SST Records Producer Glen ‘Spot’ Lockett Dead at 72

By Stermy 4 Min Read

At the age of 72, Glen “SPOT” Lockett, the renowned producer and engineer responsible for producing iconic albums by Black Flag, Minutemen, Hüsker Dü, and Descendents while serving as the in-house producer and engineer for the legendary underground label SST Records, has passed away.

Joe Carducci, a former partner at SST, announced the news on Facebook today (March 4), revealing that Lockett died this morning at a healthcare facility in Sheboygan, Wi., after struggling with fibrosis and complications resulting from a stroke.

“His fibrosis began to impair lung function. Since then he’d been on oxygen and was hoping for a lung transplant, but a stroke about three months ago put him in the hospital,” Carducci said.

We're now on WhatsApp. Click here to join.

Lockett was born in 1951 in Los Angeles and spent his final years in Sheboygan to “be near his favorite Celtic music scenes in Milwaukee and Chicago,” according to Carducci. Lockett was raised by an African-American father, who was one of the Tuskegee Airmen serving during WWII, and his Native American mother, who hailed from New Orleans. He learned to play guitar at the age of 12 and at one point tried out unsuccessfully for Captain Beefheart.

After moving to Hermosa Beach, Ca., in the mid-’80s, Lockett met Black Flag’s Greg Ginn while working at a vegetarian restaurant. Ginn recruited Lockett to play bass in the band Panic, which was a precursor of Black Flag. SPOT also contributed album reviews in the local SoCal paper Easy Reader, using his nickname as his byline.

But it was his work behind the boards for the Ginn-founded SST where Lockett made a name for himself, contributing his talents to essential punk, underground, and hardcore albums between 1979 and 1986. Among the 100-plus albums he produced or engineered are classics such as Descendents’ Milo Goes to College, Black Flag’s Damaged, Hüsker Dü’s Zen Arcade, Meat Puppets’ Up on the Sun, and Misfits’ Earth A.D./Wolfs Blood.

As Carducci shared, “[SPOT] started in Hermosa Beach playing and recording jazz and he took the primacy of live jazz playing into recording bands against prevailing attempts to soften or industrialize a back-to-basics arts movement in sound. When approaching the mixing board SPOT would assume an Elvis-like stance and then gesturing toward all the knobs he would say in a Louis Armstrong-like voice, ‘This is going to be gelatinous!’”

After leaving SST in 1986, Lockett delved further into his passion for photography, staging several exhibitions over the years. He had one planned for 2021 before his medical condition forced him to cancel it, according to Carducci.

See reactions below from musicians and scene members who worked with SPOT, including the Minutemen’s Mike Watt and Big Black/Shellac’s Steve Albini.

Read Latest Entertainment News Here

Do you enjoy reading from Townflex? Do You Want Notifications From Us On Our Latest Post? If so, click on the Red bell icon below to subscribe to our feed, which will appear in your smartphone’s notification after we publish a new article. You may also follow us on Twitter at @TownflexghFacebook at TownflexTelegram at @TownflexTownflex on PinterestTownflex on TikTokTownflex on YouTube, and Townflex on Google News.

Share This Article
By Stermy
Follow:
Stermy is one Crazy fan of the word "Internet". Always online to stay informed and keep others updated. #townflex