Edward Offord is an English retired record producer and audio engineer who gained prominence in the 1970s for his work on albums by the progressive rock bands Emerson, Lake & Palmer and Yes. Offord would spend much of his career working at Advision Studios. and Streetnoise. The same year, he is also credited as an engineer in the debut album Extrapolation by John McLaughlin.
Offord worked with Emerson, Lake & Palmer on their first four albums, released 1970 through 1972. ELP wrote a tribute to Offord with the song "Are You Ready, Eddy?", featured on their 1971 album Tarkus.
In 1970, Offord began his partnership with Yes. The partnership was fruitful but tumultuous; Offord remarked that producing Yes was like "trying to produce five producers." He suggested that the band record Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973) in the countryside to try and ease tensions that had grown within the group, but the compromise was to record at Morgan Studios with trees, plants, and model cows. Following Relayer (1974), Yes and Offord parted ways, with Yes guitarist Steve Howe stating that Offord had become unreliable on tours. In 1994, after working on Grassroots by 311, Offord announced his retirement from the music business, though he returned in 2011 when his stepson introduced him to The Midnight Moan, and went on to produce their debut album.
- Album with Andy Pratt
- Motives (1979)
- Album with Dixie Dregs (co-producer with Steve Morse)
- Industry Standard (under the name The Dregs) (1982)
- Albums with Pallas
- The Sentinel (1984)
- Album with Art in America
- Art in America (Sony/Pavilion 1983)
- Album with Jay Aaron (as co-engineer & co-producer with Jay Aaron)
- Jay Aaron Inside/Out (Warner Bros. 1990)
- Albums with 311
- Music (1993)
- Grassroots (1994)
- Albums with Opus (as producer)
- Opus (1987)
- Album with National Head Band
- Albert 1 (1971)
- Album with Tinsley Ellis
- Storm Warning (1994)
- Hell or High Water (2002)
- Albums with Utopia (engineer on 2 cuts)
- Ra (1977)
