The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gift of music a healing display

Joel Katz donates music-related items to Winship Cancer Institute.

- By Jennifer Brett jbrett@ajc.com

The Music Is Medicine exhibition at Emory University illustrate­s the breadth of Joel Katz’s long career as an entertainm­ent lawyer,

As chair of the global entertainm­ent and media practice at Greenberg Traurig, Joel Katz is an internatio­nal legal powerhouse with thousands of A-list names in his Rolodex. As the prominent lawyer closed deal after high-powered deal over the decades, he amassed a voluminous collection of unique music memorabili­a.

He recently donated a slew of items to the Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University. Now patients headed for appointmen­ts or people spending time with ill loved ones will have a fascinatin­g and carefully displayed attraction to visit. A large and prominent group of friends crowded into a Winship hallway the night the exhibit was dedicated earlier this month.

“What a great way to commemorat­e a great career,” said Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, who presented Katz with a framed proclamati­on in his honor. “You are a legend and an inspiratio­n.”

Others in attendance included former U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss, broadcaste­rs Frank Ski and Monica Pearson, Kennesaw University President Dan Papp and Atlanta Grammy chapter senior executive director Michele Rhea Caplinger, Legendary Events founder Tony Conway and former Atlanta Mayor Bill Campbell.

The celebratio­n coincided with the announceme­nt by the T. J. Martell Foundation of the Joel A. Katz Music is Medicine Fund, which supports cancer research at the Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University. Katz has been a key and avid supporter of the T. J. Martell Foundation, which raises money to fund leukemia, cancer and AIDS research.

“I was Tony’s lawyer during his career at CBS Records,

which is now Sony Records,” Katz said. “I remember the day he decided he was going to start this foundation in honor of his son, who passed away from cancer.”

Over the past 40 years, the foundation has raised more than $270 million for cancer research with events held in various spots across the country. The local event, the annual Atlanta’s Best Cellars Dinner, has benefited Winship.

“I’ve made it my mission to introduce my Atlanta friends to the T. J. Martell Foundation so we could help Winship,” Katz said.

His personal story is as compelling as the artists he has represente­d, as he shared during the 2014 commenceme­nt address at Kennesaw State University, home of the Joel A. Katz Music and Entertainm­ent Business Program.

“I started with absolutely nothing,” said Katz, a New York native who got through law school at the University of Tennessee thanks to a scholarshi­p and a six-day-a-week job working 6 p.m.-6 a.m as a Holiday Inn night clerk. Graduation in 1969 brought him to a one-bedroom apartment in Atlanta and a teaching job at Georgia State University.

In 1971, he opened a law practice. He had a tiny office, a secretary he shared with other lawyers and one big problem: “I had no clients.”

One afternoon, the telephone blessedly rang. A banker on the line had taken Katz’s course at Georgia State and enjoyed it. Now he needed to help a client locate a good entertainm­ent lawyer.

“Do you know anything about entertainm­ent law?” the banker asked. Katz pondered that for a second. “I was honest: ‘No, I know nothing.’”

This, somehow, was the right answer. The next day, he was ushered into the penthouse suite at the Omni where the mystery client — James Brown — was getting his hair done. After a 10-minute discussion, the Godfather of Soul decided this untested lawyer was his man and stroked a retainer check for $2,500. The next day, they headed for New York, where Katz’s job was to negotiate a huge recording contract.

After sealing the deal, Brown publicly thanked Katz at a news conference, and his formerly silent phone started ringing off the hook.

“If you’re good enough for the Godfather, you’re good enough for me,” Katz recalled his next client saying. “Willie Nelson went on to be a superstar, too.”

 ?? JENNIFER BRETT / JBRETT@AJC.COM ?? Memorabili­a from such artists as George Strait and Michael Jackson are in the Music Is Medicine collection at Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University.
JENNIFER BRETT / JBRETT@AJC.COM Memorabili­a from such artists as George Strait and Michael Jackson are in the Music Is Medicine collection at Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University.
 ?? BEN GRAY / BGRAY@AJC.COM ?? Joel A. Katz’s life changed when he became James Brown’s lawyer in 1971. Since that time, he has been a prominent entertainm­ent lawyer with many high-profile clients.
BEN GRAY / BGRAY@AJC.COM Joel A. Katz’s life changed when he became James Brown’s lawyer in 1971. Since that time, he has been a prominent entertainm­ent lawyer with many high-profile clients.
 ?? JENNIFER BRETT
PHOTOS / JBRETT@AJC.COM ?? From Ludacris to Led Zeppelin: The Music Is Medicine exhibition illustrate­s the breadth of Joel Katz’s long and storied career as an entertainm­ent lawyer.
JENNIFER BRETT PHOTOS / JBRETT@AJC.COM From Ludacris to Led Zeppelin: The Music Is Medicine exhibition illustrate­s the breadth of Joel Katz’s long and storied career as an entertainm­ent lawyer.
 ??  ?? Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle was among the prominent friends on hand to celebrate the dedication of the Joel A. Katz Music Is Medicine Collection at the Winship Cancer Institute at Emory University on Feb. 4.
Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle was among the prominent friends on hand to celebrate the dedication of the Joel A. Katz Music Is Medicine Collection at the Winship Cancer Institute at Emory University on Feb. 4.

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