When I was young, I’d listen to the radio

I’ve been writing this blog for 11 years, writing about the great musicians of the classic rock era and the amazing music they made. I’ve compiled many dozens of themed playlists — songs about driving, food, summer, breaking up, protests, sex, and on and on — but I recently discovered a glaring, unintentional exclusion: I’ve neglected to write a piece on songs about radio!

Seeing as how important radio airplay is (or used to be) to the success of a song or album, this is a rather serious omission. But it’s never too late to remedy that. I did my research and found a broad array of songs that focus on radio listening habits, AM or FM, the state of radio programming, and the importance of radio in our lives.

Radio used to be absolutely crucial to every music lover. In the ’50s and ’60s, AM radio was the ONLY way to hear your favorite song unless you forked over your allowance to buy the single or, heaven forbid, an entire album. It was certainly the only way to hear music in your car, before tape players, CD players and streaming services came along to make radio seem almost obsolete.

In Nashville, where I live now, there’s an excellent independent FM radio station called “Lightning 100” that plays a marvelously eclectic mix of old and new music that cuts across multiple genres. It’s the kind of station that used to dominate airwaves in every major American city in the 1970s before corporate ownership arrived, and with it came homogenization, predictability and a dearth of boundary-stretching musical offerings.

Cleveland’s radio personalities: Kid Leo, Billy Bass, John Lanigan, Bill Randle, Alan Freed

Radio also gave us disc jockeys, those quirky on-air personalities we loved (or loved to hate) who soothed us and provoked us, shamelessly promoted and coolly interviewed musicians about the tunes they were playing for us. Late night, drive time, morning zoo, all sorts of characters around the clock, 24 hours a day. Where I grew up in Cleveland, we had a rich history of influential DJs whose names have since become legendary well outside the region.

Rock musicians have done a fine job of writing tunes about the influence of radio and how its impact has changed (pretty much for the worse) in more recent times. Below I’ve selected 20 songs that explore the world of radio, with some interesting backstories about how and why they were written. The Spotify playlist at the end is, in my humble view, one of my better efforts.

Listen up!

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“Radio Song,” R.E.M., 1991

This has always been one of my favorite tracks by the Athens, Georgia-based band. It’s the opening tune on the group’s platinum LP “Out of Time,” their first US #1, which catapulted them from cult status to international stars. Although “Losing My Religion” and “Shiny Happy People” got most of the attention, “Radio Song” grabbed me immediately, with its “adventurous amalgam of jangly funk and sugary-sweet pop balladry,” as one critic described it. Michael Stipe’s commentary on the state of radio in the early ’90s hits hard: “Hey, I can’t find nothing on the radio, /Ah, yo, turn to that station, /The world is collapsing around our ears, I turned up the radio but I can’t hear it, /It’s that same sing-song, and the DJ sucks, /t makes me sad…”

“On Your Radio,” Joe Jackson, 1979

Jackson confessed that he had been bullied and teased as a youngster growing up in England, and when he developed his musical talent enough to earn a record contract and begin a public career, one of the early songs he wrote was “On Your Radio,” a scathing put-down of his past enemies. Singer Suzanne Vega, who worked on a couple of projects with Jackson in the 1990s, said, “This is the ultimate revenge song of fame. Who hasn’t been there and had those fantasies of rising above all the people who oppress you? Many people hope for the chance to respond to those who wronged us, and songwriters get to do it on the radio.” “I got your names and your numbers filed away, /See me, hear me, don’t you know you can’t get near me, /You can only hope to hear me on your radio…”

“Song on the Radio,” Al Stewart, 1978

Since 1969, Stewart had been releasing his unique brand of story-songs, often with historical references and romantic characters. His 1976 hit “Year of the Cat” captured our imaginations, reaching #7 on US pop charts. As he was writing songs for his 1978 follow-up album “Time Passages,” he said, “The folks at Arista Records were asking for a mid-tempo ballad with a saxophone that could be played on the radio so, very tongue-in-cheek, I wrote ‘Song on the Radio.’ I was actually joking, but they put it out as a single and it made the Top 30, so I guess the joke was on me!” The song seems to be about discovering a woman whose remarkable qualities are unnoticed by others, perhaps by her own design. Like many of Stewart’s songs, this one takes place while the narrator is traveling: “I was making my way through the wasteland the road into town passes through, /I was changing the radio stations with my mind on you… /We’ll go collecting the days, putting the moments away, /You’re on my mind like a song on the radio…”

“On the Radio,” Donna Summer, 1979

Donna Summer wrote this disco hit with record producer Giorgio Moroder for the soundtrack of the 1980 teen girl coming-of-age film “Foxes” starring a young Jodie Foster, Scott Baio and Runaways singer Cherie Currie. In the song, Summer is pining for a lost love and hopes to reconnect by broadcasting her feelings on the radio. Bruce Sudano, who worked with Summer before marrying her and remaining her husband until her death in 2012, said, “Donna could be very simple in her lyrics or she could be esoteric. But basically, the story of ‘On The Radio’ is somebody hoping that the song on the radio will let the man know that she is in love with him.” In addition to the “Foxes” soundtrack, “On the Radio” was also the featured new track on Summer’s “Greatest Hits Volumes I and II” double LP, and a #5 hit single in early 1980. “I never told a soul just how I’ve been feeling over you, /But they said it really loud, they said it on the air, /On the radio, whoa-oh-oh-oh, on the radio…”

“Turn Up the Radio,” Autograph, 1984

In 1983, the fledgling LA-based band Autograph was lucky enough for their demos to catch the ear of producer Andy Johns, who had worked with Led Zeppelin and The Rolling Stones. He supervised their debut LP, which included what turned out to be their only Top 40 hit, “Turn Up the Radio,” qualifying them as “one-hit wonders.” The song’s futuristic music video was very popular on MTV in 1985, helping boost their sales and a #29 peak on US pop charts (#17 on mainstream rock charts). The recording featured guitarist Steve Lynch’s distinctive two-handed, fretboard-tapping technique, which won him the “Guitar Solo of the Year” award from Guitar Player magazine that year. Lynch said the track was never a personal favorite but he always appreciated its strong hook and commercial appeal “and lyrics that were right for the times.” “Daytime, nighttime, anytime, things go better with rock, /I’m going 24 hours a day, I can’t seem to stop, /Turn up the radio, I need the music, give me some more, /Turn up the radio, I wanna feel it, got to give me some more…”

“Radio Nowhere,” Bruce Springsteen, 2007

“High-energy, E Street Band rock” was the order of the day on Springsteen’s well-received 2007 LP “Magic.” It debuted at #1 on US album charts despite an overriding lyrical theme reflecting The Boss’s disillusionment with the state of American society at the time. The intended single was “Radio Nowhere,” a meaty slab of guitar-heavy rock described as having “an end-of-the-world feel where humanity has become anonymous and communication channels have broken down.” The title metaphorically depicts a void where the narrator frantically searches for human connection over the airwaves, a despairing vibe that may have turned off the Top 40 radio audience, because it failed to chart at all. “I was spinning around a dead dial, just another lost number in a file, /Dancing down a dark hole, just searching for a world with some soul, /This is radio nowhere, is there anybody alive out there?…”

“Border Radio,” The Blasters, 1981

From the 1930s through the late 1980s, American companies set up powerful radio transmitters just over the Texas border in Mexico, offering as much as 500,000 watts of power, enough to reach great swaths of the US but out of reach of US regulations. Singer-guitarist Phil Alvin and his younger brother Dave (lead guitar) grew up on these stations’ heady stew of rockabilly, country, early R&B and blues. Between 1979-1985, they released four solid LPs as The Blasters, and on their self-titled second album — which reached #36 on US album charts and was several critics’ choice as one of 1982’s best — Dave Alvin wrote “Border Radio,” a song about the influence and appeal of hearing edgy music not available elsewhere: “This song comes from 1962, dedicated to a man who’s gone, /Fifty thousand watts out of Mexico, this is the border radio, /She calls toll free and requests an old song, something they used to know, /She prays to herself that wherever he is, he’s listening to the border radio…”

“FM,” Steely Dan, 1978

In 1978, a critically lambasted film called “FM” told the story of a group of DJs at a popular FM radio station who rebel against the station’s management. The DJs want to retain the free-form, DJ-driven music selection format that had been in place at FM rock stations since its early years in the late ’60s, but the more commercially oriented “album-oriented rock” format had already become dominant by the time the film was conceived and released. While the movie tanked, the “FM” soundtrack album was a big success, selling millions, led by Steely Dan’s title track, which reached #22 on US pop charts. Asked to write a song about FM radio, they came up with lyrics in which the narrator criticizes the predictable music selection. The overlapping harmonies of “no static at all” sound like a station ID tagline, but it seems less like a technical boast than an admission that nothing on the airwaves was likely to surprise anyone: “The girls don’t seem to care what’s on, as long as they play till dawn, /Nothin’ but blues and Elvis and somebody else’s favorite song… /The girls don’t seem to care tonight, as long as the mood is right, /No static at all, FM…”

“AM Radio,” Everclear, 2000

Emerging from Portland, Oregon, in 1992, Everclear was the brainchild of singer-songwriter-guitarist Art Alexakis, who steered them through post-grunge, alt-rock and power pop genres on several successful LP in the late 1990s. In 2000, on the Top Ten LP “Songs From an American Movie Vol. One: Learning How to Smile,” they came up with a jewel of a song called “AM Radio,” which nostalgically celebrated the early ’70s era when AM radio still ruled but was losing ground to hipper FM formats. Those without the bucks to afford cars with FM or tape players had to get their music exclusively from AM radio, with its cheesy jingles and repeated-to-death Top 40 playlist. “Flashback back in ’72, another summer in the neighborhood hanging out with nothing to do, /Sometimes, we’d go driving around in my sister’s Pinto, cruising with the windows rolled down, /We’d listen to the radio station, /We were too damn poor to buy the eight-track tape… /You’d have to wait ’til you could hear it on the AM radio…”

“That’s Why God Made the Radio,” The Beach Boys, 2012

After a long estrangement, Brian Wilson was ready to work with The Beach Boys again in 2012, just in time for the 50th anniversary of The Beach Boys 1962 debut LP. Wilson was collaborating with songwriter Jim Peterik at the time, who recalled an evening that proved fruitful. “We were at a restaurant,” he said, “and Brian was talking about radio, and how great songs used to sound through the AM radio coming through the oval speaker on his Plymouth Valiant. I said, ‘Man, that was the best sound of all,’ and Brian said, ‘Yeah, that’s why God made the radio.’ Of course, I wrote that line down, and it became not only a single but the title of the album.” The song’s lyrics are quintessential Beach Boys nostalgia: “Tuning in the latest star from the dashboard of my car, /Cruisin’ at 7, push-button heaven, /Capturing memories from afar in my car, /Feel the music in the air, find a song to take us there, /It’s paradise when I lift up my antenna, receiving your signal like a prayer, /That’s why God made the radio…”

“Devil’s Radio,” George Harrison, 1987

Harrison spent the mid-1980s on hiatus from the music business after his last two albums had charted poorly. In 1987, working with producer friend Jeff Lynne and luminaries like Eric Clapton and Elton John, Harrison wrote a quality batch of tunes for a successful comeback LP, “Cloud Nine,” which reached #8 on US album charts that year (#10 in the UK). Probably the most aggressive track was “Devil’s Radio,” which was inspired by a church billboard Harrison had seen stating “Gossip is The Devil’s Radio…Don’t Be a Broadcaster.” The lyrics are an attack on gossip, trivia and cynical talk radio which spreads inaccuracies and falsehoods, a theme that hit close to home for Harrison, who had felt victimized by unfair media as an ex-Beatle, and unable to lead a normal life: “Oh yeah, gossip, gossip, oh yeah, /I hear it through the day, airwaves gettin’ filled with gossip broadcast to and fro on the devil’s radio, /It’s all across our lives, like a weed it’s spread ’til nothing else has space to grow, /The devil’s radio…”

“You Turn Me On, I’m a Radio,” Joni Mitchell, 1972

As Mitchell was writing and recording a smart new batch of confessional songs for her fifth LP, “For the Roses,” her record label expressed a desire for her to write something that could gain Top 40 radio airplay. She responded with “You Turn Me On, I’m a Radio,” a lyrically brilliant tune equating romantic communication with radio airwaves. The metaphors she drew nailed the comparison perfectly — sending out signals she hopes he’ll pick up, and turning on a lover like turning on a radio. It wasn’t a huge hit, but it reached #25 in the US and #10 in her native Canada, and warmed up her mainstream audiences for the hits to come on her next LP “Court and Spark.” How poignant that former lover Graham Nash played the distinctive harmonica part on the recording: “Oh honey, you turn me on, I’m a radio, /I’m a country station, I’m a little bit corny, /I’m a wildwood flower waving for you, a broadcasting tower waving for you… /If your head says ‘forget it’ but your heart’s still smokin’, /Call me at the station, the lines are open…”

“Mohammed’s Radio,” Warren Zevon, 1976

From the beginning, Zevon was an enigmatic songwriter, with incisive, ironic lyrics that were often open to multiple interpretations. From his self-titled 1976 major label debut comes “Mohammed’s Radio,” which touches on themes like redemption, escapism, mysticism and negativity. Is Mohammed an Islamic DJ? A neighbor who played his radio too loud? Zevon never elaborated. Noted critic Dave Marsh ranked the tune “near the top of a list of best songs about radio.” Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks, Waddy Wachtel and Bobby Keys all participated in the session, and Linda Ronstadt made it one of several Zevon songs she covered on her own albums: “In walked the village idiot and his face was all aglow, /He’s been up all night listening to Mohammed’s radio, /Don’t it make you want to rock and roll all night long, Mohammed’s radio, /I heard somebody singing sweet and soulful on the radio, Mohammed’s radio…”

“The Radio Song,” Joe Walsh, 1987

Walsh had been a rising talent with The James Gang in the late ’60s and early ’70s, then a big solo act in the mid-’70s and eventually a full-fledged member of The Eagles. He continued to maintain a solo career, with anthemic rock songs featuring tongue-in-cheek lyrics (his Top Ten hit “Life’s Been Good” poked fun at his status as an egotistical rock star). He hit a dry patch in the mid/late ’80s when his 1987 LP “Got Any Gum?” tanked at #116, but the likable pop rock tune “The Radio Song” nevertheless reached #8 on the mainstream rock tracks chart. The music video for the song featured Wolfman Jack, and Walsh in a comical role: “I like to sit in a silent place, inside the silence is a melody, /Voices singing harmony, I close my eyes and listen carefully, /The silence starts to get loud, /It’s like your favorite station playing your favorite song, /Just like they do on the radio…”

“Radio Ga Ga,” Queen, 1984

In 1984, when Queen drummer Roger Taylor was driving in Los Angeles with his 12-year-old son, the boy spoke disparagingly about the music he was hearing, calling it “radio ca-ca.” That incident inspired Taylor to write “Radio Ga Ga,” a nostalgic defense of radio, with lyrics that disapprove of television overtaking radio in mainstream popularity. “In the past, people turned to radio to hear comedy, drama or science fiction, and you had to use your imagination,” Taylor said. “That’s part of what the song’s about, really. That, and the fact that music videos seem to be taking over almost from the aural side. The visual side seems to be almost more important now, and that’s a shame.” The song was a huge #1 in the UK and all over Europe, and #16 in the US: “I’d sit alone and watch your light, my only friend through teenage nights, /And everything I had to know, I heard it on my radio, /So stick around ’cause we might miss you, when we grow tired of all this visual, /All we hear is radio ga ga, radio goo goo, radio ga ga, /All we hear is radio ga ga, radio blah blah…”

“Do You Remember Rock ‘n’ Roll Radio,” The Ramones, 1980

To many critics and fans, punk rock’s finest moments came from The Ramones, the New York band that exploded in the punk culture in 1976 even if, almost by design, they were never much of a commercial success and didn’t have a hit single. The Ramones sought to return rock music to its most basic roots, abandoning such offshoots as late 1960s psychedelic rock and early ’70s progressive rock. On their fourth LP, “End of the Century,” which was their highest charting at #44 (#14 in the UK), the featured song was “Do You Remember Rock ‘n’ Roll Radio?” described as “a thunderous paean to radio as it should be.” The track opens with a simulation of a radio dial being tuned across stations before a DJ introduces the song. It uses more complex instrumentation and production than typical of the band’s output (particularly sax and organ), with lyrics that, while calling out ’60s TV music programs, actually longed for the radio of their youth: “Rockin’, rock ‘n’ roll radio, let’s go, /Do you remember Hullabaloo, Upbeat, Shinding and Ed Sullivan too?, Do you remember rock ‘n’ roll radio?…”

“Radio, Radio,” Elvis Costello, 1977

In 1977, as the British music scene was in the grip of punk rock, Costello’s debut LPs had “the raw energy and sass of punk but with densely layered wordplay,” as Rolling Stone put it. In 1978, “Radio Radio” was released in the UK as a stand-alone single, a reworking of an early tune he’d written called “Radio Soul.” The new version was far more aggressive with sarcastic lyrics that criticized the creeping commercialism of British radio. Costello said, “When you get into the business, you realize it’s about some guy with a sack of money giving it to somebody so that they play your record enough times that people get batted to death with it, and that makes it a hit.” When he appeared on “Saturday Night Live,” he abruptly stopped performing his debut single “Less Than Zero” and played “Radio Radio” instead, alienating the producers: “Radio is a sound salvation, radio is cleaning up the nation, /They say you better listen to the voice of reason, but they don’t give you any choice ’cause they think that it’s treason, /So you had better do as you are told, you better listen to the radio, /I wanna bite the hand that feeds me…”

“The Spirit of Radio,” Rush, 1980

Regular readers of this blog know I am no fan of Rush because I can’t abide Geddy Lee’s shrill, affected vocal style, but occasionally one of their songs was interesting enough to force me to endure the singing in order to enjoy the rest of the music. “The Spirit of Radio,” a single from their 1980 LP “Permanent Waves,” is one example of that. Inspired by the slogan of the Ontario, Canada-based radio station CFNY-FM, the song became Rush’s first Top 30 hit in Canada, although it reached only #51 in the US. Lyrically, the song is yet another lament on the change of FM radio from free-form to commercial formats during the late 1970s (although CFNY was one of those stations that had not yet abandoned free-form programming): “Invisible airwaves crackle with life, bright antennae bristle with the energy, /Emotional feedback on timeless wavelength bearing a gift beyond price, almost free, /It’s really just a question of your honesty, /One likes to believe in the freedom of music, /But glittering prizes and endless compromises shatter the illusion of integrity…”

“The Last DJ,” Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, 2002

Petty had sparred with record business folks more than once in his career, and he did it again with his 2002 LP “The Last DJ,” which included several tracks that took direct shots at the greed that prevails in the music industry. In particular, the song “The Last DJ” is about a disc jockey in Florida who became so frustrated with his inability to play what he wants that he moves to Mexico and gets his playlist freedom back. Several radio stations, especially those owned by the conservative Clear Channel Communications, banned it for being “anti-radio.” Said Petty, “I was elated when it was banned. I remember when radio meant something. We enjoyed the people who were on it. They had personalities. They were people of taste who we trusted. And I see that vanishing.” It managed a #22 spot on mainstream rock charts but the ban kept it from pop charts: “Well, the top brass don’t like him talking so much, and he won’t play what they say to play , /And he don’t want to change what don’t need to change, /There goes the last DJ who plays what he wants to play…”

“Overnight Sensation (Hit Record),” The Raspberries, 1973

Cleveland’s favorite sons The Raspberries were pioneers of power pop, exploding out of the gate with an irresistible hit, “Go All the Way,” in 1972. Although most critics loved them, some observers saw them as inferior Beatles imitators, which really rankled their lead singer and songwriter Eric Carmen. By 1974, the band was in its final months before dissolving, and Carmen came up with “Overnight Sensation (Hit Record),” which critic Mark Deming said “may be Carmen’s most impressive creation, an epic-scale piece about the thrill of hearing your song on the radio.” Ironically, he’d already had his hit record two years earlier, but he longed to be taken more seriously and wrote “Overnight Sensation” as a theatrical number, beginning with just a piano and voice and building to a grand Spectorian production, with lyrics that bluntly stated his obsession with radio play. It reached #18 on pop charts, but the band broke up, and Carmen began a solo career. “I just want a hit record, yeah, wanna hear it on the radio, /Want a big hit record, yeah, one that everybody’s got to know, /Well, if the program director don’t pull it, it’s time to get back the bullet, /So bring the group down to the station, you’re gonna be an overnight sensation…”

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Honorable mentions:

I Bet You They Won’t Play This Song on the Radio,” Monty Python, 1980

Shit on the Radio,” Nelly Furtado, 2000

Mr. Radio,” ELO, 1971

The Nightfly,” Donald Fagen, 1982

Radio Free Europe,” R.E.M., 1981

Radio Waves,” Roger Waters, 1987

Video Killed the Radio Star,” The Buggles, 1981

Turn Up the Radio,” Madonna, 2012

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Stoking the starmaker machinery behind the popular song

For more than a decade, I have been writing about the classic rock music of the 1955-1990 era and the musicians who made it.

I’ve never cared all that much about the soap-opera side stories of who sold their back catalog for a zillion dollars, who married/divorced/slept with whom, who got shafted by unscrupulous managers and record companies, or who self-destructed from overdoses or frightfully bad behavior.

For me, it’s all about THE MUSIC. The artistry, the instrumental and vocal performances, the lyrics, the recorded works.

So when just about every media outlet out there published extensive obituaries and tributes recently following the death of record industry honcho Clive Davis on June 22 at age 94, I sighed and thought, Well, just about everyone I’ve ever written about in depth has been a musician, but I guess I’ll have to write something about him for the blog. He was simply too big a figure to ignore.

Along with Ahmet Ertegun at Atlantic and Mo Ostin at Warner Brothers, Davis was considered one of the three major players in the music business (in terms of artist development and representation) throughout the ’60s/’70s/’80s heyday and beyond. These three men, for better or worse, influenced the careers of the vast majority of popular music artists of the rock era.

I’m not naive. I know it takes money, and a lot of it, for an artist’s work to be made, promoted and presented to the public. I’ve just never been interested in the business side of the music industry. It’s the necessary evil, and there is a boatload of evidence to show that far too many of those who handle financial matters in the music business — managers, agents, record company execs — have been notoriously greedy, cutthroat, even cruel in their dealings with the people responsible for making the art.

Davis was not necessarily any of those things. Perhaps he was none of them. But he was first and foremost a businessman, not a musician. He has never written songs nor played an instrument. In his autobiography, he confessed that music meant little to him in his childhood and young adulthood. “I knew nothing about music,” he said in “Clive Davis: The Soundtrack of Our Lives,” the 2017 documentary about his career.

What he did know was how to recognize and sign promising musicians to recording contracts with whatever label he was working for at the time, and promote their work with an eye laser-focused on commercial success.

Some industry observers would say he seemed just as interested in self-promotion and the role he played in the success of the artists he came in contact with. But I must say, it was a revelation to see how many of them came forward to state publicly how much they appreciated him. I’ve read a lot of gushing praise of Davis from legends like Bruce Springsteen, Alan Parsons, Barbra Streisand, Barry Manilow and Carlos Santana, all of whom had effusively complimentary things to say about the man who played a pivotal role at some point in their careers.

Manilow and Davis in the late 1970s

“For fifty years,” said Manilow, “we worked together, created together, argued together, and celebrated together. Yes, some would say it was business. But to Clive, I think it was more than that. It was family. And I was honored to be a part of his. Thank you, Clive. I wish we could do it all again.”

“Over here on E Street,” wrote Springsteen, “we mourn the death of the great record man and close friend Clive Davis. He changed my life in 1972 when he signed me to Columbia Records. He treated me with the same respect and kindness as a 22-year-old nobody as he did after all my success. He was a great man.”

Kenny G, the jazz saxophonist who broke through in 1986 with his “Songbird” hit single on Arista, credits Davis with his mainstream success. “He had an instinct about talent and could see things that others couldn’t,” he said. “And he knew how to connect all the parts — the songs, the artists, the writers, the producers, the performances, the sound — and then he knew what to do with it to have it make an impact on millions of people. Clive Davis changed my life, as he did for so many others.”

Said Streisand last week, “Back in 1970, Clive encouraged me to meet with producer Richard Perry to record an album of songs by contemporary writers like Joni Mitchell, Randy Newman, Laura Nyro and Gordon Lightfoot. The album ‘Stoney End’ opened new doors for me and became one of my most successful. I’m forever grateful for Clive’s vision and support.”

Davis with Streisand in the 1990s

But he has always had his detractors, particularly those artists who felt he meddled in their artistry. Even Springsteen conceded that when Davis first heard the tapes of his debut LP “Greetings From Asbury Park,” his response was “I don’t hear a single.” For Davis, getting a hit on the radio was his all-encompassing goal, and he had little patience for musicians who were adamant about following their muse if he felt it lacked commercial Top 40 appeal.

Melissa Manchester, who worked with Davis at Arista, remembered both good and bad times with him. “I struggled with Clive’s vision for my career sometimes.  He struggled to understand me sometimes.  I’d had great success and withering disappointments with him but, in the end, I was grateful that he believed in my talent in an unwavering way for so long.”

Davis claimed credit for resurrecting the career of Rod Stewart in the 2000s by encouraging him to sing the American Songbook, but Stewart had mixed feelings about the way Davis handled that period. “Clive was involved to the extent of being too involved,” Stewart said. “He would take these songs and change keys and not even bother about whether I could sing in that key or not.” 

Paul Simon recalled numerous disagreements with Davis about which songs should be the singles. In 1973, Simon wanted “American Tune” as the lead single from his “There Goes Rhymin’ Simon” album, while Davis argued for “Kodachrome.” Simon’s choice is the far better song, but Davis felt “Kodachrome” would have wider Top 40 acceptance, and he turned out to be right, which Simon eventually grudgingly admitted. Three years earlier, Davis had told Simon in no uncertain terms that his decision to break up with Art Garfunkel and pursue a solo career was wrongheaded. “He called it ‘career suicide,’ which really stung,” Simon said. “I felt, ‘How does he know what I’ll do on my own? Maybe my best work is still ahead of me.'” (I’d say Simon’s extraordinary solo catalog speaks for itself.)

A man cradles a phone receiver against his shoulder with his legs crossed while he reviews documents on his lap.

Davis entered the music business in the early ’60s as a lawyer, working at a New York firm where Columbia Records (and CBS, its parent company) were clients. At that time Columbia focused on Broadway and film soundtrack albums, but when Davis was named head of A&R there, he saw the nascent commercial path of rock music and began pursuing artists who were among the more adventurous purveyors of it. Based on his early track record, he was pretty good, maybe very good, at identifying creative types who showed potential.

Perhaps most famously, Davis heard Janis Joplin perform with Big Brother and the Holding Company at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967. “Joplin was mesmerizing, like a white tornado,” Davis said. “I felt my spine tingle and my arms vibrate. I realized this was going to be the future. I could feel it in my bones.” He persuaded her to join Columbia, and other acts like Blood, Sweat & Tears, Santana and Chicago soon followed. Eventually, he brought Laura Nyro, Johnny Winter, Earth, Wind & Fire, Billy Joel and Neil Diamond into the fold as well.

Davis with Joplin, 1968

To tell Davis’s full story, I would have to delve into the industry ugliness that, as I said before, has nothing to do with the music. Suffice it to say, in 1973, Columbia fired Davis for some allegedly shady stuff for which he was later exonerated, but Davis bounced back a year later by taking over the foundering Bell Records label and renaming it Arista Records.

One of the acts he chose to retain from Bell was Barry Manilow, and he helped steer the singer to his first #1 hit, “Mandy,” also the first chart-topper for Arista. “It was Barry that enabled and opened up the horizon to then sign a Dionne Warwick, to sign the queen of soul, Aretha Franklin, and eventually led to signing Whitney Houston,” Davis said.

His success with Manilow indeed got the ball rolling for the new label, attracting legacy talent and new acts alike. Davis successfully signed an eclectic stew of artists, including mainstream folks like Melissa Manchester, Air Supply, Eric Carmen and Alan Parsons Project, harder rock acts like The Kinks, Lou Reed, Patti Smith and The Grateful Dead, and R&B stars like Franklin and Warwick.

“I can think of no other record man that seemed to have that magical ability to know a hit when he heard a song,” said Warwick. “The entire music industry I’m sure will mourn his passing. He was one of a kind.”

Clearly, Davis was remarkably resilient, a character trait he seemingly developed at a relatively early age when he lost both parents within months of each other when he was just 18. Professional setbacks that he endured which might have devastated other men merely served to further his resolve. “Clive was never willing to give up,” said music industry investor Charles Goldstuck. “No matter how tough or intractable a problem was, he always believed that there was a solution, and he would fight relentlessly to find it and make it happen.”

In the late ’80s and into the ’90s, Davis was instrumental in Arista entering joint ventures with several hip-hop labels like LaFace Records and Puff Daddy’s Bad Boy Records, and he became a big promoter of acts like Usher, TLC, Outkast and Toni Braxton. Then in 2000, he founded J Records, launching Alicia Keys’s career, among others. In the mid-2000s, Davis scored hits with Keys, Eddie Vedder, and Usher, and he partnered with “American Idol” to release albums from its winners, including Carrie Underwood and Kelly Clarkson.

Davis with Houston in 2005

When asked what his crowning achievement was, Davis mentioned two. First was the signing, molding and championing of diva Whitney “The Voice” Houston, one of the most honored artists of all time, who sold more than 200 million records in her 30-year career before her tragic death in 2012 at age 48. Said Davis about her: “She had a voice, an innocence, a power and a beauty that was so stunning. In my view, she was the greatest contemporary singer of all time.”

The second was the role he played in the rejuvenation of Carlos Santana’s career with 1999’s “Supernatural” LP, a multiplatinum seller with multiple collaborators (notably Rob Thomas from Matchbox 20 on “Smooth,” a superb single that sat at #1 for nearly three months that year). The album won nine Grammys, displacing Michel Jackson’s “Thriller” as the most honored album ever.

Said the guitarist last week, “Clive was a visionary. He could hear the intangible before anyone else could see it. He believed in Santana from the beginning, and years later he believed in us again. He understood that music is more than entertainment; it’s a healing force, and he dedicated his life to championing artists and helping them share their gifts with the world. Because of his vision, countless musicians were able to reach hearts across the planet. I’m forever grateful.”

Santana and Davis with their “Supernatural” Grammy haul in 2000

The most visible sign of Davis’s prominence in the industry all these years — in addition to the fact that he was usually referred to by his first name alone — was the annual gala event he hosted every year on the eve of the Grammy Awards. It was classic Davis glitz and glamour all the way, with a virtual Who’s Who of major music people on both the artistic and business sides, plus movie celebrities and national politicians. His friends say it was Davis’s way of paying back an industry that had been (mostly) extremely good to him. His enemies would counter that it was an annual opportunity to remind the world that Clive Davis was “and still is” the most important man in the business. Indeed, the 2026 party in February was yet another in a decades-long tradition, even though Davis’s age limited his usual place in the limelight as MC.

Rest in peace, Clive. You lived about as full a life as anyone ever has in the music business.

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