Jeff Gold
Jeff Gold (born 1956) is an American music business executive, author, music historian, Grammy Award winning art director, and music memorabilia collector and dealer.
Music Business
[edit]Gold was the first employee of Rhino Records,[1] and in 1975 produced the label's first release, "Go To Rhino Records" by Wild Man Fischer.[2] In 1977 he signed former Thirteenth Floor Elevators' singer Roky Erickson to Rhino, overseeing his comeback single, "Bermuda/The Interpreter,"[3] and in 1981 signed Spirit to the label, supervising the release of their album The Adventures of Kaptain Kopter & Commander Cassidy in Potato Land."[4]"
In 1981 he joined A&M Records as assistant to president Gil Friesen;[1] he was later promoted to vice president of marketing & creative services[5] and worked with The Police, Cat Stevens, Iggy Pop[6] and Bryan Adams.[7] Gold wrote liner notes and helped compile albums by Cat Stevens,[8] Captain Beefheart,[9] and The Flying Burrito Brothers,[10] and was editor of the book "A&M Records: The First 25 Years".[11] Gold art directed album covers for numerous artists including The Neville Brothers, Al Green, and John Hiatt,[12] and in 1991 won a best album package Grammy Award for the Suzanne Vega album Days of Open Hand.[13]
In 1990 Gold joined Warner Bros. Records as senior vice president of creative services, working with artists including Seal,[14] R.E.M.,[15] and the Red Hot Chili Peppers,[16] and art directed album covers for artists including Prince,[12] Miles Davis,[17] Jimi Hendrix,[18] Squeeze[19] and New Order.[20] He received Best Album Cover Grammy nominations for his work on packages for R.E.M, ZZ Top, and Paul Westerberg. He was an executive producer of the albums Stone Free: A Tribute to Jimi Hendrix (featuring Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Seal, and The Cure) and the soundtrack to the Howard Stern movie Private Parts.[12]
In 1991 Gold had the idea to include a Rock The Vote petition postcard supporting the Motor Voter Bill on the back of the longbox for R.E.M's Out of Time CD, resulting in thousands of postcards being delivered to the United States Senate, and lending critical support to the eventual passage of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993. The podcast 99% Invisible devoted an episode to the R.E.M longbox, noting "R.E.M.’s Out of Time is the most politically significant album in the history of the United States. Because of its packaging."[21]
In 1993, Gold helped Warner Bros. Records establish the first online presence for a major record label, with dedicated Warner areas on AOL and CompuServe, and later the first website for a record company.[22] Gold was instrumental in the Warner/Elektra/Atlantic labels decision to sell cd's without the much maligned longbox, leading to an industry-wide phase-out.[23]
Gold was promoted to executive vice president/general manager of Warner Bros. Records in 1995, and left in 1998 in a management shakeup.[24]
Author
[edit]In 2012 Gold's book 101 Essential Rock Records: The Golden Age of Vinyl, From The Beatles to the Sex Pistols, was issued by Gingko Press; it was one of eight books selected by Rolling Stone as "The year's best reading material".[25]
In 2016 Gold's book Total Chaos: The Story of The Stooges/As Told by Iggy Pop, was issued by Third Man Books, a division of Jack White's Third Man Records. It was chosen by Rough Trade as one of their ‘Books of the Year’,[26] and earned rave reviews in Esquire,[27] Mojo, Noisey, and many other publications.[11]
Gold's book, Sittin' In: Jazz Clubs of the 1940's and 1950's, was issued in November 2020 by HarperCollins.[28] Including interviews with Quincy Jones and Sonny Rollins, it was featured in the year-end wrap-ups of the best music books by The Wall Street Journal, The Daily Beast, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, All Music Guide, and The Los Angeles Times, which called it "vivid and beautiful".[29]
Music Historian
[edit]Gold was profiled by Rolling Stone magazine as one of the five top collectors of music memorabilia[30] and named by Billboard as a "leading expert on rare lp's".[31] He was profiled in 2014 by the website Dust & Grooves.[32]
Gold has served as a curatorial consultant to museum exhibitions including the Experience Music Project's Bob Dylan's American Journey: 1955-1966, and Beatlemania![33] He archived the papers of legendary music executive Mo Ostin for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame; and those of A&M Records co-founders Herb Alpert and Jerry Moss for the University of California Los Angeles (U.C.L.A.) special collections library.[34]
Gold was an appraiser on VH1's "Rock Collectors",[35] and is profiled in the books Vinyl Junkies by Brett Milano,[36] Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction To Its Own Past by Simon Reynolds,[37] Why Vinyl Matters by Jennifer Otter Bickerdike (Jennifer Otter Bickerdike: Why Vinyl Matters, ACC Editions, 2017, pp. 208–213), and Iggy Pop & The Stooges: One Night at The Whisky 1970, by Ed Caraeff (Ed Caraeff: Iggy Pop & The Stooges: One Night at The Whiskey 1970, ACC Art Books, 2017, pp 113–117).
Gold has worked on archival and reissue album projects for artists including Jimi Hendrix, the Grateful Dead, The Velvet Underground, The Stooges and Gram Parsons.[12] His discovery of previously undocumented live and studio outtake tapes has led to major label releases, including the Bob Dylan album In Concert—Brandeis University 1963.[38]
Gold has appeared in music documentary films including the 1975 David Bowie BBC documentary Cracked Actor,[39][40] the 2004 Prince BBC documentary Prince's Millions,[41] the 2016 R.E.M. NRK documentary History of the Hit Song,[42] and the 2020 film Music, Money and Madness...Jimi Hendrix in Maui.[43]
In 2013 Gold hosted a panel discussion and multimedia presentation on the vinyl record revival at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles.[44]
In 2019, Longreads ran an article about Gold titled How Jeff Gold Saved Rare Iggy Pop & The Stooges Recordings From the Dump.[45]
Gold operates the music memorabilia website Recordmecca[46] where he also blogs about topics of interest to collectors.
Gold is a well known Bob Dylan expert. In 2012 he appeared on PBS’ History Detectives (2012, Episode 1), authenticating previously unknown Bob Dylan handwritten manuscripts.[47] His 2014 discovery of 149 previously unknown Bob Dylan acetate records received extensive media attention, including articles in The New York Times[48] and The Wall Street Journal.[49] In 2016, Gold and colleague Laura Woolley appraised The Bob Dylan Archive,[11] now housed at the University of Tulsa.
Non-profits
[edit]Gold is a major donor to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's library and archives, which houses The Jeff Gold Collection.[33]
Gold formerly served as co-chairman of the youth voter registration organization Rock The Vote, which presented him (with his wife Jody Uttal) their Founder's Award in 1997.[33]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Hart, Bill (10 November 2016) "Collectability, Sonics and "Essential" Records – Comparing Notes with Jeff Gold, Owner of Recordmecca" The Vinyl Press. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ 45cat Wild Man Fischer "Go To Rhino Records" Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ "Roky Erickson – Bermuda / The Interpreter (1977, Vinyl)". Discogs.
- ^ http://ww.discogs.com/Spirit-The-Adventures-Of-Kaptain-Kopter-Commander-Cassidy-In-Potato-Land/release/1359733 [dead link]
- ^ Hunt, Dennis (2 September 1989) "How Goes the Music Video Revolution" Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ "Live Conversation and Book Launch with Iggy Pop and Jeff Gold, in Detroit and New York" Archived 2017-03-14 at the Wayback Machine Third Man Records. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Discogs Bryan Adams "Into The Fire". Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Discogs Cat Stevens "Footsteps In The Dark – Greatest Hits Volume Two". Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Discogs Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band "The Legendary A&M Sessions". Retrieved 2 February 2017.
- ^ All Music Jeffrey Gold credits. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ a b c ""Total Chaos: The Story of The Stooges/As Told By Iggy Pop" Third Man Books. Retrieved 2 February 2017". Archived from the original on 21 March 2017. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
- ^ a b c d All Music Jeff Gold credits. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ ["Rock On The Net: 33rd Annual Grammy Awards – 1991". www.rockonthenet.com. Retrieved April 28, 2017]
- ^ Billboard, August 17, 1996, page 90.
- ^ Billboard, January 17, 1998, page 20.
- ^ Billboard, April 29, 1995, page 96.
- ^ All Music Miles & Quincy Live At Montreux. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Discogs Jimi Hendrix "Stages". Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Discogs Squeeze "Play". Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Discogs New Order "Republic – The Limited Run". Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Jones, Whitney (27 September 2016) Episode 124 "Longbox" 99% Invisible. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Steve Knopper: Appetite for Self-Destruction: The Spectacular Crash of the Record Industry; Simon & Schuster (2009) page 114
- ^ Steve Knopper: Appetite for Self-Destruction: The Spectacular Crash of the Record Industry; Simon & Schuster (2009) pages 38-39, 114
- ^ Billboard, January 17, 1998, page 9
- ^ Rolling Stone, December 6, 2012, page 56.
- ^ "2016 Books of the Year. Total Chaos: The Story of The Stooges. Rough Trade. Retrieved 2 February 2017". Archived from the original on 21 March 2017. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
- ^ Slate, Jeff (29 November 2016) "Iggy Pop Has Closed the Chapter on The Stooges, but He's Not Ready to Say Goodbye" Esquire. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Sittin' In: Jazz Clubs of the 1940s and 1950s by Jeff Gold. Harper Collins. Retrieved 23 January 2020
- ^ Early Response to Sittin' In. Sittin' In. Retrieved 23 January 2020
- ^ Rolling Stone, December 15, 2005, page 40
- ^ Rogers, Ray (8 April 2016) "Why The Beatles’ Records Are the Auction World's MVP's (Think a $790,000 Price Tag)" Billboard. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Paz, Eilon (9 August 2013) "Jeff Gold: The Man behind RecordMecca shows us records he would never sell." Dust & Grooves. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ a b c ""Jeff Gold Collection: Scope and Contents and Biographical Notes" Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Library and Archives. Retrieved 2 February 2017". Archived from the original on 2 September 2017. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
- ^ ""Jeff Gold Collection: Scope and Contents and Biographical Notes" Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Library and Archives. Retrieved 2 February 2017". Archived from the original on 2 September 2017. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
- ^ (29 January 2000) "Rock Memorabilia to Be Appraised" Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ [Brett Milano: Vinyl Junkies: Adventures in Record Collecting, St. Martin's Press (2003) pages 189-194
- ^ [Simon Reynolds: Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction to Its Own Past, Farrar, Straus and Giroux (2011) pages 15-19]
- ^ Radin, Charles A. (15 October 2010) "Recording of Bob Dylan at Brandeis discovered" Brandeis NOW. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Maarten (4 December 2012) "Undocumented 1970 Acoustic Performance and Interview Tape" Illustrated DB Discography. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ (1975) Cracked Actor: A Film About David Bowie (Jeff Gold appears at 40:36) YouTube. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ The Muse (15 May 2003) "How did all the money from Purple Rain disappear down the Purple Drain?" Prince.org. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ 2016 "History of the Hit Song: Losing My Religion" NKR. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Voss, Ken (16 December 2020) Kiss The Sky, the Re-Experience: World's Greatest Tribute to Jimi Hendrix. Jimi Hendrix Information Management Institute. Retrieved 23 January 2020
- ^ (9 January 2013) "Events: 101 Essential Rock Records: The Golden Age of Vinyl" Grammy Museum at L.A. Live. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Gilbreath, Aaron (31 January 2019) Accidental Music History: How Jeff Gold Saved Rare Iggy Pop & The Stooges Recordings From the Dump. Longreads Retrieved 23 January 2020
- ^ Recordmecca Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Greene, Andy (2 August 2012) "Experts: Bob Dylan's Long-Lost Newport Folk Festival Electric Guitar Found In New Jersey" Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Kozinn, Allan (3 July 2014) "A Collector's Dream: 149 Forgotten Bob Dylan Records Found in a Closet" The New York Times. Retrieved 2 February 2017
- ^ Ayers, Mike. (2 July 2014) "How 149 Unheard Dylan Acetates Surfaced From a Manhattan Closet" Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2 February 2017