Danny Goldberg
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Danny Goldberg, President of Gold Village Entertainment (GVE), has worked in the music business as a personal manager, record company President, public relations man, and journalist since the late 1960s.
He has returned to personal management.
From 1983-1992, Goldberg was the founder and President of Gold Mountain Entertainment, a personal management firm whose clients included Nirvana, Hole, Sonic Youth, The Beastie Boys, Bonnie Raitt, The Allman Brothers, and Rickie Lee Jones.
Directly prior to the creation of Gold Village, Goldberg had been CEO of Air America Radio from 2005 until mid 2006 overseeing the seven day a week, 24 hour a day network whose programs were broadband on over 80 radio stations including more than 30 owned by Clear Channel.
Goldberg formed the independent label Artemis Records in 1999 and ran until January of 2004. Daniel Glass joined Goldberg at Artemis as Executive Vice President, and after a few months he was named President. Artemis was the # 1 U.S. independent label in terms of market share from 2001-03. It released the last three albums of Warren Zevon's career including the Grammy winning “The Wind,” five albums by Steve Earle including his Grammy winner “The Revolution Starts Now,” as well as gold albums by Kittie, Kurupt and Khia. Artemis also released the triple-platinum album “Who Let The Dogs Out” by the Baha Men, as well as albums by The Pretenders, Rickie Lee Jones and Jimmy Vaughn.
From 1994-98, Goldberg was Chairman and CEO of the Mercury Records Group, which was the number one U.S. label group in terms of market share in 1998. The Mercury Records Group included music form virtually all major genres; pop, R&B, hip-hop, country, jazz and rock and roll via its labels Motown, Def Jam, Deutsche Gramophone, Verve, Mercury Records and Mercury Nashville, all of which reported to and were supervised by Goldberg.
Prior to coming to Mercury, Goldberg was Chairman and CEO of Warner Bros. Records in 1995, during which time Warner Bros. was the number one U.S. record label. In 1993-94, he was President of Atlantic Records, also a division of the Warner Music Group, which likewise attained the number one ranking among U.S. companies during Goldberg’s tenure.
Earlier in his career, Goldberg formed and co-owned Modern Records, which released Stevie Nicks' solo albums including her number one album “Bella Donna”. Prior to that Goldberg was Vice-President of Led Zeppelin's Swan Song Records.
In 1980, Goldberg co-produced and co-directed the rock documentary feature, “No Nukes”, starring Bruce Springsteen, Gil Scott Heron, Bonnie Raitt, and Jackson Browne. In 2004 he was the Executive Producer of the documentary about Steve Earle, “Just An American Boy.” He was the Executive Producer of the multi-platinum soundtrack of music from the TV series "Miami Vice" and was the Music Supervisor on numerous feature films including "Dirty Dancing". He also produced voter registration and anti-drug TV spots for MTV.
Goldberg began his career as a music journalist having written for, among others, The Los Angeles Times, Rolling Stone, The Village Voice and Billboard. He is also the author of the book “How The Left Lost Teen Spirit.” He has written for the Los Angeles Times, The Nation, and The American Prospect, among others.
Goldberg was Chair of the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Southern California from 1987-94 and its President from 1995-2005. He continues to serve on its Board and is also on the Board of the NYCLU, The Nation Institute, The American Prospect and Americans for Peace Now. He is a past Executive Vice-President of the American Jewish Congress.
With Robert Greenwald he created RDV Books which published half a dozen progressive civil liberties books including “It’s A Free Country “ an anthology about civil liberties post 9/11 which included pieces by Cornel West, Michael Moore, Congressman Jerrold Nadler and artwork by “The Simpsons” creator Matt Groening.
Revolvered 15:29, 2 March 2007 (UTC) From the public biography of Danny Goldberg.