Renowned Creative Executive Rob Cavallo Named Chairman; Veteran Music Business Executives Todd Moscowitz and Livia Tortella Named Co-President & CEO and Co-President & COO, Respectively
NEW YORK, NY, Sep 14, 2010 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) --
Warner Music Group Corp. (NYSE: WMG) announced today a new senior
management team for Warner Bros. Records. The Warner Bros. Records
label group includes the Warner Bros., Asylum, Nonesuch, Reprise and
Sire imprints.
Composed of some of the industry's most accomplished creative
executives and label operators, the new executive team at Warner
Bros. will be Rob Cavallo (currently WMG's Chief Creative Officer),
who will serve as Chairman, Todd Moscowitz (currently Executive Vice
President of Warner Bros., CEO of WMG's Independent Label Group and
President of Asylum Records) who will serve as Co-President and CEO
and Livia Tortella (currently Executive Vice President and General
Manager of WMG's Atlantic Records) who will serve as Co-President and
Chief Operating Officer. Tom Whalley, who has served as Chairman and
CEO of Warner Bros. Records since 2001, has decided to leave the
company. In addition, given that the new executive structure
substantially alters management responsibilities, Diarmuid Quinn has
decided that he will be stepping down from his position as Chief
Operating Officer of Warner Bros. Records and President of Reprise
Records.
In making the announcement, Lyor Cohen, WMG's Vice Chairman and
Chairman and CEO, Recorded Music - Americas and the U.K. said, "The
new Warner Bros. executive team represents the ideal combination of
skills to operate a successful music company in today's radically
evolving industry environment. With Rob's creative brilliance, Todd's
proven ability to develop and execute new business models and revenue
streams and Livia's established track record of building lasting
artist careers, we have in place a group of executives who are
uniquely positioned to continue to strengthen the reputation of
Warner Bros. as an artist-friendly haven with a visionary approach to
discovering and nurturing new talent."
"Tom Whalley is one of this industry's most accomplished executives
and his contributions to WMG are enormous, having restored Warner
Bros. to its leadership position," said Cohen. "Just consider his
near-decade of creative and operational success at Warner Bros.,
including ranking as one of the country's top three labels every year
since 2003 and as the country's top label in two of the last five
years. Tom embodies a rare combination of great creative instincts
with a deep understanding of the music business, and we are
privileged to have had him lead Warner Bros."
Cohen stated, "Since joining Warner Bros. in 2001, Diarmuid Quinn has
successfully guided the development and marketing of the company's
roster, resulting in numerous global artist successes. We wish both
Tom and Diarmuid all success."
"I leave here extremely proud of what we've accomplished," said Tom
Whalley. "I don't know a more talented group of professionals than
the WBR team. After working with them for almost a decade, I'm awed
by what they've done and by the roster we've built together. I'll
miss them and our amazing artists, and wish them all the best. I'd
like to thank both Edgar and Lyor for their leadership and their
acceptance of my decision. I also want to thank all of the men and
women whom I've had the great privilege to work with at WBR through
the years."
Cavallo said, "It is truly an honor to be named Chairman of a company
that I've grown up in, that has played such an important role in
shaping my career and embodies what it means to be an artist-oriented
organization. The team at Warner Bros. has never lost sight of its
core mission of serving artists and supporting the creative process.
I'm so incredibly proud to have the opportunity to continue the
legacy of the many great leaders of this company, from Mo Ostin to
Tom Whalley, who exemplify this artist-centric mission in every
aspect of their work. With Todd and Livia, and all of the great
executives at the company, I'm confident that we can further enhance
Warner Bros.' position as the preeminent home for artists, not just
with respect to their work in the recording studio, but in all facets
of their careers."
Moscowitz said, "Warner Bros. is one of the most respected brands in
music, and with that comes a profound responsibility to insure that
this company continues to be progressive and innovative in its
approach to artist development, and treats its artists as true
partners. There's a great entrepreneurial spirit which lies at the
foundation of this company, one that is more critical in today's
industry environment than ever before. I look forward to enhancing
that sense of entrepreneurship and to creating the most effective
platform possible to translate Rob's creative vision into global
artist successes. I want to thank Tom for his leadership and for
helping to make Warner Bros. the remarkable organization that it is
today."
Tortella said, "Working at Warner Bros., with its legendary artist
roster and its talented employees, is truly a dream come true for me.
The Warner Bros. logo stands for the finest music, regardless of
genre, and most importantly for a commitment to building artist
careers. By supporting Rob's amazing skills as one of our industry's
most consistent discoverers and nurturers of talent, I'm confident we
can achieve new levels of growth by continuing to focus on long-term
artist development. I can't think of a better, more passionate,
talented and hardworking group of people to carry out that mission
than the team at Warner Bros. Records."
Rob Cavallo
One of the top-selling producers in the world, Cavallo has produced
or had creative involvement in albums that have sold more than 125
million units over the past 16 years, nearly 30 million of those
units in the last five years alone. In 1998, Cavallo was awarded the
"Producer of the Year" Grammy and was nominated for the same award in
1999 and 2004. Cavallo has also won Grammys for his producing work
with Green Day, including "Best Rock Album" for American Idiot in
2004 and, in 2005, "Record of the Year" for Boulevard of Broken
Dreams. His work has amassed six Grammy awards, an Oscar, a Golden
Globe and numerous nominations.
Cavallo first joined Warner Bros. Records in 1987 as an A&R
representative where he was originally assigned to work with Black
Sabbath. In 1989, he signed the multi-Platinum band, Goo Goo Dolls,
to Warner Bros./Reprise Records and, in 1993, signed Green Day to the
label. He produced Green Day's major label debut, Dookie, his
second-ever full album production, which sold 15 million units
worldwide. Since then, he's produced or executive produced six of the
band's albums which have now sold more than 45 million worldwide
units combined. In 1994, he was promoted to Senior Vice President of
A&R for Warner Bros./Reprise, where he oversaw the label's A&R
department and served as an in-house producer.
In 1997, Cavallo was an instrumental force in reuniting the members
of Fleetwood Mac at Warner Bros. for the band's reunion album, DVD
video and TV special, The Dance, which combined have sold more than
six million units, and was a producer on the band's following album
Say You Will. In 1998, Cavallo joined Hollywood Records as senior
vice-president of A&R, where he signed, developed and produced a
number of artists including a Gold-certified album from BBMak. That
same year Cavallo produced two No. 1 singles for Warner Bros. on the
City of Angels soundtrack, Alanis Morissette's, "Uninvited," which
went on to win two Grammy Awards, and Goo Goo Dolls', "Iris," which
was nominated for three Grammys. The soundtrack has sold more than
eight million album units worldwide, the second-best-selling
soundtrack in WMG history.
In 1999, Cavallo worked with Phil Collins on the Disney feature
animated movie, Tarzan. The lead single, "You'll Be in My Heart," won
an Oscar, a Grammy and a Golden Globe award for best original song
from a motion picture. The song stayed at No. 1 for 19 weeks on the
Billboard Hot AC chart. This was Collins' longest running hit at that
format.
In 2002, Cavallo returned to Warner Bros. Records where he produced
Green Day's American Idiot, as well as Green Day's DVD/CD set, Bullet
in a Bible, which features a live performance of the band. These two
titles have now sold in excess of 15 million units worldwide. In
addition, Cavallo has worked on recordings for Eric Clapton, David
Cook, Chris Isaak, Jewel, My Chemical Romance, The Dave Mathews Band,
Kid Rock, Less Than Jake, Avril Lavigne, Shinedown and Sixpence None
The Richer. In 2009, Cavallo was appointed to the position of Chief
Creative Officer for WMG.
Todd Moscowitz
Moscowitz joined Warner Bros. Records as Executive Vice President in
2009 where he has overseen the expansion of the label's urban roster
while continuing to run WMG's Asylum Records and Independent Label
Group. Named President of the newly re-launched Asylum Records in
2004, Moscowitz pioneered innovative new business models that quickly
established the label as the premier destination for independent
entrepreneurs looking to release their music worldwide.
Moscowitz was integral in transforming hip-hop artists Mike Jones,
Paul Wall, Bun B, D4L, New Boyz and Webbie into gold and
platinum-selling superstars. Prior to joining WMG, Moscowitz was GM
of Def Jam Records, head of Rush Communications, and was a partner at
Violator Management where he helped guide the careers of 50 Cent and
Missy Elliott, among others.
Livia Tortella
Tortella began her career in 1989 at PolyGram Canada in A&R, and then
continued as a product manager for artists on numerous labels
including Island, Def Jam, Mercury, London and Beggars Banquet Music
Group. After spending five years at Island Def Jam Music Group, she
joined Atlantic Records in 2004, where in addition to focusing on
artist development, she led business and digital product development.
As a member of Atlantic's senior management team, she played a key
role in Atlantic's achieving the No. 1 market share position in the
U.S. in calendar years 2008 and 2009, as well as in Atlantic's being
cited by the New York Times in 2008 as the first major label to
achieve digital revenue in excess of 50% of its U.S. physical and
digital sales revenue.
In the past 10 years, Tortella has helped develop the careers of
numerous artists including Paramore, Death Cab For Cutie, Rob Thomas,
Kid Rock, Shinedown, 3OH!3 and The Zac Brown Band. She has
facilitated the launch of several label ventures, including Fueled By
Ramen, Photofinish and Chop Shop Records, which released the
best-selling Twilight soundtrack franchise for which Tortella served
as executive producer.
About Warner Bros. Records
Warner Bros. Records is one of the most successful recording
companies in music history and home to some of the most influential
and innovative artists of our time. Its reputation and extraordinary
roster of new and established recording artists is unparalleled, and
its collective influence on pop culture is without precedent. In
2007, Warner Bros. was ranked the No. 1 record label in the U.S. as
measured by Total Album share and has been ranked one of the
country's top three labels every year since 2003.
Warner Bros. Records was founded 50 years ago by Jack Warner, the
last of the original pioneering Warner brothers, as an offshoot of
Warner Bros. Studios, which, 32 years earlier, had introduced its
Vitaphone sound-on-disc system for feature films. The acquisition of
Frank Sinatra's Reprise label in 1963 catapulted the company into one
of the most dynamic organizations in popular music and throughout the
next five decades built a family of labels that today represent a
full spectrum of musical genres.
For more information about Warner Bros. Records visit:
http://www.warnerbrosrecords.com/
Media Contacts:
Will Tanous
(212) 275-2244
will.tanous@wmg.com
Amanda Collins
(212) 275-2213
amanda.collins@wmg.com
SOURCE: Warner Music Group
mailto:will.tanous@wmg.com
mailto:amanda.collins@wmg.com