http://www.suntimes.com/news/obituaries/20260844-418/mack-emerman-89-founded-criteria-studio-where-layla-eat-a-peach-produced.html
Mack Emerman, 89, founded Criteria studio where 'Layla,' 'Eat A Peach' produced
By CURT ANDERSON Associated Press
May 21, 2013 5:48PM
Updated: May 22, 2013 12:21AM
MIAMI - Mack Emerman, the founder of Criteria Recording Studios where acts
including Eric Clapton, James Brown and the Bee Gees made some of their most
famous records, has died after a long illness. He was 89.
His daughter Bebe Emerman said Tuesday that her father died of complications
from pneumonia at the Miami Jewish Home for the Aged, where he had lived since
his health began failing in 2004. The Criteria studio, which he opened in 1959
in North Miami, has been operated by the Hit Factory since 1999.
Some 250 gold or platinum singles and albums were recorded at Criteria, which
became known as Atlantic Records South when Mr. Emerman formed an alliance with
producer Tom Dowd.
The records include "Layla" by Clapton's group Derek and the Dominoes, James
Brown's "I Feel Good," "Eat A Peach" by The Allman Brothers Band and parts of
huge 1970s hits such as "Saturday Night Fever" by the Bee Gees, Fleetwood Mac's
"Rumours" and "Hotel California" by the Eagles.
Things went downhill for Mr. Emerman in the 1980s. His daughter said he
continued buying equipment and expanding studios at Criteria even as the music
industry hit a slump. Mr. Emerman eventually sold Criteria to a local investor
in 1988 and three years later he was forced out.
Bebe Emerman said her father suffered from depression for years afterwards.
"Eventually, however, he recovered and began recording again, on a small scale,"
she said in an email.
Maxwell Louis Emerman was born in 1923 in Erie, Pa., and later began playing the
jazz trumpet while attending Duke University. With his wife and two daughters,
he came to South Florida in 1953 to work in his father's candy business in
Hialeah, but his daughter said he began recording live jazz and then set up a
studio in his garage, running cables into the family living room where the
musicians performed.
"The same family station wagon he used to haul saltwater taffy for his father by
day was packed with audio gear at night as he moved from club to club,
perfecting his recording technique," said Bebe Emerman.
He built Criteria with a loan from his father and opened it in 1959 as Miami's
first world-class recording studio. Other musicians who recorded there over the
years included Black Sabbath, Bob Dylan, Gloria Estefan, Crosby, Stills and
Nash, Lenny Kravitz, Lynyrd Skynyrd and R.E.M.
Mr. Emerman his survived by another daughter, Julie Goldman, as well as two
grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
AP