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Emil Richards
Emil Richards
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Key Information

Emil Richards (born Emilio Joseph Radocchia; September 2, 1932 – December 13, 2019) was an American vibraphonist and percussionist.

Biography

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Early life

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Richards was born in Hartford, Connecticut to Italian immigrant parents who ran a meat market.[1]

Musician

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Richards began playing the xylophone aged six. In High School, he performed with the Hartford Symphony Orchestra. He studied with Al Lepak at the Hartt School of Music in Hartford, graduating in 1952. After being drafted, he belonged to an Army band in Japan and played with Toshiko Akiyoshi.[2][3] He cited Lionel Hampton as his first and biggest influence on vibraphone.[3]

In 1954, Richards moved to New York City, where he played with Charles Mingus, Ed Shaughnessy, and Ed Thigpen while doing studio recordings for Perry Como, the Ray Charles Singers, and Mitchell Ayres.[4] For about three years, he was a member of a group led by George Shearing, then moved to Los Angeles and worked with Don Ellis and Paul Horn. He led his own band, the Microtonal Blues Band, and spent time with composer and inventor Harry Partch. As a sideman, he accompanied George Harrison on tour and recorded with Frank Sinatra, Frank Zappa,[3] Doris Day, Judy Garland, Nelson Riddle, Steely Dan, and Sarah Vaughan.[4]

Richards worked often as a studio musician for movies and television. His credits include playing bongos on the theme song for the television program Mission: Impossible. Other television work included finger snaps for the Addams Family theme, and xylophone work for the opening theme of The Simpsons.[5] He led a band with Joe Porcaro, and he released a solo album, The Wonderful World of Percussion.[3] His mallet pupils included Morten Grønvad, Stan Levey and Bo Wagner.[6] Richards died on December 13, 2019.[7][non-primary source needed]

Collector

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Percussion instruments
Percussion instruments from the Emil Richards Collection

In 1962, Richards went on a worldwide tour with Frank Sinatra to raise money for poor children. The tour increased Richards's fascination with ethnic percussion instruments.[4][8] During his career, he collected over 350 instruments, many of them more common in the East than the West.[2] Richards wanted his instruments to continue to be heard in recordings and other performances and to remain together as much as possible. The Emil Richards Collection includes common percussion, such as xylophone and marimba[9] and exotic, such as the angklung, bulbul tarang, chimta, flapamba, jal tarang, janggu, lujon, mbira, and pakhavaj.[8]

In 1992, he gave sixty-five instruments to the Percussive Arts Society museum in Lawton, Oklahoma. He was a member of the Society's Hall of Fame.[3] Part of the collection was sold to Los Angeles Percussion Rentals. Many instruments were restored and are used in recordings and other performances in Los Angeles.[10] LAPR works with Odd Art Fabrications to custom design and fabricate instruments and hardware such as chromatically tuned wood blocks and chromatically tuned bell plate.[11]

Discography

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As leader

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  • Yazz Per Favore (Del-fi, 1961)
  • New Sound Element Stones (Uni, 1967)
  • New Time Element (Uni, 1967)
  • Cosmic Sounds with the Zodiac (Elektra, 1967)
  • Journey to Bliss (Impulse!, 1968)
  • Spirit of 1976/Live at Donte's (Impulse!, 1969)
  • Wonderful World of Percussion (Interworld, 1994)
  • Luntana (Interworld, 1996)

With The Surfmen

  • The Sounds of Exotic Island (Somerset, 1960)
  • Hawaii (Somerset, 1960)

As sideman

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With Louis Bellson

  • Ecue (Ritmos Cubanos) (Pablo, 1978)
  • Prime Time (Concord Jazz, 1978)
  • Louie Bellson Jam (Pablo, 1979)

With Alessi Brothers

  • Alessi (A&M, 1976)

With Frank Capp

  • Percussion in a Tribute to Henry Mancini (Kimberly, 1961)
  • Percussion in a Tribute to Glenn Miller (Kimberly, 1963)
  • Percussion in a Tribute to Lawrence Welk (Kimberly, 1963)
  • In a Tribute to the Dorsey Brothers (Kimberly, 2010)
  • In a Tribute to Count Basie (Kimberly, 2014)

With Rosemary Clooney

With Nat King Cole

With George Duke

  • I Love the Blues, She Heard My Cry (MPS, 1975)
  • Liberated Fantasies (MPS, 1976)
  • From Me to You (Epic, 1977)

With Michael Giacchino

  • The Incredibles (Walt Disney, 2004)
  • Ratatouille (Walt Disney, 2007)
  • Coco (Walt Disney, 2017)
  • Spider-Man: Homecoming (Sony, 2017)
  • War for the Planet of the Apes (Sony, 2017)

With George Harrison

With Paul Horn

With James Newton Howard

  • Off Limits (Varese Sarabande, 1988)
  • Grand Canyon (RCA, 1991)
  • Outbreak (Varese Sarabande, 1995)
  • Waterworld (MCA, 1995)

With Quincy Jones

  • The Hot Rock OST (Prophesy, 1972)
  • Roots (A&M, 1977)
  • The Color Purple (Qwest, 1986)
  • Basie & Beyond (Qwest, 2000)

With Roger Kellaway

  • The Roger Kellaway Cello Quartet (A&M, 1971)
  • Come to the Meadow (A&M, 1974)
  • Nostalgia Suite (Discwasher, 1978)

With Stan Kenton

With Julie London

With Henry Mancini

  • The Hawaiians (United Artists, 1970)
  • Symphonic Soul (RCA Victor, 1975)
  • The Jazz Sound from Peter Gunn (Fresh Sound, 1994)

With Harry Partch

  • The World of Harry Partch (Columbia, 1969)
  • Delusion of the Fury (Sony, 1999)
  • Harry Partch: A Portrait (New World, 2015)

With Shorty Rogers

With Lalo Schifrin

  • More Mission: Impossible (Paramamount, 1969), featured in a chimes solo on "Self-Destruct"
  • Rock Requiem (Verve, 1971)
  • Gypsies (Tabu, 1978)
  • Rush Hour 2 (Varese Sarabande, 2001)
  • Rush Hour 3 (Varese Sarabande, 2007)

With Shadowfax

With George Shearing

With Frank Sinatra

With The Manhattan Transfer

With L. Subramaniam

  • Fantasy Without Limits (Trend, 1980)
  • Blossom (Crusaders, 1981)
  • Indian Express (Milestone, 1983)
  • Spanish Wave (Milestone, 1983)
  • Salaam Bombay! (DRG, 1988)

With Frank Zappa

With Hans Zimmer

  • Broken Arrow (Milan, 1996)
  • The Thin Red Line (RCA Victor, 1999)
  • The Last Samurai (Elektra, 2003)

With others

Bibliography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Emil Richards (born Emilio Radocchia; , 1932 – , ) was an American vibraphonist and percussionist renowned for his extensive work as a session musician in , contributing to over 2,000 film and television scores as well as recordings with more than 650 artists across , rock, and pop genres. Born in Hartford, Connecticut, to Italian immigrant parents, Richards began studying xylophone at age six and by tenth grade had joined the Hartford Symphony Orchestra under conductors Arthur Fiedler and Fritz Mahler. He attended the Hartt School of Music from 1949 to 1952, studying under Al Lepak, and later served in an Army band in Japan, where he collaborated with pianist Toshiko Akiyoshi. After moving to New York, Richards spent three years with George Shearing's group before relocating to Los Angeles in 1959, where he became a core member of the Wrecking Crew studio collective. Throughout his career, Richards performed and recorded with luminaries such as Frank Sinatra (including a 1962 world tour), George Harrison, Frank Zappa, Elvis Presley, the Beach Boys, Ray Charles, Sarah Vaughan, Ravi Shankar, and Steely Dan, while also working on iconic soundtracks for films like Star Trek, Indiana Jones, Ghostbusters, Jaws, The Exorcist, and Shaft, as well as television series including Mission: Impossible and The Addams Family. He formed innovative ensembles like the Hindustani Jazz Sextet and the Microtonal Blues Band, and amassed a personal collection of over 650 world percussion instruments, donating portions of which to the Percussive Arts Society. Among his honors, Richards received the MVP Award from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences for six consecutive years and was inducted into the Percussive Arts Society's Hall of Fame in 1994; he also released the solo album The Wonderful World of Percussion that same year.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Emil Richards was born Emilio Joseph Radocchia on September 2, 1932, in Hartford, Connecticut. He was the son of Italian immigrant parents who operated a meat market and Hartford's first legal liquor store after Prohibition in the industrial city. Their heritage from Italy, particularly his mother's roots in Sicily, included cultural traditions that Richards later explored, such as the maranzano—a traditional jaw harp—during a 1976 trip to trace his ancestry. For his professional career, Radocchia adopted the stage name Emil Richards, a change made to better suit the American entertainment industry later in life.

Musical Beginnings and Education

Emil Richards began playing the xylophone at the age of six, marking the start of his lifelong dedication to percussion. This early interest was profoundly shaped by jazz vibraphonist Lionel Hampton, whom Richards cited as his primary and most significant influence on mallet playing. During his high school years in Hartford, Connecticut, Richards developed his skills on mallet instruments through local performances, including appearances with the Hartford Symphony Orchestra by the tenth grade. These experiences provided his initial exposure to ensemble playing and helped cultivate his technical proficiency in percussion. Richards pursued formal training at the Hartt School of Music in Hartford from 1949 to 1952, studying percussion and vibraphone under instructor Al Lepak. His curriculum emphasized mallet instruments, building on his foundational jazz influences and preparing him for advanced musical applications. He graduated in 1952, having solidified his expertise in these areas through rigorous academic and performance-based learning.

Career

Early Professional Work in New York

Following his discharge from the United States Army in 1954, Emil Richards relocated to New York City to pursue a career in music. There, he immersed himself in the dynamic jazz milieu, initially supporting himself through studio work while honing his skills as a vibraphonist and percussionist. Richards' early professional engagements included collaborations with leading jazz artists such as Charles Mingus, with whom he performed live gigs in the mid-1950s. He also worked alongside drummers Ed Shaughnessy and Ed Thigpen on recording sessions and performances, establishing his reputation in the city's competitive jazz circles. A pivotal association came in 1956 when Richards joined George Shearing's quintet as vibraphonist, touring and recording with the group until 1958; notable live and studio efforts included the Capitol Records album In the Night (1958), featuring vocals by Dakota Staton and tracks like "Bewitched" and "East of the Sun." These performances showcased Richards' fluid, Hampton-inspired vibraphone style amid Shearing's elegant arrangements. Complementing his jazz pursuits, Richards secured his first major studio recordings in New York through commercial sessions for Perry Como, the Ray Charles Singers, and conductor Mitchell Ayres, contributing percussion to pop and variety tracks in the mid-1950s. These opportunities provided steady income amid the era's demanding schedule of gigs and auditions. The rigorous and highly competitive nature of New York's 1950s jazz scene, characterized by intense rivalries among musicians for limited spots in ensembles and clubs, presented significant hurdles for emerging talents like Richards. In 1959, seeking broader prospects and a shift toward studio stability, he decided to relocate westward to Los Angeles.

Hollywood Session and Film Contributions

In 1959, Emil Richards relocated to Los Angeles, where he quickly established himself as a premier session percussionist in the burgeoning Hollywood studio scene. Following his time in New York jazz circles, he joined the elite group of musicians known as the Wrecking Crew, contributing to recordings that spanned film, television, and pop. Over his six-decade career, Richards performed on more than 1,000 film and TV soundtracks, providing innovative percussion elements that enhanced atmospheric and rhythmic depth in scores. His work emphasized the integration of exotic and world percussion instruments, drawing from his extensive collection to create unique timbres tailored to cinematic needs. Richards' contributions to iconic television themes exemplified his precision and versatility. He played the bongos on the original Mission: Impossible theme composed by Lalo Schifrin in 1966, adding a pulsating urgency that became synonymous with the series. Similarly, his xylophone performance on The Simpsons theme, arranged by Danny Elfman, provided the whimsical, playful undertone that defined the show's opening. These elements, along with percussion on scores for films like Jaws, The Exorcist, and Taxi Driver, underscored his role in shaping Hollywood's sonic landscape through subtle yet impactful instrumentation. Throughout his tenure, Richards collaborated with luminaries across genres, blending his skills in studio sessions for both artists and composers. He recorded and toured with Frank Sinatra, providing rhythmic support on albums and live performances. His work extended to Frank Zappa's experimental recordings, George Harrison's solo projects including Dark Horse (1974), and Hans Zimmer's film scores such as The Thin Red Line (1998), where Richards' percussion added textural layers to the soundtracks. These partnerships highlighted his adaptability, as he innovated by incorporating unconventional percussion—like waterphones and global mallet instruments—into mainstream Hollywood productions, influencing the evolution of film scoring techniques.

Jazz Recordings and Collaborations

Emil Richards contributed extensively to jazz recordings as a versatile sideman on vibraphone and percussion, collaborating with prominent artists and ensembles from the 1960s through the 1990s, while occasionally leading his own projects that blended traditional jazz with innovative elements. In the early 1960s, shortly after relocating to Los Angeles, Richards joined sessions with arranger Quincy Jones, providing vibraphone on Frank Sinatra's album It Might as Well Be Swing (Reprise, 1964), which featured the Count Basie Orchestra and highlighted Richards' melodic contributions to swing standards. He also supplied percussion for Jones' Quincy Plays for Pussycats (Mercury, 1965), a playful jazz collection conducted by Benny Carter that showcased Richards' rhythmic precision in ensemble settings. Richards' vibraphone playing enriched recordings by jazz luminaries such as Johnny Hodges, where he appeared on a 1961 Verve session alongside Ben Webster, Ray Nance, and Russ Freeman, adding lush harmonic textures to small-group improvisations. Similarly, his early sideman work included vibes on Mongo Santamaría's Latin jazz album Jambo Jazz (Fantasy, 1959), bridging Afro-Cuban rhythms with mainstream jazz. Transitioning toward leadership, Richards released New Time Element (Uni, 1967), an experimental jazz outing where he led a group exploring microtonal blues on vibes, electric vibes, and octave marimba, demonstrating his interest in expanding jazz's sonic palette through unconventional percussion arrangements. Later in the decade, he provided percussion for the Microtonal Blues Band's self-titled Impulse! album (1969), further emphasizing his role in avant-garde jazz explorations. Into the 1970s and 1980s, Richards continued sideman appearances that integrated his percussion expertise into jazz contexts, such as on Joni Mitchell's Mingus (Asylum, 1979), a collaborative tribute to Charles Mingus featuring arrangements by Jaco Pastorius, where Richards' subtle percussion supported the album's improvisational depth. By the 1990s, his collaborations evolved to include big band settings, with notable vibraphone solos on the Quincy Jones/Sammy Nestico Orchestra's Basie & Beyond (Sony, 2000), a straight-ahead jazz tribute to Count Basie that marked one of Richards' later high-profile ensemble contributions.

Percussion Instrument Collection

Emil Richards amassed a collection of over 650 ethnic percussion instruments during his extensive global travels, beginning notably with a 1962 world tour accompanying Frank Sinatra at the request of President John F. Kennedy. These travels, which continued throughout his career including trips to Sicily in 1976 to study traditional instruments like the maranzano, allowed him to acquire rare items such as gamelans, taiko drums, and microtonal bells from regions including Asia, Africa, and Europe. His passion for these instruments stemmed from a desire to expand the sonic palette of Western music, often purchasing or receiving them as gifts from cultural exchanges. Richards frequently incorporated his collection into Hollywood studio sessions, where the instruments provided distinctive, exotic timbres that enhanced film scores, television soundtracks, and commercial recordings. For instance, he would select unconventional pieces like boo bams or angklungs to layer atmospheric effects, contributing to the innovative sound design in projects spanning genres from jazz to orchestral works. This practice not only elevated the production quality but also introduced audiences to global percussion traditions through mainstream media. In 1992, as a dedicated supporter of percussion education, Richards donated 65 instruments from his collection to the Percussive Arts Society's newly established museum in Lawton, Oklahoma. This gift included a diverse array of ethnic pieces that enriched the museum's holdings, enabling students and performers to study and access them directly. To broaden access to his instruments beyond personal use, Richards' collection was made available through Los Angeles Percussion Rentals, where it serves as a core resource for musicians seeking unique sounds for recordings and live performances. Following his death in 2019, the remaining collection was acquired by Los Angeles Percussion Rentals, where it continues to be available as a resource for musicians. Housed in a dedicated section, these items continue to support professional endeavors in the industry he helped shape.

Personal Life

Marriages and Family

Emil Richards had two marriages. His first marriage ended in divorce, and it produced his daughter, Camille Radocchia Hecks. He later married Celeste Richards, his second wife, with whom he co-authored a series of instructional books on creating music and instruments from everyday household items, including Making Music in Mommy's Kitchen and Making Music Around the Home & Yard. Richards and Celeste resided in the Los Angeles area, where she supported his extensive career in music through their collaborative projects and family life.

Death

Emil Richards died on December 13, 2019, at the age of 87 in Los Angeles, California. His daughter, Camille Radocchia Hecks, announced the death on Facebook, stating, "He lived and loved as he played: fully, deeply, with endless creativity, humor, discipline and spirituality." The cause of death was not publicly disclosed. Immediate tributes poured in from the music community, with composer Michael Giacchino tweeting, "As a percussionist he was the best. As a human, he was even better." The Percussive Arts Society published an in memoriam notice highlighting his contributions as a vibraphonist and studio musician.

Legacy

Awards and Honors

Emil Richards received numerous accolades throughout his career, recognizing his virtuosity as a percussionist and contributions to music education and the studio recording industry. These honors highlight his status as a pivotal figure in both jazz and film scoring communities. One of his earliest major recognitions came from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS), where he won the Most Valuable Player Award for six consecutive years following its inception in the early 1960s, acknowledging his exceptional session work in Los Angeles. Later, Richards was presented with the NARAS Emeritus Award for his lifelong dedication to the recording arts. In 1994, Richards was inducted into the Percussive Arts Society (PAS) Hall of Fame, joining luminaries such as Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich; this honor celebrated his innovations in percussion performance and his service on the PAS Board of Directors. In 1992, he also donated 65 rare instruments to the PAS Museum in Lawton, Oklahoma, further solidifying his legacy within the organization. In 2012, at the Percussive Arts Society International Convention (PASIC), Richards received the Yamaha Lifetime Achievement Award in Education, honoring his 15 years as a Yamaha Artist, his educational outreach through instrument donations and clinics, and his influence on generations of percussionists via recordings and film scores.

Influence on Percussion Community

Emil Richards played a pivotal role in popularizing ethnic percussion instruments within Western music, particularly through his extensive work in film and television soundtracks. By incorporating instruments such as the angklung, bulbul tarang, and waterphone into scores for composers like Jerry Goldsmith, he expanded the sonic palette available to Hollywood productions and introduced audiences to global percussion traditions. His efforts helped bridge cultural divides, making exotic sounds integral to mainstream compositions and inspiring composers to seek authentic ethnic timbres for atmospheric effects. In 1992, Richards donated 65 rare instruments to the Percussive Arts Society's museum in Lawton, Oklahoma, and in 1993 and 1994, he donated his entire library of percussion books and a significant portion of his instrument collection. These contributions enriched the society's resources for study and exhibition, fostering greater appreciation and accessibility for percussionists worldwide. As a longtime supporter and board member of the PAS, he further advanced the organization's mission to promote percussion arts education. Richards' legacy endures through Los Angeles Percussion Rentals, which acquired a substantial part of his collection and continues to supply these unique instruments to film, television, and live performances. This ongoing availability ensures that his curated sounds remain a vital resource for contemporary composers and performers, sustaining the integration of ethnic percussion in modern scoring. Through his tenure as head of the percussion department at the Los Angeles Music Academy and his influential recordings, Richards mentored generations of younger percussionists, emphasizing innovative techniques for film scoring. He advocated for the creative use of world instruments to evoke emotion and narrative depth, techniques that have become standard in the industry and shaped how percussionists approach hybrid Western-ethnic ensembles.

Discography

As Leader

Emil Richards led several recording projects that highlighted his innovative approach to percussion, blending jazz, experimental sounds, and world music influences across decades. His first album as leader, Yazz Per Favore (1961, Del-Fi Records), featured his Yazz Band and served as an early showcase for his jazz percussion style, with original compositions like the title track alongside standards such as "Blue Monk" and "Green Dolphin Street." The album emphasized rhythmic interplay and vibraphone work, reflecting Richards' emerging leadership in small-group jazz settings. In 1967, Richards contributed prominently to the experimental album The Zodiac: Cosmic Sounds (Elektra Records), a zodiac-themed project incorporating ethnic percussion influences and early Moog synthesizer elements, where his diverse instrument collection drove the atmospheric and cosmic soundscapes across tracks like "Aries: The Fire Dweller" and "Taurus: The Voluptuary." This collaborative yet percussion-focused work underscored his role in pioneering fusion of global rhythms with electronic experimentation. Richards' New Sound Element "Stones" (1967, Uni Records) further explored experimental territory, assigning each track to a birthstone with exotic percussion arrangements, including "Aquarius the Water Carrier" and "March for Virgo the Virgin," highlighting his collection of over 300 world instruments. The album's innovative structure and sound design marked a key evolution in his leadership style. He also released New Time Element (1967, Uni Records), continuing his experimental percussion themes. During his Impulse! Records period, Richards led the Microtonal Blues Band on Journey to Bliss (1968), a jazz album featuring microtonal explorations and tracks like "Marching Through the Wilderness," blending blues inflections with percussive complexity. This was followed by the live recording Spirit of 1976 / Live at Donte's (1969), capturing energetic performances of originals such as "Spirit of 1976" and "Jordu" at the Los Angeles club, emphasizing his band's improvisational dynamics. In his later career, Wonderful World of Percussion (1994, Interworld Music) reflected on his extensive instrument collection through compositions like "Good Grief" and "Enjoy," demonstrating a lifetime of percussive mastery in a solo showcase format. Other notable leader efforts included the Afro-Cuban jazz album Luntana (1996, Emil Richards Music), featuring rhythmic fusions on tracks like the title song, and the live set Calamari: Live at Rocco's (2000, Emil Richards Music), which captured his Jazz Knights ensemble in performance.

As Sideman

Emil Richards contributed as a sideman to thousands of recording sessions across jazz, pop, rock, and soundtrack genres, spanning from his early days in New York City's jazz scene in the 1950s to his later work in Los Angeles studios through the 2010s. His percussion and vibraphone work supported a wide array of artists, emphasizing rhythmic innovation and exotic instrumentation drawn from his extensive collection of global instruments. Over his career, Richards appeared on more than 1,300 film scores and numerous commercial albums, often providing distinctive textures that enhanced ensemble performances without drawing primary focus. In the 1950s, after moving to New York City, Richards quickly established himself in the jazz community, recording with luminaries in small-group jazz settings before his relocation to the West Coast. The 1960s marked Richards's transition to Los Angeles and broader pop-rock collaborations, including pivotal work with Frank Zappa. He provided percussion on Zappa's Lumpy Gravy (1968), contributing to the album's orchestral chaos with intricate mallet and found-object sounds during sessions involving the Abnuceals Emuukha Electric Symphony Orchestra. These recordings highlighted Richards's role in bridging jazz improvisation with rock's experimental edge amid hundreds of studio dates. Throughout the 1970s, Richards deepened his involvement in high-profile pop and soundtrack projects, notably with Quincy Jones and Harrison. On Jones's Roots soundtrack (1977), Richards's percussion drove the epic's emotional depth, particularly in ensemble cues evoking historical narratives. He also played marimba on Harrison's Dark Horse (1974) and Thirty Three & 1/3 (1976), adding subtle exotic flair. By this period, Richards was logging over a hundred sessions annually in LA, supporting artists from Steely Dan to Frank Sinatra while maintaining his jazz roots. Into the 1980s and beyond, Richards's sideman work increasingly focused on film soundtracks, including key collaborations with Hans Zimmer. He contributed taiko drums and Tibetan bowls to Zimmer's The Thin Red Line (1998), enhancing the score's atmospheric tension on tracks like "Journey to the Line." Richards also played on Zimmer's Broken Arrow (1996) and The Last Samurai (2003), providing percussive authenticity for action sequences and cultural motifs. These sessions, part of his ongoing LA studio commitments through the 2010s, exemplified his enduring demand for over 2,000 total media projects, where he often introduced rare instruments to elevate orchestral ensembles.

Bibliography

Autobiographical Works

Emil Richards co-authored the autobiography Wonderful World of Percussion: My Life Behind Bars with Tom Di Nardo, published in 2013 by BearManor Media. The book chronicles Richards' 55-year career as a percussionist, spanning his work in Hollywood recording studios, jazz performances, and international tours. The narrative is structured chronologically by decades, beginning with Richards' album recordings in the 1960s, television sessions in the 1970s, and film scoring in the 1980s and 1990s. Key themes include his passion for percussion instruments, highlighted by his extensive personal collection and innovative uses such as salad bowls for sound effects in Planet of the Apes. It also features jazz anecdotes and collaborations with luminaries like Frank Sinatra, George Harrison, Burt Bacharach, Elvis Presley, Ravi Shankar, George Shearing, Lionel Hampton, Igor Stravinsky, Henry Mancini, and John Williams. The book received positive reception from prominent figures in music and film. Composer John Williams described it as "a valuable addition to the documentation of a period of great creativity in American music." Michael Giacchino called it a source of "inspirational and funny stories from one of the greatest souls in the music industry." Danny Elfman praised Richards as "an irreplaceable original," noting his contributions to 60-70 film scores.

Professional Catalogues

Emil Richards contributed significantly to the documentation of percussion instruments through his professional catalogues, which cataloged his renowned personal collection and provided essential references for composers, performers, and scholars. These works emphasized the diversity of global percussion traditions, including standard Western instruments, ethnic variants, and experimental effects, reflecting Richards' decades of collecting and performing experience in film, jazz, and orchestral settings. By detailing instrument ranges, timbres, and applications, his catalogues facilitated innovative scoring practices in 20th-century music. His seminal publication, World of Percussion: A Catalog of 300 Standard, Ethnic, and Special Musical Instruments and Effects, was released in 1972 and stands as an early comprehensive inventory of his holdings at the time. The book includes photographs, technical specifications, and practical notes on over 300 items, ranging from conventional timpani and mallet instruments to rare ethnic pieces like Balinese gamelan elements and African talking drums. Designed primarily for film and television composers, it highlighted how these instruments could enhance sound design. This catalogue underscored the growing integration of world percussion into American media, influencing composers seeking authentic or exotic timbres without extensive fieldwork. In 1995, Richards expanded this effort with Range Finder for the Percussion Seeker: A List of Six Hundred Percussion Instruments, published by Emil Richards Music. This updated volume documented more than 650 instruments, organized into categories such as standard pitched, tonal, microtonal, chromatic, and non-distinct pitched items, with precise notations on ranges, playing techniques, and sonic characteristics. It served as a practical tool for orchestral and experimental composers, enabling precise selections for scores that required nuanced percussion palettes. The catalogue's depth—spanning instruments from Japanese taiko to South American cuicas—reflected Richards' international tours and collaborations, positioning it as a key resource for advancing multicultural percussion education and composition. These catalogues not only preserved Richards' collection, estimated at over 800 unique pieces by the late 20th century, but also democratized access to obscure instruments, fostering broader adoption in professional music production. They remain influential in percussion studies, often referenced in academic texts on instrumentology and ethnomusicology for their firsthand, performer-oriented insights.

References

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