Chicago Sun-Times

Tech- savvy jazz producer

- BY CHARLES J. GANS

NEW YORK — Larry Rosen, one of the most influentia­l and tech- savvy modern jazz producers who cofounded GRP Records with pianist Dave Grusin, died Friday, his publicist said. He was 75.

Mr. Rosen, who had been battling brain cancer, died surrounded by his family at his home in Park Ridge, New Jersey, publicist Sheryl Feuerstein said.

Against the advice of their financial advisers and lawyers, Mr. Rosen and Grusin mortgaged their homes to borrow money to launch GRP as an independen­t label in 1982.

“It was two musicians who just believed in the music and merging technology with quality product,” Mr. Rosen recalled in a 2012 interview with Billboard Magazine on the 30th anniversar­y of the label’s founding. “We wanted to see if audiences would like it, and they did.”

GRP, which embraced the jazz- fusion sound and enjoyed crossover success, was voted Billboard’s No. 1 contempora­ry jazz label for five consecutiv­e years and won 33 Grammys. Its catalog included albums by many top jazz artists such as Chick Corea, Lee Ritenour, Diana Krall, Diane Schuur, Patti Austin, Dr. John and Ramsey Lewis.

On the technologi­cal side, GRP was noteworthy as the first record label to use digital recording technology for all its releases and issue every release on the new CD format.

More recently, Mr. Rosen’s main focus was on producing concerts. In 2008, he created Jazz Roots, a popular jazz concert series with an education and mentoring program for music students, at the invitation of the new Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts in Miami. The series presented world- class jazz artists such as Dave Brubeck, Sonny Rollins, Wynton Marsalis and Dee Dee Bridgewate­r.

A Bronx native, Mr. Rosen performed as a drummer with the Newport Jazz Festival Youth Band in 1959. He got to know Grusin when they worked together with singer Andy Williams’ band.

In 1972, the two formed a freelance production team Grusin/ Rosen Production­s that discovered and produced such artists as Earl Klugh, Patti Austin and Lee Ritenour. Six years later, GRP signed a production deal with Clive Davis’ Arista Records.

After enjoying success as an independen­t label, they sold GRP to MCA Records in a multimilli­on- dollar deal.

Mr. Rosen went on to found N2K, which not only released CDs but became one of the first online music sites with a music store and genre- based community sites, making available some of the first digital downloads in early 1996.

For television, Mr. Rosen created and produced the PBS series “Legends of Jazz” with pianist Ramsey Lewis in 2006. He also establishe­d the annual Sarah Vaughan Internatio­nal Jazz Vocal Competitio­n in 2012 at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark.

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