Jerry
Wexler, the legendary record man, music producer and ageless hipster,
died at 3:45 a.m. August 15, 2008 at the age of 91. Wexler was one
of the great music business pioneers of the 20th century: as co-head
of Atlantic Records from 1953 to '75, he and his partner Ahmet Ertegun
grew the small independent R&B label into the major record company
that it is today. Jerry Wexler received a Lifetime Achievement Award
from The Blues Foundation and was inducted into its Blues Hall of
Fame in 2006.
Wexler
was much more than a top executive — he was a national tastemaker
and a prophet of Roots and Rhythm. The impact of his deeds matched
his larger-than-life personality. Because of him, we use the term
"Rhythm and Blues" and we hail Ray Charles as "Genius"
and Aretha Franklin as "Queen." We came to know of a
record label called Stax and a small town called Muscle Shoals,
Alabama. We witnessed the rise of Led Zeppelin and the Allman
Brothers, and we care about a thing called Soul.
In
the '50s, Wexler's studio work helped introduce white ears to
the royalty of R&B: Ray Charles, Big Joe Turner, the Drifters,
LaVern Baker, Chuck Willis. In the '60s as the age of R&B
gave way to the Rock and Soul era, Wexler and Ertegun steered
Atlantic into a lead position among labels, releasing music by
Otis Redding and Aretha Franklin, Cream and Led Zeppelin, Solomon
Burke and Wilson Pickett, Duane Allman, and Willie Nelson. In
the '70s, Wexler departed Atlantic and went freelance, producing
soundtracks for films by Louis Malle and Richard Pryor, and recording
albums with Bob Dylan, Dire Straits, and Etta James and others.
Wexler
was a throwback to a time when record men could be found in the
studio and the office, producing the music and running the company.
Blessed with big ears — they really were large — his
productions generated a staggering number of gold and platinum
records. The collective impact of the music he personally produced
or somehow ushered into being won him nearly every lifetime honor
in the music world. In 1987, he was inducted into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame, one of the first non-performers to receive
the honor. Tuxedoed and hale, he summed up his work at Atlantic:
"We were making Rhythm and Blues music — black music
by black musicians for black adult buyers perpetrated by white
Jewish and Turkish entrepreneurs."
Laughing,
Wexler added, "Incidentally, two weeks ago I hit three score
and 10 — the Biblical allotment. So this is my first posthumous
award."
He
was born Gerald Wexler in 1917 to a working class family, and
grew up during the Depression in the upper Manhattan neighborhood
of Washington Heights. His youth was marked by poolrooms and truancy,
until the mid-1930s when he was distracted by a music called Jazz.
Wexler became part of a loosely knit group of record collectors
and streetwise intellectuals, praising trumpeter Henry "Red"
Allen and quoting Spinoza. Many members of this circle eventually
became captains of the music industry: John Hammond and George
Avakian at Columbia Records, Milt Gabler and Bob Thiele at Decca,
Alfred Lion and Frank Wolff at Blue Note, and Wexler's future
partners at Atlantic, Ahmet and Nesuhi Ertegun.
"If
somebody asked me who I was," Wexler said, "an aspiring
journalist, a stick ball player from Washington Heights, the son
of a window cleaner? No, I was a record collector. And we all
felt that way. We were absolutely a cult. It was 'we happy few'
as the English say. We used to hang out at the Commodore Record
Shop, this little in-group, and get together in the evening. We
loved McSorley's Ale and maybe we'd smoke a cigarette without
any name on it. People would bring their favorite records and
we'd be listening to Louis and his Hot Five, Hot Seven, whatever."
A mother who was convinced she had birthed the next Faulkner,
and a Stateside stint in the Army during WWII (spent partly in
Miami) helped steer Wexler down a more accomplished path. He attended
college in Kansas upon being discharged, and in 1946 returned
to New York to pursue a career in journalism and the music business.
In a day when music publishers held more power than record companies,
he first worked as a song-plugger, and then as a Billboard reporter.
In 1949, he coined the term "Rhythm and Blues" for the
magazine's black music chart to replace the term "Race Music."
Wexler
was the wordsmith, and revered and respected his favorite authors
— Hemingway, Fitzgerald, James M. Cain and John O'Hara —
as he did his favorite Jazz and Bluesmen. Praising a Big Joe Turner
Big Band album, he wrote that it had been created sub specie aeternitatis.
Look it up — the Latin and the album.
Ertegun
thought and felt the same way. They became friends and in 1953,
when he asked Wexler to join Atlantic Records, partners as well.
It was a gesture Wexler never forgot. "In a way," he
said after Ertegun's death in 2006, "he handed me a life."
Wexler's
first years at Atlantic found him recording the music that built
the foundation of Rock — songs about partying, romancing
and one about shaking, rattling and rolling, that really had more
to do with what happened in car backseats than in the kitchen.
Some went further: Clyde McPhatter's "Honey Love" (banned
by some radio stations for indecency) and the Clovers' "Down
in the Alley" ("I'll plant you now and dig you later/Because
you're my sweet potato") were a refreshing poke at the propriety
of the '50s.
For
Wexler, it was on-the-job training: "No one really knew how
to make a record when I started. You simply went into the studio,
turned on the mike and said play." Atlantic's forte was a
sound that was clear, precise, and heavy on the groove —
the label was one of the first to mike the rhythm section separately.
"My rubric [for the sound] was 'Immaculate Funk,' "
he wrote in his autobiography Rhythm and the Blues (a must-read
for anyone seeking a handle on how American music came to be).
When
most radio stations were playing Perry Como and Doris Day, Wexler
pleaded, cajoled, bullied and even paid to get airplay for the
latest Atlantic singles. Everyone — black and white —
was listening. As Ertegun once put it, "they could segregate
everything else, but they couldn't segregate the radio dial."
With
Ertegun sitting one desk away in their small office on Manhattan's
West 56th Street, Wexler fought a righteous fight: hassling distributors
for payment, battling other labels for market share, at times
getting what was needed by sheer force of personality. He was
no angel — he could be imperious and had a reputation for
unusually erudite Working together, the two made a formidable
pair, balancing their love of music and music-makers with their
will to survive. "Wexler and Ertegun could be ruthless opportunists
on one hand and enormously generous on the other," says Jerry
Leiber, who would know. He was one half of Leiber and Stoller,
the famous songwriting/production team that provided Atlantic
an unbroken string of hit recordings by the Coasters, the Drifters
and Ben E. King. Wexler increased Atlantic's fortune by forging
innovative contracts with songwriters, producers, labels and studios
— many have since become common practice in the industry.
In 1957, he brought Leiber and Stoller to New York from the West
Coast and structured a distribution deal allowing them to work
as independent A&R men for the label. Similar arrangements
with upstart producers Phil Spector and Bert Berns followed.
Wexler
initiated another specialty in the early '60s: launching subsidiary
labels under the Atlantic umbrella (Rolling Stone Records, and
Led Zeppelin's Swan Song, Capricorn Records, home to the Allman
Brothers, were three hugely profitable imprints made possible
by his innovation). At the close of the decade, Wexler flew British
songbird Dusty Springfield to Memphis to record an album that
stands as her career best. To secure her signing with Atlantic,
Wexler agreed to personally produce the session: a precursor to
the ubiquitous "key-man" clause in today's contracts.
In
Memphis, Wexler discovered Stax Records and developed a distribution
deal that brought to Atlantic the brightest stars of Southern
Soul: Rufus and Carla Thomas, Booker T. & the MGs, Otis Redding.
At Stax, and in a few studios in nearby Muscle Shoals, Wexler
learned a new way of making records: more organic and improvised
than the pressured, pre-written approach typical of New York City
studios. He was soon bringing Atlantic artists south to record;
Wilson Pickett, Don Covay and Sam & Dave were among the many
to benefit from Wexler's change of venue.
The
stage was set for what today stands as Wexler's greatest single
triumph. In 1966, he signed a singer whose Columbia Records contract
had lapsed, and whose potential had yet to be realized. Wexler
asked Aretha Franklin to drop the Judy Garland cabaret act, play
the piano herself and focus on her natural, church-trained way
of singing. Before one could spell "respect," a legend
was born, and a new way of singing became the standard —
it's impossible to imagine Whitney, Mariah or Christina today
without Aretha. More significantly, Franklin's ascendancy marked
a seismic cultural shift: What black America was listening to
— in its full unbleached form — became a significant
and permanent part of the popular playlist.
By
the late '60s, Atlantic's legacy proved to be a dividend as many
British Rock groups chose to be on the same label as their R&B
and Soul heroes. Cream, Yes, King Crimson, the Bee Gees, Emerson,
Lake and Palmer all signed to Atlantic. On a tip from Dusty, Wexler
signed Led Zeppelin, crafting a contract that allowed the band
to produce themselves. Blown away by a young electric slide guitar
player in Muscle Shoals, he bought out Duane Allman's studio contract,
effectively releasing him to form the Allman Brothers. He signed
Southern Gospel-tinged Rockers Delaney and Bonnie, and the Proto-Metal
band Vanilla Fudge.
Not
every move was a good one. In 1968, Wexler convinced the Ertegun
brothers to sell Atlantic to Warner Brothers (then known as Warner
Seven Arts) but left major money on the table. Wexler regretted
the decision the rest of his life. "What a mistake. Worst
thing we ever did. It was because of my own insecurity when I
saw all these other independent record companies going out of
existence. We were sort of done in by the broker who was supposed
to be representing us. He undersold us." Generous contracts
notwithstanding, the three partners became employees for the first
time, answering to a board of directors. For Wexler it was a rough
fit. The irony is that Ertegun, who resisted going corporate,
eventually thrived in that environment, his diplomatic pedigree
helping him navigate boardroom culture. The move did liberate
Wexler from the overriding concern with the company's bottom line.
As he had when he first arrived at Atlantic, he focused on the
music he wanted to hear. Noticing a new blend of Southern Rock,
Country and R&B he dubbed "Swamp," he produced sessions
for the likes of Ronnie Hawkins, Donnie Fritts and Tony Joe White.
Some Soul productions — like Donny Hathaway — fared
well sales-wise; others did not. "The two albums I'm proudest
of are Dr. John's Gumbo and Doug Sahm and Band. And they both
tanked. Two of Atlantic's worst sellers."
In
1974, Wexler led a failed attempt to establish Atlantic in Nashville;
two classic albums that paired him with Willie Nelson were the
most that came from the effort. In 1975, Wexler departed Atlantic
and — save for a brief run heading East Coast A&R for
Warner Bros. where he signed the B-52s and the Gang of Four —
he freelanced for the remainder of his career, producing albums
for Bob Dylan, Dire Straits, Etta James, Allen Toussaint, the
Staple Singers, George Michael, Jose Feliciano, Linda Ronstadt
and Carlos Santana.
In
the late '90s, Wexler retired to his Florida home and canceled
his Billboard subscription, disengaging himself from the music
business. While Ertegun remained an industry fixture atop Atlantic,
Wexler was visited by a steady stream of journalists and TV crews
wanting to talk about the past. He could be irascible at times,
but he wasn't turning them away.
"They
keep coming time and again and I do them and sometimes they're
good. Well they're never really bad because they're dealing with
state of the art here in an interview — not everybody can
deliver a paragraph extemporaneously," Wexler laughed. "More
hubris."
This
reporter visited Wexler in his Sarasota, Florida home over a year
ago: We spent a long afternoon in his living room, surrounded
by photographs of him smiling with Ray, Willie, Bob, Aretha and
the Muscle Shoals rhythm section. At 89, he was energetic and
totally unenthused at the idea of turning 90. He was happy to
speak of the Atlantic years, and dismissive of his and Ahmet's
portrayal in the Ray movie ("Two stick figures, empty suits?
That's not who we were. But it had to be seen for two reasons
— the music and Jamie Foxx."). He lit up when talking
of early Jazz heroes like trumpeter Henry "Red" Allen
and saxophonist Bud Freeman, and at one point broke into a verse
from an obscure 1926 song: "I want a big butter and egg man/Don't
some butter and egg man want me?"
Jerry
Wexler died peacefully, and leaves behind his wife, the novelist
Jean Alexander, his children Paul and Lisa, and an undying legacy.
Less than two weeks before he died, he was still taking calls.
"Always answer the phone," was a personal motto of his.
"You never know if it's a hit calling."
Above
item courtesy of: www.blues.org