Norman 'Hurricane' Smith was the first recording engineer to work with The Beatles and was responsible for their entire Parlophone output from their 1962 audition for George Martin through to Rubber Soul in 1965. His production and engineering credits include Pink Floyd, Stevie Wonder, Little Richard and Barclay James Harvest with far too many more to name. 'Hurricane Smith' made the transition from producer/ engineer to solo recording artist with the singles "Don't Let It Die" and the phenomenal hit "Oh Babe, What Would You Say", which reached number one in the U.S.A. charts. The cover contains a letter from Paul McCartney and the telegram from John Lennon & Yoko Ono.
Norman 'Hurricane' Smith was the first recording engineer to work with The Beatles and was responsible for their entire Parlophone output from their 1962 audition for George Martin through to Rubber Soul in 1965. His production and engineering credits include Pink Floyd, Stevie Wonder, Little Richard and Barclay James Harvest with far too many more to name. 'Hurricane Smith' made the transition from producer/ engineer to solo recording artist with the singles "Don't Let It Die" and the phenomenal hit "Oh Babe, What Would You Say", which reached number one in the U.S.A. charts. The cover contains a letter from Paul McCartney and the telegram from John Lennon & Yoko Ono.