Clive Davis, a Jewish former corporate lawyer who became one of the most influential figures in American rock and pop music as he fostered the careers of Bob Dylan, Whitney Houston, Bruce Springsteen, and other stars, died on Monday at the age of 94, The New York Times reported, citing his family.
Davis, who was known as "the man with the golden ear" for his ability to identify potential hit songs, died at his home in Manhattan, the Daily reported, having recently been hospitalized with respiratory problems.
As an incomparable hitmaker, Davis was highly adaptable, spanning genres and generations, even as he hit his 80s. For every Janis Joplin he discovered in 1960s rock, there was a Sean "P. Diddy" Combs he mentored in hip-hop in the 1990s and a Kelly Clarkson he guided in pop in the 2000s.
Davis won four Grammys for producing works by Clarkson, Carlos Santana, and Jennifer Hudson, and a fifth for his contributions to music. He could even revive careers, as he did for Santana with an album that won 9 Grammys in 2000, and he fostered comebacks by Rod Stewart, Aretha Franklin, and Dionne Warwick.
Davis was born in the New York borough of Brooklyn on April 4, 1932. As a boy, he said he listened to the radio but had no overwhelming affinity for music and did not even collect records like his friends.
After graduating from New York University and Harvard Law School, Davis worked at private law firms before joining the legal department at Columbia Records, a CBS subsidiary, in the early 1960s. He made his first mark there by putting together a case that kept Dylan at the label when his handlers had tried to void his contract.
In 1966, Davis was named head of the record label, which until then had largely ignored the burgeoning rock-oriented market, with only a few acts such as Dylan, Simon and Garfunkel, and the Byrds aimed at the youth audience.
'Talent attracts talent'
In his new position, Davis helped change the sound of American music. Record producer Lou Adler took Davis to the Monterey Pop Festival in California in 1967, which Davis would come to consider "the creative turning point in my life." Mesmerized by Joplin's performance at the festival, he signed her and her band, Big Brother and the Holding Company.
In the following years, he would build the Columbia roster by signing Chicago, Aerosmith, Pink Floyd, Blood, Sweat and Tears, Springsteen, Santana, Billy Joel, Sly and the Family Stone, and Boz Scaggs - all of whom became superstar acts.
Davis was a hands-on executive, taking a major role in marketing Columbia's performers, working as a studio producer, and providing input on song selection. When he suggested that Springsteen's "Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J." album needed a radio hit, Springsteen came up with "Spirit in the Night" and "Blinded by the Light," which would become staples of his act.
"Talent comes to me because they believe I've established a creative haven in which they can flourish," Davis said in an interview with Newsweek. "And talent attracts talent."
Davis enjoyed the attention his success brought and conceded it inflated his ego. According to a running joke in the music world, Davis thought CDs were named after his initials.
By 1973, CBS's record division was on the verge of scandal amid its success. According to the book Hit Men: Power Brokers and Fast Money Inside the Music Business, there were reports of prostitutes at company meetings, payoffs to get records played on the radio, and a Davis underling who was linked to fraud with a heroin smuggler. Davis was under scrutiny for using corporate funds to pay for his son's bar mitzvah.
CBS eventually fired Davis that year and filed a $94,000 expense-account-related suit that would be settled out of court. Davis later pleaded guilty to failure to pay taxes on job-related expenses and was fined $10,000.
Birth of Arista
Davis was not down for long. By 1974, he found backing for his own record label, which he named Arista. Among the first signees was Barry Manilow, who gave Davis a string of hits.
At Arista, Davis specialized in reviving acts such as Franklin, Warwick, Lou Reed, and the Kinks that had faded after initial success, returning them to stardom. The revived acts and new talent brought in great revenues, Grammys, and stacks of gold records for Arista.
Not all of his moves were profit-driven. He signed Patti Smith, known as the godmother of punk rock, even though her commercial appeal was limited.
"I really felt Clive, whatever his mainstream reputation... does love artists," Smith, who inducted Davis into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2000, told the Associated Press.
Davis' best move at Arista was discovering a teenage Whitney Houston in 1983 and guiding her career to record-breaking heights with a string of No. 1 hits. He took a hands-on producer role with Houston's "I Will Always Love You" - from her movie with Kevin Costner, The Bodyguard. It set a record by holding the No. 1 spot on the charts for 14 weeks and becoming one of the biggest-selling commercial singles of all time.
'It rips your heart out'
Davis and Houston grew close personally, and Houston thought of Davis as family. Her decline due to drug abuse and her overdose death in 2012 were crushing for him.
"It rips your heart out, is what it does," Davis told CNN in a 2013 interview. "We knew there was no one like her, and it is very, very painful that this tragic, tragic talent so prematurely came to an early demise, really."
Davis also signed saxophonist Kenny G, who became one of music's best-selling instrumentalists at Arista, and branched out by starting a Nashville subsidiary that became home to country stars Alan Jackson, Brooks & Dunn, and Brad Paisley.
Also at Arista, Davis helped proteges LA Reid and Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds set up a label that featured star R&B acts such as Usher, TLC, and Outkast, and brought in future music mogul Combs as a partner on a rap label.
Despite his roaring success, in 2000, Arista's parent company, BMG Entertainment, ousted Davis, who was undeterred and started J Records. His biggest successes at J were with Alicia Keys, Luther Vandross, and the "American Songbook" series of 1930s and 1940s pop standards that revived Stewart's career.
J Records ceased to exist after a series of corporate mergers, and in 2008, Davis was named chief creative officer of Sony Music Entertainment.
In his 2013 memoir, The Soundtrack of My Life, Davis, who was married and divorced twice and had four children, revealed that he was bisexual. He said he had a 13-year relationship with a male doctor and, at the time, was in a long-term relationship with another man.