Clive's Demise

Posted Fri Apr 18, 2008 5:11pm PDT by Bob Lefsetz in The Lefsetz Letter
1

But is he still gonna have his Grammy party?


2

"And sooner or later
Everybody's kingdom must end
And I'm so afraid your courtiers
Cannot be called best friends"

I don't know who signed Elton John to MCA, whether we ultimately should give Dick James credit for starting his legendary career, but someone in an inept organization whose label name was essentially unknown in the U.S. was savvy enough to realize Reg Dwight had talent, in spades. He came with his own co-writer, a producer and an arranger. The label didn't meddle, they just sat back and collected the cash. Sure, Norm Winter deserves credit for breaking Elton in America, but do you really think he wouldn't have made it anyway? Have you listened to "Your Song"?

This is how it was at the turn of the decade. From the sixties to the seventies. Labels signed talent and then got out of the way. The record company was not much more than a marketing and distribution outlet. Clive Davis says he was a player in this era too, signing Janis Joplin, Santana and making Laura Nyro a star, he takes all the credit. Then how come he never signed anyone close in talent since?

Maybe Patti Smith was just the buzz. For Clive never signed anything so edgy, so innately talented after her. And let's not forget, Patti was a poet. It was easy to listen to her music and dismiss it. Which most of America did until she covered one of Bruce Springsteen's songs.

After Patti came a succession of established acts who bitched until they could leave, like Lou Reed, and MOR acts so bland as to be almost faceless, if they weren't sold on their features.

In retrospect, Barry Manilow looks like a giant. He came at the beginning, before Clive had refined his paradigm. Barry could actually write, even if his initial hit was a cover. A song that Clive changed the title of from "Brandy" to "Mandy." And with that stroke, Clive Davis anointed himself a creative genius, bigger than any act. Clive Davis was suddenly the talent. He made you, and killed you if you didn't play along. What resulted was a trail of pop hits almost all of which have been completely forgotten.

But in an era when MTV could explode your career and AOR was dying, replaced by Top Forty on FM, suddenly, there was money in pop hits. Or maybe not money, but noticeability! You could trot out chart statistics, which got you ink and TV exposure. All those acts on Warner looked like has-beens in comparison. Didn't matter that by the fourth quarter Mo had the sales, and the profits. Mo got squeezed out, but not before Donnie Ienner, Clive's promotion man, had taken over at Columbia and Charles Koppelman, who idolized Clive, ran the EMI empire in the U.S. Suddenly, the whole business had been rebuilt in Clive's image.

Propped up by MTV and CD sales. Both of which declined at the turn of the century. When suddenly music was free and your only hope was to maximize the revenue of a career artist. One whose catalog would pay dividends for decades, unlike any of Clive's proteges.

They tried to squeeze Clive out. But he was too smart and too wily. He got his own label, he got revenge.

But they weren't only squeezing him out because he was aged, but because all those chart statistics didn't flow to the bottom line. Sales were good, but profits were often abysmal. Some might say the operation was all flash, and no substance.

But Clive hadn't lost his starmaking ability. He built me-too act Alicia Keys on the back of a James Brown rip-off and regained his power, not only in the eye of the media, which he worked so well, but the BMG operation. Many felt he was poised to gobble up Sony Music. That would be his ultimate triumph, to rule Columbia and Epic once again. Alas, it's not to be.

Like in the old days, the first time around, when Clive lost his job in the seventies, the person who pulled the trigger was essentially anonymous. How could some nameless, faceless person kill God? Well, Clive just acted like God. In truth, he was just another employee. Simon Cowell might be God.

Simons Cowell and Fuller built a juggernaut. They'd make the star, all that would be left would be to fit the two-dimensional figure with material. That's where Clive came in, after being initially reluctant. And just after pronouncing that acts shouldn't bother to write, he got blown out.

Because it is show business. But it's the kernel of art that makes it all work. The one genius, the one Bruce Springsteen, energizes everybody about music, it brings people into the stores, generates sales. Lose the true stars, who write and play or sing from the heart as opposed to being manipulated by handlers, and you've got a headless, heartless corpse. Otherwise known as today's music business. There are people with statistics, like Mariah Carey, but they don't make you pay attention, at least not to their music. They can be denied. Like all of Clive's post-'75, Arista-era on, productions.

Barry Weiss is sharp. But not as sharp as Clive Calder, who came up in the business with the best producer alive today, Mutt Lange. Clive was a scientist, who specialized in getting the elixir right, all at a cheap price. Barry knows cheap in an era when you must look at all expenses, but he's more of a traffic cop than a deity.


3

Clive had a long run. He eluded mandatory retirement. He got away with never anointing a successor. But no one lives forever. He should be able to sleep well at night. But he won't. Because of the legacy factor.

Without millions at his disposal, without being able to spin (buy?) the press, Clive will fade out. It's not like Clive Davis records will be spun on oldies stations... Hell, does anybody other than an insider talk about David Geffen's tenure in the record business anymore?

No. But if one does, and focuses on the early period, one can see that Mr. Geffen used his charm on his acts, not the press. He found the best acts, made sure they knew he was on their side, and fought for them, stuck with them, made them stars. Geffen made Joni Mitchell. And Jackson Browne. He built the aforementioned Laura Nyro. He gave the Eagles a deal. If you want a model, go back to that era, before King David got sick of the talent and decided to become the talent himself. An investor, a studio head, a billionaire.

Yes, in reality shepherds of talent are unsung heroes. If you doubt me, go backstage. The hoi polloi don't want to hang with the manager or the label head, they want to touch the star. They'll sacrifice their bodies, anything to get closer to the person whose music changed their lives. Back when music changed lives, before big time musical acts were known more for their celebrity antics. It's a rewarding job midwifing talent. One that oftentimes comes with riches. But it's sans the spotlight. All the great record men stood out of the spotlight. From John Hammond to Mo Ostin. Hell, how much publicity does Coran Capshaw get? These people realize that it's about the act. With Clive Davis it ceased to be about the act.

Is Kelly Clarkson happy today? Elated, I'd think. The roadblock is gone. Maybe she's only a mildly talented songwriter, but now she can do it her way. Every artist wants to do it his way. It was Clive who stood against this. Clive who refused to release records. The enemy is now gone.


4

The major labels have lost their luster. By wanting to reside in the twentieth century, by playing by old rules. By wanting instant success, instant riches, at a high price to the consumer. But that era is never coming back.

Today we're closing the door on the twentieth century. Today we're drawing a line in the sand, that acts last, not executives. The future of this business will be based on artistry. The music will come before commerce. It has to. The old tricks of scarcity and publicity used to drive the old moguls' priorities no longer work in the new world. There will be a new set of moguls. Who know this. No one from the old world has evidenced an ability to adapt.

Richard Sanders is not ascending to the throne. But, at least, unlike Charles Goldstuck, he didn't get completely blown out. Like that old Blondie record, Charles Goldstuck is going to fade away, but he's not going to radiate. He doesn't bring enough to the party. He was the sycophant to a deposed king.

But now there's a new king. Nobody lives forever. Every reign comes to an end.

"The king is dead, the king is dead
The king is dead, the king is dead
Long live the king"

"The King Is Dead"
Elton John

4 Comments

1. Honeygirl47 -
what will happen tp Whitney H....

2. Yahoo! Music User -
What is good music?
That can be anything, that depend on too many factors no one control. It is more intuition than talent. That can be totally hazardous like many inventions.
So this guy imposed to the public his vision of what is good music like many other big producers.
You follow his road or not, if not then good luck with the planing.
You can do what you want when everyone know you but before you're nothing both a sand grain in the desert. Internet has not changed anything you have more sand grains than ever and no one on earth has the time or simply wants to listen and analyse all that poor quality home production.

3. DUDE -
In direct contrast to #2,the internet has changed everything.I have spent many hours reviewing,listening to,and purchasing music on the internet.I will continue to do this while you ponder your sand grains.

4. milkyaqua -
Well, it's not as though people inside and outside of the business haven't been preaching this thing for years to the records labels and their ilk...either evolve or die. They've been fighting change for so long they are now on the losing side and seem to just be realizing it even now. Clive's problem is that he believed his own hype. Back in the day, the labels were fun by actual musicians and not PR guys.

As for Whitney's new album, the process is supposedly slow going for whatever reasons but I keep joking with people this may be Whitney's Chinese Democracy. Guns'n'Roses fans are still waiting for that one and it's been 10 years already.
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