Clive Davis Dies at 94

Legendary music executive Clive Davis has died at the age of 94, reports The New York Times.As one of the industry’s most influential figures, serving as a producer and an A&R man over the course of his career, Davis directly shaped numerous genres, especially rock ‘n’ roll and R&B.
Over the course of his lengthy career, he signed and worked with a seemingly endless list of artists, including Whitney Houston, Bruce Springsteen, Janis Joplin, Aerosmith, Santana, Pink Floyd, and Patti Smith.Davis earned his law degree from Harvard in 1956, and soon after joined CBS affiliate Columbia Records in 1960.Within seven years, he rose to become president and began signing influential artists including Joplin (of Big Brother and the Holding Company), Earth, Wind & Fire, Aerosmith, and Springsteen, among many others.
Davis would go on to form several labels: Arista in 1974, Bad Boy in 1994 (with Sean Combs), and J Records in 2000.At each one, he continued the practices he had implemented at Columbia by signing, to name a few, Whitney Houston, Patti Smith, Barry Manilow, Notorious B.I.G., Puff Daddy, Sarah McLachlan, and Alicia Keys, and revitalizing the careers of Aretha Franklin, Lou Reed, the Grateful Dead, and more. Davis’ last position was Chief Creative Officer at Sony Music.Davis has won five Grammys as producer, including Best Album and Best Rock Album for Santana’s 1999 LP Supernatural, and Best Pop Vocal Album for Kelly Clarkson’s 2006 LP Breakaway.
In 2000, he was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a non-performer.That same year, Davis helped create the Department of Recorded Music at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts.
In 2011, he helped turn it into the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music.The program was the first of its kind, offering four-year degrees to students interested in careers working in the music industry as artists and executives.
He was recently the subject of a documentary, Clive Davis: Th...