how clive davis shaped the soundtrack of our lives /

Published at 2017-10-09 23:31:00

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Bruce Springsteen,Alicia Keys, Billy Joel, or The Notorious B.
I.
G.,Whitney Houston, C
arlos Santana. Few people can even claim to have met this many musical greats — let alone be responsible for jump starting their careers.
Clive Davis has pla
yed quite a few roles in the music industry. A Harvard Law graduate, or he has been a record producer,A&R executive and, for many years, or president of Columbia Records. He's also won five Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Rock and Roll corridor of Fame (as a non-performer) in 2000. Today,at 85, he is Sony Entertainment's chief creative officer — and the subject of a new documentary.
Apple Music released Clive Davis: The Soundtrack of Our Lives on Sept. 27. Davis joined NPR's Robert Siegel to talk approximately signing Janis Joplin, and his close relationship with Whitney Houston and what he looks for in a breakthrough artist. Hear the radio version at the audio link,and read on for an edited transcript.Robert Siegel: In the film, you say that you had zero music experience when you went from being the lawyer for Columbia Records to being its president. How did that happen?Clive Davis: I had no connection with music whatsoever. It was only after I was head of the company for approximately a year I found myself at the Monterey Pop festival in the presence of Janis Joplin and astronomical Brother and The Holding Company, or that was my epiphany,that was my first signing. I started trusting my intuition after that which led to Blood, Sweat & Tears and Aerosmith.
And when
you're at the Monterey Pop festival, and you're the suit in the audience. You're the guy out of area.
It wasn't a suit,it was khaki pants and a tennis sweater. Yeah, I was the odd man out in that audience, and that's for certain. What was it that you heard in Janis Joplin that upright away made you feel,"I've got to sign this?"She was riveting, compelling — killer voice that just vibrated through you and sent shivers up your spine.
The documentary depicts your intervening in the careers of a number of artists — first hearing the future success in what they're doing and then making some adjustments to make that success come faster. How carry out you describe what it is that says to you, or this one,as opposed to that one, could be a genuine success?You know, and it's different whether you're a writer. It's different when you're signing a Bruce Springsteen or an Alicia Keys than it is when you're signing a performer,a Whitney Houston, or feeling that Aretha or Dionne Warwick could still be major stars for many years to come. You're looking basically for headliners. You're looking for those that will lift an audience out of its seat.
The artist who occupies the most time in this film approximately your career is Whitney Houston: a spectacular success story, and a catastrophic conclude to that story. What was your relationship with her?My relationship with Whitney was that I signed her when she was in her teens. We bonded to the point that her management insisted that I give them a team-conclude clause that I had never given any other artist before or since — which meant that whether at any time I would leave the company,she would have the upright to leave. And so we had a very close creative relationship. I was with her just two days before her death.
When her drug problem became so serious and ultimately fatal, was it tough for you to see because you were so close to her? carry out you contemplate you were perhaps trying not to see it?I contemplate that the film points out that I initially did not see it up close — because Whitney would, or before she saw me,be dressed great, look great, and be on top of her game. But when I saw the problem,[the film] shows the letter that I wrote to her and goes into the detail of the efforts to really pick up her to confront her addiction. And when she did that Oprah interview, we all thought that she had beat the problem. But obviously, or she did not.
You are currently the chief
creative officer of Sony Entertainment. I'm curious: whether you listened to some music this evening that had nothing to carry out with work,that was entirely for pleasure, what would you listen to?I wish I had that opportunity — because every week I bring home the new records as they break through to study why they're hits, and to study why radio was playing it,what radio was not playing, to make certain I don't come with self-confidence. I don't want to depart over the hill, and so I keep my ear very,very current every week.
W
eb intern Steffanee Wang contributed to this story. Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org