham produced all Rolling Stones recordings from 1963 until late 1967 despite having no previous experience as a producer. According to the Rolling Stones' website, accounts regarding the value of his musical input to the Stones recordings vary "from negligible to absolute zero". Though lacking technical expertise in the studio, it is thought that Oldham was good at seeing the "big picture" of the Rolling Stones' image and sound. He discovered Marianne Faithfull at a party, giving her Jagger and Richards' "As Tears Go By" to record. He also developed other studio talent with his Andrew Oldham Orchestra,

With Arthur Greenslade he was credited as the co-writer of "Headlines", the B-side of "Ride on Baby" (IM 038), by Chris Farlowe, which was released in October 1966.

After the Small Faces disbanded in 1969, he put together Humble Pie, featuring Steve Marriott (formerly of the Small Faces) and Peter Frampton (formerly of the Herd).

In the 1970s and 1980s, Oldham worked primarily in the United States. He produced Donovan, Gene Pitney and other artists.

Later career

A recording by the Andrew Oldham Orchestra was rediscovered in the 1990s when the Verve used a string loop based on the orchestral arrangement of the Rolling Stones song "The Last Time" in their song "Bitter Sweet Symphony"; in the ensuing court battle, songwriting royalties for the Verve track were awarded to Allen Klein's ABKCO Records, the owner of the copyright for "The Last Time".

Oldham co-wrote a biography of ABBA in the 1990s and three autobiographies: Stoned (1998), 2Stoned (2001), and Rolling Stoned (2011) in which he and other music figures recount his days as a manager, producer and impresario. He was inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2014.

In 2005, Oldham thanked the Scientology-linked drug rehab organisation Narconon for saving his life from his cocaine addiction. In the same year he was recruited by Steven Van Zandt to host a radio show on Van Zandt's Underground Garage radio channel heard in North America on Sirius Satellite Radio. Oldham had a three-hour show on weekdays and a four-hour weekend show. In 2006 he collaborated with renowned Argentine musician Charly García for his album Kill Gil, which was eventually released in a slightly reworked form in 2010. In 2008, he worked on the production of a new album by Argentine rock band Los Ratones Paranoicos.

In 2014, Oldham overheard Canadian artist Ché Aimee Dorval singing backup on a friend's track he was helping to produce, and he subsequently signed her to his label. In September 2014, Oldham's label released Dorval's second studio EP, Volume One. She was also given two covers to sing on his 2013 album of Rolling Stones songs entitled Andrew Oldham Orchestra and Friends play the Rolling Stones Songbook Vol. 2. Dorval sang "As Tears Go By" and "Under My Thumb".

In 2020, he began his first lectures as a visiting Scholar at Thompson Rivers University in British Columbia, Canada.

"Andrew's Blues"

The song "Andrew's Blues", sung by the Rolling Stones and appearing on the bootleg Black Box collection CD1, is a humorous if scathing evocation of Oldham.

Personal life

In August 1964 he was quoted in the London Evening Standard saying that he wanted 'to settle down and marry a girl called Sheila'. This took place the following month, when he and Sheila Klein were married in Glasgow on the 16 September. They had known each other for over two years. Oldham told Maureen Cleave: 'I don't know that she has any special qualities, but she's just right for me.'

Oldham has two sons, the elder from his marriage to Sheila Klein, and the younger from his marriage to Esther Farfan.

Bibliography

  • Stoned: A Memoir of London in The 1960's.
  • 2Stoned.
  • Stone Free.
  • Rolling Stoned.
  • On Hustling: Trailblazers, Hustlers and Revolutionaries: People Who Changed Their Worlds
  • ABBA: The Name of the Game (Andrew Loog Oldham - co-writer)
  • Motown: The Sound Of Young America. Adam White, Barney Ales (foreword by Andrew Loog Oldham)
  • Exposed: The Faces of Rock N' Roll. Mick Rock (afterword by Andrew Loog Oldham)
  • Immediate: The Rise and Fall of the UK's First Independent Record Label. Simon Spence (introduction by Andrew Loog Oldham)
  • The Stones: 65-67. Gered Mankowitz (foreword by Andrew Loog Oldham)
  • Satisfaction: The Rolling Stones Photographs Of Gered Mankowitz. Gered Mankowitz (foreword by Andrew Loog Oldham)
  • Goin’ Home with the Rolling Stones ’66: Photographs by Gered Mankowitz. Gered Mankowitz (foreword by Andrew Loog Oldham)
  • Bob Crewe: Sight and Sound: Compositions in Art and Music. Donald Albrecht, Jessica May, Andrew Loog Oldham, Peter Plagens

Notes

References

Sources

  • <!--used in many refs above-->
  • Review of The Rolling Stones Songbook
  • Small Faces - Immediate
  • Lyrics of "Andrew's Blues"