Obituary - NY Times, Dec. 3, 1995: David
Briggs, a record producer best known for
his 26-year association with the
rock artist Neil Young, died on Nov. 25
at his home in San Francisco. He
was 51. The cause was lung cancer,
said Joel Bernstein,
Mr. Young's archivist. Mr. Briggs was born in Douglas, Wyoming. He hitchhiked
to
Los Angeles when he was 16 and soon found a job as a staff producer at
Bill
Cosby's Tetragrammaton Records. He went out on his own in the late
1960's,
working on albums by Alice Cooper, Spirit, Jerry Williams, Nils
Lofgren and
Grin. He developed a reputation as a passionate and opinionated
producer,
placing great demands on the musicians with whom he worked to
get the
rawest, most direct sound he could in the least amount of
time.
He met Mr. Young in 1968 when
he picked him up
hitchhiking in Topanga Canyon, the hippie enclave north of
Los Angeles.
Mr. Briggs worked on 18 of Mr. Young's albums, including
"Tonight's
The Night," Rust Never Sleeps" and "Ragged
Glory." He
also worked with more recent artists, including Nick Cave
and Royal Trux.
He is survived by his
wife, Bettina, of San Francisco,
and a son, Lincoln, of Los Angeles.
More on David Briggs, his life and producing Neil Young albums.