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Music mogul Clive Davis dead at 94

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Music mogul Clive Davis, who oversaw the monumental careers of Whitney Houston, Sean “Diddy” Combs, Kelly Clarkson and more, has died at the age of 94.

Davis passed away peacefully from age-related illness at his home in Manhattan, his family confirmed in a statement to Page Six.

He was surrounded by his family and loved ones, the statement said.

‘To the world, our father was the iconic music legend whose vision, instincts, and relentless pursuit of excellence shaped the soundtrack of countless lives,” Davis’ family told us. “He discovered, mentored, and championed the greatest artists in modern music history, leaving an indelible mark on culture that will endure for generations.”

“To his family, Clive was Dad and Granddaddy, the steady presence at the center of our lives, the source of wisdom, strength, encouragement, and unconditional love,” Davis’ loved ones continued. “No matter how extraordinary his professional accomplishments, he never lost sight of what mattered most: the people he loved.”

The statement also said the father of four’s family was his “greatest pride and deepest joy” throughout “every chapter of his remarkable life.”

“Today, we celebrate not only a towering figure whose influence changed music forever, but the man who led our family with grace, generosity, and kindness,” the family said. “We will miss him greatly, cherish him always, and carry his love with us for the rest of our lives.”

Davis was hospitalized in New York City on May 29, with a source telling TMZ that he was suffering from “an upper respiratory infection and out of an abundance of caution, he was admitted to the hospital.”

At the time, the insider said he was expected to be released within 24 hours.

Prior to his hospitalization, the iconic producer was spotted at the Gordon Parks Foundation Awards Dinner and Auction in New York City on May 19.

The Arista Records founder was diagnosed with Bell’s Palsy in February 2021, with a rep saying that the time that he was “being treated with antibiotics and steroids” and was “expected to recover within six to eight weeks.”

Davis had an early start as a music mogul — after breaking into the business in the early 1960s, he was appointed president of Columbia Records at the age of 35 in 1967.

After visiting the Monterey Pop Festival that year, Davis signed Janis Joplin and her band, Big Brother and the Holding Company, to Columbia — his first for the iconic label.

He subsequently became founder and president of Arista Records in 1974, a post he held up until 2000, when he founded J Records.

Under the newly founded label, he personally selected and pitched the 1974 song “Mandy” to Barry Manilow, and it became the label’s first hit record.

Among the hundreds of chart-topping singles overseen by the music legend over the decades are Whitney Houston’s “Greatest Love of All,” Simon & Garfunkel’s “Bridge Over Troubled Water,” Billy Joel’s “Piano Man,” Santana’s “Smooth,” Alicia Keys’ “Fallin” and Kelly Clarkson’s “Since U Been Gone,” among many others.

Davis served as Chief Creative Officer of Sony Music Entertainment beginning in late 2008 until his death.

Davis was known for his iconic pre-Grammy parties, which began in 1975 and were only interrupted by Davis’ 2021 Bell’s Palsy diagnosis.

Though the mogul was forced to postpone the second half of his traditional bash, a rep reassured fans at the time that the party would go on.

“He is in good spirits and looks forward to doing the second half of his pre-Grammy gala in May,” the rep said.

In 2014, the Grammy’s labeled the event “the second most coveted ticket” of the Grammys. “Davis is nothing short of a living legend in the music industry, and his parties have become legendary as the most star-studded and excitement-packed of VIP bashes,” a release read.

“Through the years, an array of A-list talents have performed at these events, turning the celebrations into the ultimate, intimate, ‘insider’ concerts.”

Those “insiders” were nothing short of music’s greatest names. Repeat attendees have included John Legend, Joni Mitchell, Manilow, Jennifer Hudson, and Dave Grohl.

Throughout the years, other A-listers to drop in have included Paul McCartney, Aretha Franklin, Quincy Jones, and Whitney Houston.

In an interview, Davis once addressed the practical role his pre-Grammy parties had in launching the careers of so many artists.

“Well, all you can really do for an artist is create an opportunity to be seen by tastemakers,” he said. “But if they don’t have the goods to back it up, it just becomes another social function. The value of the music shouldn’t be undermined.”

The exclusive bash has been host to a number of memorable incidents — but in 2012, it was also the setting for a historic tragedy.

On February 11, 2012, Houston — by then a Grammy winning pop and R&B juggernaut — was found dead in her hotel room at the The Beverly Hilton, hours before the gala was set to take place at the same location.

Davis opted to move forward with the event, transitioning it to a somber tribute to the pop songstress, who was discovered by him in her teens.

“To put it simply, Whitney would have wanted the music to go on and her family asked that we carry on,” Davis said at the event, according to the Hollywood Reporter, before asking for a moment of silence for her.

Tony Bennett, Alicia Keys and others honored the late singer onstage in the hours following her death.

Davis exclusively told Page Six in 2022 that Houston was working on getting sober before she died.

“She was showing me what she had done in rehab,” he told us. “How she had given up smoking, how she had cleared her throat of nicotine. And she was wanting to start going in the studio….I never would have thought 48 hours before her death, that she would pass, that there would be that horrendous, premature end to her life.”

Davis added, “She was making a valiant attempt during that period to give up drugs and rehabilitate herself.”

Houston once addressed critics’ claims that Davis was “pulling the strings” behind the scenes in her career.

“Nobody makes me do anything I don’t want to do,” she told Rolling Stone back in 1993. “Clive and I work well together. We get on each other’s nerves sometimes, but we’ve been together 10 years now. Anybody can get on anybody’s nerves over that long a time.”

Of their personal bond, which saw the magnate mentor her to global superstardom, Houston once said, “Clive is a constant. He’s my guide and my confidante and he knows the love songs so well.”

Other stars were equally complimentary. “He’s predictable, yet he’s forward-thinking,” Carly Simon once said, per the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “He’s remarkable in his stamina. He’s very loving, he has a big heart.”

As for Davis’ remarkable eye for talent, he himself said simply, “You look for stars. You look for the makeup of [artists] who can have long-lasting careers and who could be headliners.”

He also addressed his personal relationships with the stars he’s guided

“If an artist knows you have respect for their talent—which I have to feel to my core, to sign them—they know that you’re in their corner,” he told the Guardian in 2014.

Still, the staggering influence he’s exerted over the industry — he won five Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as a non-performer, in 2000 — was almost happenstance, he once divulged.

“I had no idea that I was ever getting into music,” he told the Guardian. “I did not prepare for a music career, and here I’ve found, out of pure luck, that I did have, not only a talent and an ear, but a passion for music. And I have it to this day.”

On his ability to identify talent, Davis told Playboy magazine in 2013: “I didn’t necessarily have an ear, but I think I developed one. Whether there was a natural ear that was triggered, I don’t know the answer to that. But when you see a Joplin or a Springsteen, you know. And the statistics start mounting and give you confidence. You think, ‘My God, yeah, I did say yes to Santana.’”

The music magnate was married and divorced twice — to Helen Cohen from 1956 to 1965 and to Janet Adelberg from 1965 to 1985.

He welcomed son Fred in 1960, daughter Lauren in 1962, son Mitchell in 1970, and son Doug — who is a Grammy Award winning record producer in his own right — in 1972.

Davis publicly came out as bisexual in 2013 in his memoir, “The Soundtrack of My Life,” at the age of 80. He wrote at the time that he’d been in a “strong monogamous relationship” with a man for the previous seven years.

The record producer once said on “The Talks” that “music is a necessary ingredient in people’s lives.”

“No matter what revolution is occurring in technology, it has to understand that music will not be obsoleted,” he stated. “People need music, and they’ve needed it for many years in many different ways; whether you go back to church traditions or other traditions in life, whether it’s pop or soul or rock or jazz… It’s a very, very natural basic ingredient that’s essential to the full enjoyment of life.”

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