Phil Quartararo, the previous EMI, Virgin and Warner Bros. file mogul who helped break Paula Abdul, the Spice Ladies, Linkin Park and quite a few different pop megastars, died Wednesday morning in Los Angeles of most cancers. He was 67.
“I liked serving to an artist’s dream come true,” Quartararo instructed an interviewer in 2021. “I can’t press upon you the satisfaction of doing that.”
Generally known as “Phil Q,” the gregarious, Brooklyn, N.Y.-born Quartararo was a ubiquitous determine within the file business, serving to to interrupt U2 on pop radio within the mid-’80s as senior vp of promotion at Island Data, engineering the Spice Ladies’ advertising and marketing plan within the ’90s as CEO/president of Virgin Data America, and dealing through the years with Madonna, Coldplay, The Smashing Pumpkins, Religion Hill and Inexperienced Day.
“Phil believed in me like no different,” Paula Abdul stated in an announcement. “His ceaseless help for me throughout my time at Virgin was unparalleled. I’ll miss him.”
Within the early 2000s, when Napster, MP3s and digital piracy threatened to destroy the enterprise, Quartararo was one of many executives in Steve Jobs’ workplace when the late Apple CEO promised to shift the enterprise from $10 CDs to 99-cent downloads. “On the finish of the day, 99 cents for a observe is healthier than nothing for a observe,” Quartararo would say.
Virgin Data’ founder, Richard Branson, recruited Quartararo to assist launch his American label in 1986, and through the years Quartararo rose to president and CEO. In 1997, in accordance with The New York Instances, Quartararo helped “flip Virgin into EMI’s crown jewel,” producing a lot of the dad or mum label’s $5.9 billion in yearly gross sales.
Quartararo left Virgin that yr to turn into president of Warner Bros. Data, the place he labored with Madonna, Linkin Park, Josh Groban, Cher and Wilco, amongst others. In 2005, he made his method again to EMI, Virgin’s proprietor, as an government, serving to to shift the label’s focus from bodily gross sales and distribution to advertising and marketing and launching Coldplay, Norah Jones, Keith City and others.
After leaving EMI in 2005, Quartararo turned an entrepreneur and guide, working with music-distribution startups, streaming providers and expertise managers and managed acts corresponding to Japanese composer Yoshiki and metallic band X Japan. He additionally ran Janet Jackson’s Rhythm Nation Data from 2016-2019. “Phil approached every little thing with a form coronary heart and a light-weight spirit and humorousness,” says Taylor Jones, a co-owner of music-focused multimedia firm The Hiya Group, the place Quartararo was president and chairman. “He was extremely stress-resistant. His values have been instilled within the very core and ethos of our firm.”
Provides Evan Lamberg, president of Common Music Publishing North America: “Phil Q was arguably the ‘Mayor of Goodwill’ in our business for many years. There isn’t a one which he touched that was not higher for having identified him.”
In 2013, Quartararo instructed Billboard he didn’t miss main labels, however “I miss coping with the artists. I miss sharing with younger folks, educating them the music enterprise. That’s the half I liked probably the most. I don’t miss the large firm, per se. As a result of the large firm is cumbersome and sadly can’t transfer as rapidly as the buyer or artists want to maneuver. It’s not as nimble because it was once.”
This story first appeared on Billboard.