John Loder 1946-2005

5
About half the records I bought when I was in high school had his name in the credits. I won't begin to mention how often it appeared once I got involved in college radio.

It's hard for me to directly make an emotional connection to his passing, as he's always appeared as a name on my record collection, and never someone I met...

...so I'm really thankful to read all the comments in the blog entry and get a sense of what he was like.

Please. If you did meet him, and have enough worthy of commenting, I encourage you to do so and add your words. Because I felt the emotional hit after reading those initial comments, and I think there deserves to be more recollections and stories about him. I want a reason to feel the impact, because his work has had a tremendous influence on the side of my life that I'm passionate about. (Just as much as John Peel did... even though I've never met him either.)
"Pro Tools is too California Hollywood bullshit.”

John Loder 1946-2005

7
i didn't know john well, but he mastered a couple of silkworm records and i stayed at his place once, when steve and i were in london to master various things.

he was an unusual guy--he was charming, a little intimidating, drily funny, direct yet rather polite. i think about the questions he had to answer from me before the mastering session for _in the west_, though....'patience' is the word that comes to mind.

before i stayed at his place, i already knew all about at the way steve does things and the way corey rusk does things. i walked into john's building and saw the breadth what he had been doing and the way he did it--with southern studios, the label and its mail-order system, even the organization of his personal living space. and i thought 'aha! so _that's_ where they got it.'

he loved music. his love for it just kinda poured out of him when he talked about it.

resquiscat, mr. loder

John Loder 1946-2005

8
While my (very limited) encounters with him lead me to the conclusion that he wasn't exactly a 'people person', he was clearly a talented man, and an astute mover in business terms.

Where do Scientologists go when they die?

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