Dubai Telegraph - Clive Davis: the starmaker who shaped modern music

EUR -
AED 4.198299
AFN 72.583816
ALL 94.019914
AMD 420.704666
ANG 2.046432
AOA 1049.274168
ARS 1670.45311
AUD 1.632462
AWG 2.057401
AZN 1.939879
BAM 1.952061
BBD 2.302989
BDT 140.470942
BGN 1.932678
BHD 0.430854
BIF 3411.85707
BMD 1.143001
BND 1.478768
BOB 7.900867
BRL 5.896059
BSD 1.14341
BTN 108.191769
BWP 15.518276
BYN 3.199272
BYR 22402.813593
BZD 2.299695
CAD 1.618758
CDF 2588.896631
CHF 0.924596
CLF 0.026327
CLP 1036.164256
CNY 7.737658
CNH 7.746767
COP 3936.631549
CRC 518.706468
CUC 1.143001
CUP 30.289518
CVE 110.054202
CZK 24.196125
DJF 203.133759
DKK 7.47443
DOP 66.841971
DZD 152.617101
EGP 56.886119
ERN 17.14501
ETB 184.3477
FJD 2.569179
FKP 0.86376
GBP 0.862983
GEL 3.028998
GGP 0.86376
GHS 12.835415
GIP 0.86376
GMD 84.020825
GNF 10018.809946
GTQ 8.719299
GYD 239.201832
HKD 8.960612
HNL 30.589409
HRK 7.534667
HTG 149.363908
HUF 352.275669
IDR 20397.647477
ILS 3.396255
IMP 0.86376
INR 108.10552
IQD 1497.930859
IRR 1571625.953592
ISK 144.006235
JEP 0.86376
JMD 180.673937
JOD 0.810347
JPY 184.599152
KES 147.950338
KGS 99.95507
KHR 4591.205992
KMF 490.916285
KPW 1028.701024
KRW 1756.82062
KWD 0.352799
KYD 0.952875
KZT 557.312522
LAK 25252.631045
LBP 102395.671068
LKR 382.337669
LRD 208.111383
LSL 18.787415
LTL 3.374984
LVL 0.69139
LYD 7.310307
MAD 10.659483
MDL 20.107486
MGA 4822.762468
MKD 61.647195
MMK 2400.2077
MNT 4091.064279
MOP 9.233115
MRU 45.720427
MUR 54.646421
MVR 17.670543
MWK 1984.24915
MXN 19.840075
MYR 4.743112
MZN 73.041041
NAD 18.787415
NGN 1562.173531
NIO 42.079401
NOK 11.081275
NPR 173.106431
NZD 2.000579
OMR 0.439488
PAB 1.14341
PEN 3.869089
PGK 5.094242
PHP 69.879064
PKR 318.021261
PLN 4.275383
PYG 6970.648402
QAR 4.168416
RON 5.237913
RSD 117.41016
RUB 84.863008
RWF 1674.69229
SAR 4.290586
SBD 9.214213
SCR 15.629856
SDG 686.359388
SEK 10.991398
SGD 1.478329
SHP 0.853365
SLE 28.289887
SLL 23968.157231
SOS 653.448383
SRD 42.783084
STD 23657.806647
STN 24.453162
SVC 10.004837
SYP 126.338264
SZL 18.783023
THB 37.661299
TJS 10.605486
TMT 4.000502
TND 3.380924
TOP 2.752072
TRY 53.102442
TTD 7.754148
TWD 36.167989
TZS 3004.071008
UAH 51.425699
UGX 4174.0051
USD 1.143001
UYU 45.722423
UZS 13703.751799
VES 693.381551
VND 30083.778254
VUV 135.276765
WST 3.145305
XAF 654.70298
XAG 0.017475
XAU 0.000273
XCD 3.089016
XCG 2.060753
XDR 0.813463
XOF 653.79697
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.702952
ZAR 18.739068
ZMK 10288.378745
ZMW 20.26718
ZWL 368.045757
  • RBGPF

    0.3600

    61.5

    +0.59%

  • RYCEF

    0.1900

    18.45

    +1.03%

  • NGG

    1.8000

    81.24

    +2.22%

  • AZN

    2.2700

    177.2

    +1.28%

  • GSK

    0.3150

    50.985

    +0.62%

  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    22.16

    -0.95%

  • RIO

    -0.7500

    99.33

    -0.76%

  • BTI

    0.1200

    59.03

    +0.2%

  • RELX

    -0.3350

    30.845

    -1.09%

  • BCE

    -0.4000

    22.88

    -1.75%

  • VOD

    -0.1350

    14.165

    -0.95%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.64

    -0.24%

  • BCC

    -1.5250

    73.135

    -2.09%

  • CMSD

    -0.2600

    22.03

    -1.18%

  • BP

    0.5600

    39.66

    +1.41%

Clive Davis: the starmaker who shaped modern music
Clive Davis: the starmaker who shaped modern music / Photo: Frederic J. Brown - AFP/File

Clive Davis: the starmaker who shaped modern music

Clive Davis, the music mastermind who championed some of the globe's biggest names including Whitney Houston, Bruce Springsteen and Santana, died Monday aged 94.

Text size:

An empathetic executive whose expertise transcended genres, he displayed an uncanny ability to spin talent into gold. Aretha Franklin once called him "the greatest record man of all time."

"Clive has the mind of a bank executive and the ears of a teenager," said Davis protege Barry Manilow, the singer-songwriter known for "Copacabana" and other easy listening hits.

A lawyer by education, Davis entered the music world as counsel at Columbia Records before shifting into management and in 1966 becoming president of the reorganized CBS Records.

It marked the start of a career that would come to define the modern music industry.

From Janis Joplin to Earth, Wind & Fire, Aerosmith to Billy Joel, Patti Smith to Alicia Keys, Davis discovered, mentored and catapulted an empire of artists to household name status, reigning for decades in a business where longevity is rare.

Grateful Dead singer Bob Weir even sometimes changed a lyric when performing the band's standard "Jack Straw" to honor Davis.

"We used to play for acid," he'd sing. "Now we play for Clive."

- 'No clue' -

Born April 4, 1932 in Brooklyn, Davis enjoyed music but did not see it as his professional future.

"The emphasis in Jewish families that did not have any money was that you've got to be a lawyer, or you've got to be a doctor," Davis said in the documentary "Clive Davis: The Soundtrack of Our Lives."

"I was going to be a lawyer, with no clue what being a lawyer meant."

He was a New York University student when personal tragedy struck: Davis's mother died suddenly and then his father passed within the following year.

He graduated from Harvard Law School and began working at a New York law firm. His move to CBS subsidiary Columbia Records as legal counsel proved pivotal.

"I knew nothing about music. I knew nothing about what awaited me," said Davis. "But I did seize that opportunity."

- 'Weakness for artists' -

CBS executives ultimately convinced him to change from law into management, and Davis took an interest in the burgeoning world of folk and rock.

He attended the storied Monterey Pop Festival, an experience he later described as life-changing.

Awestruck by Joplin and the social and musical revolution she embodied, Davis signed her that night.

He worked with Bob Dylan as well as Simon and Garfunkel, convincing the duo that the soft, melodic "Bridge Over Troubled Water" could be a radio hit, though it was far from the sounds on the airwaves at the time.

And Davis returned a demo to a young Springsteen, telling him it still needed a hit single.

So the rocker went to the beach and penned "Blinded by the Light" and "Spirit in the Night" in a single evening.

"That was a good call," Springsteen has joked.

Davis encouraged jazz legend Miles Davis -- who came to the executive furious that young white artists were profiting off styles pioneered by Black musicians like himself -- to play rock venues.

Shortly thereafter, the trailblazing trumpeter released "Bitches Brew," a seminal, rock-imbued album.

Davis had a "weakness for artists," said another groundbreaking musician, Patti Smith -- a Davis favorite who he signed to the record company he would eventually found, Arista.

- Whitney, his ultimate star -

Davis struck out on his own after CBS Records fired him in 1973, on charges, which Davis denied, of bankrolling personal expenses including his son's bar mitzvah.

Arista, which Davis started in 1974, featured stars including Manilow, Franklin, Dionne Warwick, Keys, The Kinks and Lou Reed.

And he made the eyebrow-raising decision to throw his weight behind Kenny G, convincing radio stations to play the solo saxophonist's music among pop songs.

Davis also forged a deal with Sean Combs -- the mogul known as "Diddy," who is now in prison on prostitution-related charges -- to start Bad Boy Records, one of hip-hop's foundational labels.

But for all the stars he launched, it was Davis's mentorship of Whitney Houston that would prove among the most significant.

She became one of the best-selling artists ever and great voices of her generation under his guidance, before her shock death the day of one of Davis's famed pre-Grammy galas.

It was another of the mogul's great personal tragedies.

"The loss of Whitney came about as suddenly as the loss of my parents," Davis said. "And profoundly reminded me how quickly and immediately vitally important people in your life can just disappear."

- Party of the year -

Married and divorced twice, Davis had four children, and publicly came out as bisexual in his autobiography.

After another skirmish with CBS over Arista and several more shake-ups and mergers in the industry, Davis landed the title of Chief Creative Officer at Sony Music Entertainment, where he remained into his later years.

His career was not without critics: an industry joke held that Davis's ego was so large he thought CDs were named after him.

But he was a music mainstay for well over half a century.

A Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee with an armful of Grammys, Davis for decades hosted a splashy signature pre-Grammy galas.

The bash remained one of the most coveted tickets in showbiz and included a private variety show put on by A-listers.

"Clive's Grammy parties, it's kind of more than just a party... it's kind of a historical event," said Berry Gordy, the storied founder of Motown Records.

Davis refused to retire.

"I don't continue to do things to prove a point," he told Rolling Stone in 2021. "I just do what I always did."

F.A.Dsouza--DT