George Daly | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | George William Daly |
Genres | Rock, folk, pop, new wave, jazz |
Occupation | Music executive |
Instrument(s) | Guitar, piano, synthesizer, Fender bass |
Labels | Columbia, Elektra/Asylum/WMG, Atlantic/WMG, BMG/Zoo, About/UMG, |
George Daly is a music executive, songwriter, musician, video and music producer, multiple awards-winning film director and inventor. In his role as a music Industry A&R (Artists & Repertoire) executive he has worked with artists and groups such as Janis Joplin, Booker T. Jones, The Cars, Tool (band), Huey Lewis, Carlos Santana, and many others. [1] Artists to whose efforts Daly has contributed have sold in excess of 300 million singles and albums in vinyl, tape, CD, and digital download music streaming formats.
Moving from the Washington, D.C. area to San Francisco in the 1960s, Daly befriended Janis Joplin and was soon hired by Columbia Records as CBS Corporate San Francisco Head of A&R spanning the Clive Davis and Goddard Lieberson eras. [1] Following that, Daly was named head of A&R at Elektra/Asylum Records, and later directly hired as Head of Artist & Repertoire by Ahmet Ertegun at Atlantic Records (WMG), where he worked under Doug Morris. He then worked with Zoo Entertainment (Bertelsmann Music Group) as both BMG corporate Vice President and head of the Artists & Repertoire division. Daly is the recipient of multiple Gold Record and Platinum Record music recording certifications. [2]
Daly discovered and contracted musical artists such as The Cars, signing the band to a long-term Elektra/Asylum recording contract on a paper napkin after a live performance at Harvard University. [3] [4] The band’s first album, The Cars, stayed on the charts for 139 weeks and sold over six million copies in the US. Daly also discovered and brought The Tubes, a surreal SF theatrical rock band, to A&M Records. Daly also signed Bill Manspeaker’s Green Jellÿ to BMG/Zoo. Green Jelly members Maynard James Keenan and Danny Carey became the band Tool on the label. Daly has also worked professionally as a songwriter/musician with many other prominent artists and musicians, such as Roy Buchanan, Nils Lofgren and Boz Scaggs. Daly co-wrote Boz Scaggs’ classic "Slow Dancer," which some consider to be the artist’s greatest musical achievement. [5] Daly has also worked with other artists, including Huey Lewis, [6] Carlos Santana, and Alice Coltrane. Daly also worked with the family of Jimi Hendrix in producing The River of Color and Sound, an award-winning interactive multimedia biography of Carlos Santana. [7]
Daly was born the second of six siblings at the United States Naval Hospital in Annapolis, Maryland to U.S. Navy Captain George William Daly, Sr., former Deputy Chief of Industrial Relations for the U.S. Navy, and Frances Helen Daly, who encouraged her son’s creativity. [8] [9] He showed an aptitude in his early years for science, technology, and music, writing his first song in 4th grade and crafting early electric guitars and sound amplifier circuits. In 8th grade, he invented a device he entered into a local science fair which used light waves to transmit sound across a large hall.
By his early teens he was playing guitar, electric bass and keyboards, and writing songs. He founded several bands, beginning with The Hangmen. The Hangmen are credited on record with the singles "What a Girl Can't Do", "Faces" and "Bad Goodbye," among others. The song "...Girl...", written and recorded by Tom Guernsey and Joe Tripplet, with its Everly Brothers' Wake up Little Susie guitar riff and Bob Berberich's drumming, plus the band's live performance, pushed the Hangmen past The Beatles to the number one position in the Washington, D.C. regional radio charts. [10] Fans of the Hangmen included famed beat poet Allen Ginsburg, Robert F. Kennedy, and Ethel Kennedy. [10] [11] Daly's original song "Faces" is noted in the 21st century as a prototypical punk rock anthem. [10] [12]
After joining Columbia Records, Daly’s first role was head of A&R for the San Francisco division. Clive Davis served as Daly’s mentor. [3] At the time Columbia Records had just begun to enter the West Coast modern rock market, opening both a state-of-the art recording studio (CBS recording studio on Folsom St., San Francisco) and A&R offices at Fisherman's Wharf. [13] Daly has been a senior executive at Divisions of four major U.S. record labels (Columbia, Elektra/Asylum/Atlantic/BMG), and is currently the CEO of About Records, a label distributed by Universal Music Group/UMG/Fontana. As an A&R executive, Daly has worked with or discovered many of the ground-breaking music acts that eventually defined their genre, including Janis Joplin, [14] Carlos Santana, The Cars, and Tool, among others. Throughout his career he has worked directly with prominent music industry leaders such as “industry legend” Clive Davis, Ahmet Ertegun ("one of the most significant figures in the modern recording industry."), and songwriter and serial music business CEO, Doug Morris. [15] [16]
Daly's tenure in the music businesses' modern high-sales era coincides with the rise of the modern "tonnage" popularity of recorded music to non-physical media and global streaming music. [17]
Daly founded and performed in three historically important DC bands: The Hangmen, Dolphin, and Grin. The Hangmen’s performances instigated at least one 3000+ person fan riot in suburban Virginia, which was written up in Billboard magazine as one of the first of the '60's US "rock & roll riots'' before the Beatles’ dominance of the charts. [18] Daly also founded the historically important DC folk-blues band, Dolphin (signed to Seymour Stein’s Sire Records/London Records) in 1967. [19] The band included Daly, Bob Berberich, Paul Dowell, Nils Lofgren, and Roy Buchanan, whom Rolling Stone Magazine described as "one of the three greatest living guitarists." [20] Daly then formed the trio Grin with fellow Hangmen alumni and drummer and friend Bob Berberich and Nils Lofgren. Daly came to California after a chance meeting in Washington, DC between Neil Young and Nils Lofgren. Young asked Lofgren to come and bring the band to stay at Neil Young's home in California, bringing Daly west to Laurel Canyon in the Hollywood Hills.
Lofgren worked on several Neil Young albums and would go on to join Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band. The song Slow Dancer which Daly co-wrote with Boz Scaggs went multi-platinum, being recorded by Scaggs, Emmylou Harris and Rita Coolidge, among others. Daly's also wrote with singer/songwriter Tim Hockenberry, who Howard Stern praised as his all-time favorite singer when Hockenberry appeared on America’s Got Talent, [21] Cole Tate, Justin Miller and Mill Valley icon Austin de Lone.
Daly holds six US patents for audio and musical devices and is inventor of various audio devices including the early electrical guitar processor, the “Moan Tone,” which was used by Nils Lofgren and others in live performance and recording and the “Master Mount” recording studio device, (later sold to Tandy Corp). [22] Daly has consulted to the US Government's Comcast STC Satellite Television Corporation where he designed the PSR2000, the first prototype desktop consumer unit for digital music downloads, developed in conjunction with Hartford Gunn, the first president of PBS. [23]
At the request of Keith Richards and Rob Fraboni, Daly, starting at the 63,000 seat Oakland Coliseum went on the road and recorded The Rolling Stones during their US Rolling Stones Bridges To Babylon tour using his experimental Aura-Live recording technology.
As head of the A&R divisions at the four largest American Record corporations, Daly has overseen hundreds of artists, including their signings and album productions. These include multi-platinum artists such as Janis Joplin, the Cars, Carlos Santana, Tool, Boz Scaggs, Green Jellÿ, and others. Daly has also recorded The Rolling Stones on tour, as well as recording Huey Lewis (in Clover, Summers Here/Pyramid Records); [24] Gene Clark; Marc V (Too True/Elektra Records); [25] Family Brown (Imaginary World/United Artists Records); Grammy-nominated internationally-known English composer Michael Hoppé (Simple Pleasures/Seventh Wave); Pamela Polland (Pamela Polland/Columbia Records); Boulder (Boulder, Elektra Records); Alejandro Escovedo in the early punk/new wave band The Nuns, [26] with Jennifer Miro; Blue Train (Blue Train, All I Want Is You/BMG) which gave Bertelsmann/BMG/Zoo its first pop Top 40 US Hit; [27] Laura Allan, the singer often cited as the important inspiration to Joni Mitchell in her Blue and post Blue vocal style; [28] Booker T. (Bittersweet/Epic Records); Skinny Songs for Heidi Roizen; [29] Mill Valley's Tim Hockenberry, (Back In Your Arms/About Records/Universal Music Group); Larkin Gayle (Two Hands/About Records/Universal Music Group); Jon Collins, (Jon Collins/Coliseum/About Records); Boston sourced and Mill Valley discovered The Rowan Brothers, and the "sui generis" YASSOU. [30]
In video, Daly wrote and produced the first digitally recorded (SoundStream system) live music video and TV series, StudioLive, which was short-listed in the Emmy's technical category. StudioLive starred Freddie Hubbard, with music composed and conducted by Allyn Ferguson. [31] Daly also wrote, produced and served as an Executive Producer of the multimedia life story of Carlos Santana, The River of Color and Sound, for Polygram Multimedia. [32] Daly and Colin Farish created the pilot television show Sanctuary of Sound, with Daly on-screen and in discussion with such music business notables as Narada Michael Walden and Ben Fong-Torres.
In film, Daly co-directed, co-wrote, and co-edited Gary Yost’s multiple-award-winning film documentary about the restoration of Marin County's Mount Tamalpais: The Invisible Peak (narrated by actor Peter Coyote). [33] Daly also produced all the music and sound design in the film, which includes piano performances by Grammy nominated English composer and performer Michael Hoppé and multi-Emmy award-winning composer Ron Alan Cohen. [34]
Daly Executive Produced and co-wrote the globally multiple-award-winning music video The Girl Who Faded Away, which debuted in Graumann’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, CA, in partnership with Portland, Oregon director, editor and co-writer Brent Heise. [35] The music video is based on a song released by the Hangmen band and written by Tom Guernsey and vocalist Joe Triplett. [36]
Daly has also served as a consultant to the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History, where he produced the major DC exhibit in which the original Star Spangled Banner anthem was performed with period-accurate instruments. Daly recorded and produced the unique rendition of Francis Scott Key's original song using a modern studio orchestra playing the original instruments from the mid-19th century. Daly acquired the rare instruments with the help of Dr. Arthur Molella, then Chairman of the museum’s department of the History of Science and Technology at the Smithsonian Institution. [37] The Daly-produced exhibit is the most popular Smithsonian exhibit of all time. [38]
At his Advisor Intel consultancy (founded 2018), George Daly and William Daly identified and coordinated the acquisition for ACX Music/UFC of 65 million streaming music licenses as well as the design of the UFC's Ultimate Sound streaming music service, one of the first corporate (the UFC) branded streaming music services. [39]
To give back to youth in music, Daly co-founded the Teen Hoot with Nashville producer/songwriter Hall-of-Famer David Malloy. [40] The Teen Hoot, using live and streamed music performances with a growing, large online community propelled by video, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook and Twitter (where the Hoot has trended Twitter top three in the world), encourages young singers and songwriters to learn their craft. [41] Hoot's one voting event garnered over 1,300,000 votes from online fans.
Daly is a founding Board of Governors member and co-founder of the San Francisco chapter of NARAS, as well as a lifetime member of NARAS (the Grammy Organization) as a Los Angeles member. Daly is also a lifetime member of Mensa and holds an FCC Amateur Extra-Class radio license.
Janis Lyn Joplin was an American singer and songwriter. One of the most iconic and successful rock performers of her era, she was noted for her powerful mezzo-soprano vocals, as well as her "electric" stage presence.
Clive Jay Davis is an American record producer, A&R executive, record executive, and lawyer. He has won five Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as a non-performer, in 2000.
Nils Hilmer Lofgren is an American rock musician, recording artist, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist. Along with his work as a solo artist, he has been a member of Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band since 1984, a member of Crazy Horse, and founder/frontman of the band Grin. Lofgren was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the E Street Band in 2014.
The 19th Annual Grammy Awards were held on February 19, 1977, and were broadcast live on American television (CBS). It was the seventh and final year Andy Williams hosted the telecast. The ceremony recognized accomplishments by musicians from the year 1976.
Big Brother and the Holding Company are an American rock band that was formed in San Francisco in 1965 as part of the same psychedelic music scene that produced the Grateful Dead, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Jefferson Airplane. After some initial personnel changes, the band became well known with the lineup of vocalist Janis Joplin, guitarists Sam Andrew and James Gurley, bassist Peter Albin, and drummer Dave Getz. Their second album Cheap Thrills, released in 1968, is considered one of the masterpieces of the psychedelic sound of San Francisco; it reached number one on the Billboard charts, and was ranked number 338 in Rolling Stone's the 500 greatest albums of all time. The album is also listed in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.
415 Records was a San Francisco record label created in 1978. The label focused its efforts on local punk rock and new wave music acts of the late 1970s through the late 1980s, including The Offs, The Nuns, The Units, Romeo Void, and Wire Train. Its name, pronounced four-one-five, was a play on both the telephone area code for the San Francisco area and the California penal code section for disturbing the peace. The label had a productive partnership with Columbia Records from 1981 until shortly before it was sold in 1989 to Sandy Pearlman, who retitled the label Popular Metaphysics.
Paul Allen Rothchild was a prominent American record producer of the 1960s and 1970s, widely known for his historic work with the Doors, producing Janis Joplin's final album Pearl and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band's first two albums.
Rayward Powell St. John was an American singer and songwriter, active on the mid-1960s Austin, Texas campus folk/bohemian music scene. He was an occasional member of various Austin rock groups, including The Conqueroo, and wrote some songs for The 13th Floor Elevators, including "You Don't Know ", included on the band's 1966 debut, The Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators.
Deborah Christine "Siedah" Garrett is an American singer and songwriter who has written songs and performed backing vocals for many recording artists in the music industry, such as Michael Jackson, the Pointer Sisters, Brand New Heavies, Quincy Jones, Tevin Campbell, Donna Summer, Madonna, Jennifer Hudson among others. Garrett has been nominated for two Academy Awards for Best Original Song, and won the Grammy Award for Best Song Written for Visual Media at the 50th Annual Grammy Awards for co-writing "Love You I Do" for the 2006 musical film, Dreamgirls.
William Louis Shelton is an American guitarist and music producer.
Joseph Thomas "Coke" Escovedo was an American percussionist, who came from a prominent musical family including five musician brothers and his niece, Sheila E. He played in various genres, including R&B, jazz fusion and soul, with bands including Santana, Malo, Cal Tjader, and Azteca.
Michael T. Mainieri Jr. is an American vibraphonist, known for his work with the jazz fusion group Steps Ahead. He is married to the singer-songwriter and harpist Dee Carstensen.
Jordan "Jerry" Ragovoy was an American songwriter and record producer.
Richard Thomas Marotta is an American drummer and percussionist. He has appeared on recordings by leading artists such as Aretha Franklin, Carly Simon, Steely Dan, James Taylor, Paul Simon, John Lennon, Hall & Oates, Stevie Nicks, Wynonna, Roy Orbison, Todd Rundgren, Roberta Flack, Peter Frampton, Quincy Jones, Jackson Browne, Al Kooper, Waylon Jennings, Randy Newman, Kenny G, The Jacksons, Crosby, Stills & Nash, Boz Scaggs, Warren Zevon, and Linda Ronstadt. He is also a composer who created music for the popular television shows Everybody Loves Raymond and Yes, Dear.
"Lowdown" is a song originally recorded in 1976 by Boz Scaggs from his album Silk Degrees. The song was co-written by Scaggs and keyboardist David Paich. Paich, along with fellow "Lowdown" session musicians bassist David Hungate and drummer Jeff Porcaro, would later go on to form the band Toto.
Luis Conte is a Cuban percussionist best-known for his performances in the bands of artists including James Taylor, Madonna, Pat Metheny Group, Eric Clapton, Carlos Santana, Phil Collins, Rod Stewart and Shakira. He began his music career as a studio musician for Latin Jazz acts like Caldera. Conte's live performance and touring career took off when he joined Madonna's touring band in the 1980s. Neil Strauss of The New York Times describes Conte's playing as "grazing Latin-style percussion".
"Miss Sun" is a 1980 hit for Boz Scaggs first recorded in 1977 by David Paich along with David Hungate, Steve Lukather, and Jeff Porcaro.
Kathryn Marie "Kathi" McDonald was an American blues and rock singer and songwriter. As a teenager she sang with different bands around the Pacific Northwest before she was discovered by Ike Turner. She sang as an Ikette with Ike & Tina Turner and eventually replaced Janis Joplin as the front woman of Big Brother and Holding Company. McDonald became a background vocalist for various artists, including Leon Russell, Joe Cocker, The Rolling Stones, Freddie King, and Long John Baldry. She also recorded as a solo artist and fronted her own band Kathi McDonald & Friends.
Wendy Haas-Mull is an American vocalist and keyboardist best known for her work with the bands Santana and Azteca.
The Hangmen were an American rock band from Rockville, Maryland, who were active in the 1960s. In an effort to distinguish themselves from other American groups and establish a closer affiliation with the popular British Invasion, they lured Scottish vocalist Dave Ottley to join the group. Eventually they became the most popular band in the Washington, D.C., area, having a huge regional hit with "What a Girl Can't Do", that appeared on Monument Records, but was recorded by an earlier local group, the Reekers, whose membership included two future Hangmen, Tom Guernsey and Bob Berberich. The single was nonetheless credited to the Hangmen.