Mr. Oliver Has Left the Building: Vaughan Oliver / 1957-2019


by John Baccigaluppi
It may not be obvious, but as this magazineās graphic designer, the recently passed Vaughan Oliver was a major influence on the look ofTape Op Magazine. Being someone whoās not involved with social media, and as Mr. Oliver was not the level of celebrity whose death would cause a flood of emails to my inbox and notifications on my phone, I only heard about his passing a month after he died. To me, he was as big as Elvis Presley.
If youāre not familiar with Mr. Oliver, he designed nearly all of the influential record label 4ADās album covers for the first decade or so of their existence. The PixiesāDoolittleandSurfer Rosa? Yep. The BreedersāLast SplashandPod? Yep. The Cocteau Twinsā entire catalog? Yep. At one point in the ā90s, I had every CD heād ever designed on a separate shelf of my CD library because they were āVaughan Oliverā CDs. My wife Maria was looking for one of those CDs one day. When she couldnāt find it, and was a bit frustrated, she didnāt really understand my reasoning when I told her it was in the āVaughan Oliverā section
Initially hearing those records when they came out blew me away, but in the long run the artwork became even more influential. Besides Roger Dean (who did many of the Yes album covers), or Storm Thorgerson and Aubrey Powell of Hipgnosis (responsible for the classic Pink Floyd covers), coming across Vaughan Oliverās designs for the 4AD catalog was one of the first times I realized that graphic design was a āthing.ā There was something so mysterious, yet elegant and timeless, about his design work that it intrigued me. Designs that made the Yes and Pink Floyd album covers seem a bit dated ā something that I outgrew. I never outgrew my deep admiration for Vaughan Oliverās work. If youāre a graphic designer, and youāve followedTape Opfor decades, this influence will be obvious. Iāve riffed off his style more than a couple of times, and will surely continue to do so.
I once had a chance to do a phone interview with him for another magazine. To be honest, itās probably not one of the best interviews Iāve done; I was way too much of a fanboy. At the end of the day, Iām grateful to have had a chance to talk to him on the phone for half an hour, and he was very polite and gracious. I could go on, but I think Iām still too much of a fanboy. Instead Iād highly suggest you read the beautifully written article about him inThe Guardian.
Or this nice piece in theLos Angeles Times.
And from Ivo Watts-Russell, founder of 4AD:
āVaughan Oliver taught me to appreciate quality. He taught me how to look at the physical world. He was a force of nature and Iām having such a hard time processing this.
I have no idea how to define in a few words the enormous impact he had on my life. Two Virgos with a tendency toward being controlling, we somehow managed to complement and bolster each other in our mission to transcend mediocrity. The breadth and scale of work is incomparable, continuously fanned by the inspiration a new collaboration would bring. Iām aware that we each considered the other a bit of an enigma, a contradiction to our own personalities, and I also know that our mutual respect for each other remained intact.
We had drifted apart, having less frequent contact as the years passed and I moved to the States. This last year, aware of an unrelated but serious illness gave me cause to bully my way back into his life a little. I was scared for him then, so found myself participating in more genuine, heartfelt, conversation than weād been used to, working side by side for years. So, some things were said⦠words of affection, admiration, and eternal gratitude⦠that might just have been left unspoken. For this Iām grateful. But Iām so angry that, having made a full recovery, he was still taken. And, of course, I want to have just one more conversation.
It is rare to think of someone in oneās life and know that with absolute certainty that the course of both our lives were irrevocably changed for the better as a result. The results, the fruit, is available for all to see... in pictures at least.
Vaughan William Oliver, quite simply: Thank you for the beauty, the friendship, the work, and the madness.ā
MORE ENTRIES

April 18, 2025
Tunde Adebimpe: Thee Black Boltz
BY Geoff Stanfield
Ian Brennan interviewedTunde Adebimpe forTape Op#155, and he has just releasedThee Black Boltz, a beautifully conceived album full of interesting soni...

April 13, 2025
New Bon Iver: SABLE fABLE
BY Geoff Stanfield
Listening toSABLE, fABLE, the new release from Bon Iver, it dawned on me that he and co-producer Jim-E Stack, have created a collection of songs that ...

April 4, 2025
New Music from Dirty Projectors
BY Geoff Stanfield
We interviewed David Longstreth of the Dirty Projectors back in 2013 forTape Opissue #93. His new release,Songs of the Earth, is a return to a sound a...

March 31, 2025
New Music From Tortoise
BY Geoff Stanfield
Members of Tortoise have graced the pages ofTape Opfor years. We interviewedJohn McEntirein 2001 for issue #23, and more recently we coveredJeff Parke...

March 30, 2025
New Music From Lucy Dacus and Perfume Genius Produced By Blake Mills
BY Geoff Stanfield
We interviewed producer and guitarist Blake Mills inTape Op#115and for ourpodcastin 2019. Heās produced newly-released records for both Lucy Dacus āFo...

March 21, 2025
Fort George Brewery and Tape Op Overdub IPA
BY Geoff Stanfield
Brian Bovinizer is the Marketing and Sales Director at Fort George Brewery in Astoria, Oregon. Being aTape Opreader, some 11 years ago he spottedTape ...

March 5, 2025
Mdou Moctar Releases Tears of Injustice
BY Geoff Stanfield
Released in 2024, Mdou Moctar'sFuneral for Justiceis a raucous, distorted guitar-driven album that, along with bands such as Tinariwen, turns the idea...

March 4, 2025
Panda Bear Releases Sinister Grift
BY Geoff Stanfield
It's always a good day when I discover that there is new music from Panda Bear. It hits all the marks for me; nods to the classics, modern concepts, s...

February 25, 2025
New Music From Rafiq Bhatia
BY Geoff Stanfield
We hadRafiq Bhatiaas a guest on ourDISCussion podcastin June of 2023. His new release, a collaboration with pianist Chris Pattishall,Each Dream, A Mel...