EMPIRE STATE OF MIND: Bandier with Alicia Keys and Jay-Z.
Marty Bandier has been a rainmaker for so long that two of our other rainmakers, UMPG’s Jody Gerson and Warner/Chappell’s Big Jon Platt, were once his protégés—and Platt, as we recently learned, will be the music-biz legend’s successor when Bandier retires from the top post at Sony/ATV at the end of March, perfectly closing the circle of a remarkable career. But until Marty calls it a day, the three close friends will remain competitors—and all’s fair in love and publishing. “I love them; they’re like my kids—and they wanna kill me!” is how Bandier explained it in a 2017 Q&A at his alma mater, Syracuse University.“For Marty, it’s more about the music. He’ll come to your show, see the vibe that you’re on. He actually studies every artist to see the range of what they can do.”
- Wyclef Jean
Pharrell Williams put it more bluntly when his hip-hop band N.E.R.D played at EMI’s post-Grammys party in 2003. “Respect to Marty Bandier, the best motherfucking music publisher in the world.” That is not an exaggeration. Without question, Bandier has been the single most dominant music publisher of the last 30 years. Apart from his two accomplished former lieutenants, no one comes close to matching his gigantic footprint. Sony/ATV owns the rights to 3 million songs, including such Grammy Song of the Year winners as “Moon River,” “Michelle,” “You’ve Got a Friend,” “The Way We Were,” “Every Breath You Take,” “Stay with Me” and “Thinking Out Loud.” “We are the greatest content holder in the music-publishing era,” Bandier boasted a few years ago.PLAYERS: Bandier with Dottie Harris-Bandier and Clive Davis
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