The Daily Telegraph

Ray Cooper

Warehouse worker turned pop executive who worked with the Stones and signed the Spice Girls

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RAY COOPER, who has died of a neurologic­al condition aged 69, was a pop music executive who guided the careers of dozens of high-profile musicians. In a career in the industry lasting nearly half a century, Cooper worked with artists of the stature of the Rolling Stones, U2, Bob Marley and George Michael. Sales and marketing, rather than talent-spotting, was his forte, but when a group of young women arrived at the Virgin offices in the summer of 1995, he knew he was on to a winner.

“The Spice Girls came upon us like a bomb,” recalled Cooper, then joint managing director of Virgin UK, who signed the group without hesitation. “They just blew us away.”

“Girl Power” was born, and by the end of 1996 the Spice Girls’ debut single Wannabe had gone to No 1 in 22 countries; that number eventually rose to 37, and by the end of 1997 the record had sold 7 million copies. The album Spice, released in September 1996, went on to sell more than 20 million.

An industry survey in 1997 concluded that Virgin was the most successful label in signing and developing new talent. That year, as well as the Spice Girls – who scored a US No 1 with their debut album – they had promoted such acts as Daft Punk, Placebo, Chemical Brothers and Shaggy, and Cooper was named joint president of Virgin Records America alongside Ashley Newton.

Raymond Cooper was born in Sheffield on December 16 1948, one of twins, with his sister Pam. Their father, Jack, was a bookkeeper, while their mother, Gladys, taught ballroom dancing.

He left High Storrs Grammar School at 16 and began working as a commercial trainee at an engineerin­g firm. But having built an encyclopae­dic knowledge of pop music through perusing the New Musical Express, he left his job at the age of 20 and headed to London, his heart set on exploring the city’s music scene.

He secured a job in the warehouse of Nat Joseph’s Transatlan­tic Records, one of the country’s first independen­t labels, and when they needed someone with a clean driving licence to deliver records, he took the job before, in 1972, moving seamlessly into the role of sales rep. He was tasked with promoting acts outside the pop mainstream such as the folk guitar virtuoso Bert Jansch, jazz maestro Sonny Rollins and Brian Eno’s avant garde protégés, the Portsmouth Symphonia.

He rose to sales manager before moving on and in 2005 would send a note of thanks to Joseph: “I was a pot-smoking, wildeyed, lazy, dole-addicted, relatively useless member of some hippie society, until you decided to send me out in a minivan to sell your madcap music ideas to the world of unsuspecti­ng UK record retailers.”

After a stint at Anchor Records and then Don Arden’s Jet Records (where he worked with Electric Light Orchestra), in 1980 Cooper moved to Island Records as marketing director. The acts he promoted there included Bob Marley, U2 and Frankie Goes to Hollywood. At Island he met the A&R director Ashley Newton, and in 1988 the pair formed their own UK imprint, Circa Records, signing, among other acts, Neneh Cherry and Massive Attack.

Circa was eventually incorporat­ed into Virgin Records, and in 1992 the pair became joint managing directors of Virgin UK, where, as well as the Spice Girls, the acts they promoted included the Verve and the Chemical Brothers. In 1997 they were appointed co-presidents of Virgin America.

Cooper stayed for five years, leaving in 2002 to work with the environmen­tal organisati­on Future Forests. In 2004 he founded Zama, a management consultanc­y based in Venice Beach, California, and also set up a firm, D(icon)struct, teaming up musicians with the Milan fashion world in order to develop clothing lines.

Ray Cooper was a voracious reader, an art lover and film buff noted for his warmth, generosity and humour.

He is survived by his partner Philippa Hubsch and her son, by a son and daughter, and by a stepdaught­er.

Ray Cooper, born December 16 1948, died July 28 2018

 ??  ?? Cooper and (right) the Spice Girls in 1997: ‘They just blew us away’
Cooper and (right) the Spice Girls in 1997: ‘They just blew us away’
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