User:Vixhenry/George Daly (Music Industry)

George Daly is a music executive, songwriter, musician, video and music producer and audio inventor and technologist, who originally worked as as an A&R (Artist & Repertoire) music executive. He has worked with and/or introduced many notable artists, with groups as varied as Janis Joplin, The Tubes, The Cars ,Tool, Huey Lewis, and Carlos Santana.

Moving from the Washington, DC area to San Francisco in the ‘60’s, Daly befriended Janis Joplin and, due to that link, was eventually hired by Columbia Records as San Francisco Head of A&R during the Clive Davis era. Daly followed this up with being named head of A&R at Elektra/Asylum Records, followed by his direct hiring by legendary label chief Ahmet Ertegun at Atlantic Records (WMG), and Zoo Entertainment (Bertelsmann Music Group /BMG) where he was again named Vice President of A&R. He is the the recipient of multiple Gold and Platinum awards.

As a significant executive in the music industry, Daly has discovered such original music talents as the seminal new-wave group The Cars (whom he signed to a long-term Elektra/Asylum deal on a paper napkin, after their live performance at Harvard University where his sister was attending) whose first album, The Cars, stayed on the charts for an astonishing 139 Weeks and sold over six million copies in the US, the radical Bay Area surreal pop performers, The Tubes, who he brought to A&M Records, as well as contracting modern theatrical rockers, Green Jelly, who morphed into modern edge Multi-Platinum rockers, Tool. In addition, in various roles Mr. Daly has also worked professionally with many of the classic music legends including writing with Boz Scaggs his seminal ballad recorded by Scaggs 'Slow Dancer', of the Scaggs album of the same name, considered by some to be Scaggs' greatest musical achievement , producing Huey Lewis as well as Carlos Santana by serving as the Executive Producer and line producer of the Carlos Santana interactive video life story DVD, The River of Color and Sound

Early Life - Science and Music
Born George William Daly, Jr., 10 June, 1945, the second of six siblings, at the US Naval Medical Hospital at Annapolis, MD of Captain George William Daly, Sr., former Deputy Chief of Industrial Relations for the US Navy and Frances Helen Daly, a housewife and artistic mentor to the young George. He showed an aptitude in his early years for both science and invention as well as music, writing his first song in 4th grade as he and his classmates studied the state of Florida, "Miami Is The Place You Should Be" and crafting early electric guitars and sound amplifier circuits. In the eighth grade, he created a sound over light wave link - his own invention for a science fair. By his early teens he was playing guitar, bass and keyboards and writing songs resulting in the formation of several garage bands, culminating in the seminal DC garage band, The Hangmen, credited on record with the singles "What a Girl Can't Do", "Faces" and "Bad Goodbye", all released on Monument Records, of which "...Girl..." (written by Hangman guitarist Tom Guernsey and singer Joe Triplett and recorded with them and Hangmen drummer Bob Berberich and other session musicians), pushed the Beatles from the number one chart position in the DC and Baltimore region.

Music Industry
Daly's first post after joining Columbia Records in 1969 was heading the San Francisco A&R division of Columbia Records under the guidance of Clive Davis. This was a time when Columbia Records entered the West Coast rock market with a vengeance, opening both a state-of-the art recording studio (CBS recording studio, Folsom St, San Francisco) and establishing major label Columbia Records' A&R offices in San Francisco at Fisherman's Wharf. Including that entry point in the music business, Daly has been a senior executive at Columbia Records, Elektra/Asylum Records, Atlantic Records and BMG, four of the biggest U.S. record labels and is presently the CEO of About Records distributed by Universal Music Group/UMG/Fontana. As an A&R executive, Daly has had responsibility for, and sometimes introduced the world to, many of the ground-breaking music acts that eventually defined their genre and became legends, including Janis Joplin, Carlos Santana, The Cars and Tool among others. Throughout his career he had the opportunity to work directly under such historically significant music business icons such as the famous golden-eared and ground-breaking Clive Davis, the legendary Atlantic Recording Company founder Ahmet Ertegun, as well as songman and longtime major music business leader and serial president, CEO and Chairman of Atco, Atlantic, Warner Music, MCA, Universal Music Group and now in 2011, Chairman, Sony Music Entertainment, Doug Morris.

Daly's tenure in the music businesses' modern high-sales era coincides almost exactly with the rise of the modern "tonnage" popularity of recorded music, through and up to the present rapid growth of all the contemporary online digital music delivery systems of social media oriented and iPhone-format mobile phone oriented channels of subscription and distribution of popular music.

Song Writing and Music Performance
Daly’s music career as a songwriter and performer initially involved founding and performing in three historically noteworthy DC bands - The Hangmen, The Dolphin, and Grin. Initially playing guitar and keyboards and writing songs for The Hangmen in 1964, the band, which toured behind a #1 regional hit that pushed the Beatles off the #1 position in local radio charts. Daly's, The Hangmen band performances instigated at least one 3000+ person fan riot in suburban Virginia, written up in Billboard magazine as one of the first such '60's US "rock & roll riots" prior to the Beatles complete dominance of the charts. He followed this by creating the rarely-heard but historically important and short-lived DC folk-blues band, The Dolphin (Sire Records/London Records), in 1967, which included Daly, Berberich, Paul Dowel, and later Nils Lofgren but originally included the guitar immortal Roy Buchanan, called in Rolling Stone Magazine in 1968 "one of the three greatest living guitarists". He followed up in 1968 by forming the band the Grin, which he founded with fellow Hangmen alumni and drummer friend Bob Berberich and, again with the young accordionist turned telecaster guitarist extraordinaire Nils Lofgren , before Lofgren recorded on several Neil Young albums and later joined Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band.

Technology and Patents
Daly holds several US patents for audio and musical devices and is inventor of various audio devices including the early electrical guitar processor, the Moan Tone used by Nils Lofgren and others in live performance and recording and the recording studio device, Master Mount (later sold to Tandy Corp.) and is holder of US Patent # 4,151,971 and US Patent 4,074,883 as well as the US Patent App. for a novel digital sound/human response-altering technology, HaloField. During a break from the music business of several years, Daly consulted for the US Government's satellite corporation and designed for Comcast/STC, the PSR2000, the first prototype desktop appliance for digital music downloads, consulting to Hartford Gunn, then President of STC, and prior first president of PBS. In 1997 Daly, at the request of Keith Richards and their producer at the time, industry icon Rob Fraboni, went on the road with the Rolling Stones during their Bridges To Babylon tour and recorded the Stones for six nights on the tour in California and Nevada using Daly’s experimental Aura-Live recording technology. These recordings have not been released as of 2011 and are the possession of the Rolling Stones band. At the long-time behest of Fraboni, Daly experimented with multiple technologies over several years before ultimately creating the “digital to analog-sounding processor”, HaloField, a digital audio "human response altering" process said to have the same somatic effect on listeners as pure analog reproduction of sound.

Video, TV, Digital Multimedia, and Music Production
As head of A&R at three of the largest major record labels as well as his own, Daly has overseen many hundreds of artist signings and productions of album recordings, including multi-platinum artists the Cars, Carlos Santana, Tool, Boz Scaggs, Green Jelly and many others as well as live recordings of the Rolling Stones in partnership with producer Rob Fraboni, as well as rehearsals and demos with, chronologically, The Hangmen, (originally with himself, David Ottley, Thomas Guernsey, Robert Berberich and Paul Dowell) with their album Bittersweet, Monument Records); the Dolphin with Dowell, Berberich, Lofgren and Roy Buchanan on Sire Records; The Grin with Nils Lofgren; The Tubes (rehearsal and studio sessions CBS Records; and sessions co-produced with Stephen Barncard); Huey Lewis (in Clover on Pyramid Records); Marc V (Elektra Records); Family Brown (United Artists Records); Pamela Polland (Columbia Records) ; Boulder (Boulder, Elektra Records); Blue Train, (Blue Train, All I Want Is You) which gave BMG/Zoo it's first Top 40 US Hit; Laura Allan, the singer often cited as the important inspiration to Joni Mitchell in her Blue and post blue vocal style; Booker T. (Bittersweet, Epic Records); Skinny Songs for Heidi Roizen; Tim Hockenberry, (Back In Your Arms, About Records/Universal Music Group); Larkin Gayle (Two Hands, About Records/Universal Music Group; Jon Collins, About Records and others.

Daly also produced what is believed to be the first digitally recorded (SoundStream™ system) live music video and TV series, StudioLive(tm), staring famed jazz trumpeter Freddie Hubbard and directed by Ric Trader. The digital audio music for this production was released on Elektra Records as the album Fly Like The Wind and the one-hour TV pilot was sold to consumers by Sony Home Video and broadcast on PBS. He also wrote, produced and served as a Executive Producer of the multimedia life story of Carlos Santana, The River of Color and Sound for Polygram Multimedia. Daly has also been a consultant to the Smithsonian Institution, where he produced the long-running “Star Spangled Banner” original instrument exhibit recording at the Museum of American History site in Washington, DC. Daly consulted with the Smithsonian Institution and produced for that institution a rare 1844 version of Francis Scott Key’s original lyrics to the Star Spangled Banner, using an orchestra playing “rare vintage instruments” from the 19th century, made available to him by the Museum of American History in conjunction with Dr. Arthur Mollela, then Director of the Museum.

Lifetime Music Business Governance and Affiliations
Mr. Daly is a founding Board of Governors member and co-founder of the San Francisco chapter of NARAS (former Governor), and is a lifetime member of NARAS as a Los Angeles member.