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  1. Jack Douglas. After responding to an ad in the Village Voice offering a program for recording engineers, Bronx-born producer Jack Douglas began his music business career just as the famed Record Plant Studio was opening…. Read Full Biography.

  2. 6. Dez. 2020 · One of Ono’s tracks recorded during the sessions, “Walking on Thin Ice,” didn’t make “Double Fantasy,” but she, John and Douglas were working at Record Plant on a six-minute version they planned to release as a single for rock clubs and discos when Lennon was murdered Dec. 8. Yoko Ono, John Lennon, Jack Douglas, New York City, 1980.

  3. Jack Douglas is an American record producer. He is known for his work with John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Patti Smith, Cheap Trick, and the New York Dolls, among other rock artists in the 1970s and 1980s; notably he produced three successful albums for Aerosmith.

  4. Jack Douglas served as producer and Jay Messina engineered the sessions. Douglas, a Record Plant engineer, had previously worked with The Who , John Lennon and Patti Smith . [21] Douglas was asked by Aerosmith's managers Leber and Krebs to produce the sessions after success engineering the debut for one of their other artists, The New York Dolls .

  5. Jack Douglas is a natural storyteller and he will be telling his story—well, sort of his story—in an upcoming book. The producer/engineer extraordinaire has been exploring a collaboration with Scottish screenwriter/director Mick Davis. It will be a book, but it will not, Douglas stresses, be a rock ’n’ roll memoir. (This interview was ...

  6. During their 1978 tour, several of the band's concerts were professionally recorded by producer Jack Douglas for radio broadcast, and subsequently bootlegged. Douglas remembers, "At the same time that we were recording that album [Draw the Line], we were doing live radio broadcasts. Right over the air, man. There were some amazing bootlegs made ...

  7. Deciding to take a break from recording, band members and producer Jack Douglas went down to Times Square to see Mel Brooks' Young Frankenstein. Returning to the studio, they were laughing about Marty Feldman telling Gene Wilder to follow him in the film, saying "walk this way" and limping. Douglas suggested this as a title for their song.