Los Angeles Times

Rock-champion record exec dies

His championin­g of rock acts like Pink Floyd revived Capitol Records in the 1970s.

- By Priscella Vega

Bhaskar Menon was dubbed in 1978 “The Man Who Really Runs Rock & Roll.”

When Bhaskar Menon learned Capitol Records was on the verge of losing Pink Floyd’s next album, he immediatel­y took a f light to the South of France to salvage the relationsh­ip. The band’s previous album, “Meddle,” performed poorly in the United States — and the group blamed the record label.

After the band’s performanc­e, the members met with Menon and engaged in an all-night negotiatin­g session until they reached an agreement. Menon, the newly appointed president and chief executive of the record company, documented the agreement on a cocktail napkin and flew back to Los Angeles to notify the legal team.

In 1973, Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side of the Moon” went on to become one of the biggest-selling and most influentia­l albums of the rock era, selling more than 15 million copies in the U.S. alone. This feat also helped elevate the struggling record label’s status back to a heavyweigh­t music industry brand.

“Sometimes companies get it right, sometimes it doesn’t happen,” said Rupert Perry, a longtime top official at EMI and Capitol. “He understood the importance of that particular release of that particular time to Capitol Records.”

Menon, the first Asian asked to oversee one of the world’s largest music conglomera­tes and more or less save Capitol Records, died March 4 at his Beverly Hills home, his wife, Sumitra, confirmed to the New York Times. He was 86.

“Determined to achieve excellence, Bhaskar Menon built EMI into a music powerhouse and one of our most iconic, global institutio­ns,” Lucian Grainge, chairman and chief executive of Universal Music Group, said in a statement. “Music and the world have lost a special one. Our hearts go out to his loved ones.”

A longtime Los Angeles resident, Menon was born in 1934 in Thiruvanan­thapuram, India. He gained his appreciati­on for music through his mother, Saraswathi, who often filled their home with Indian ragas. His father, K.R.K. Menon, served as India’s finance minister.

Menon earned his education at St. Stephen’s College in Delhi before earning his master’s degree from Christ Church, Oxford. He got his first break into the global music industry in 1956 with a professor’s help.

The story goes that he was personally hired as a management trainer by Joseph Lockwood, chairman of EMI Music Worldwide, the United Kingdom-based company that owns Capitol Records. Under the music division, Menon learned the ropes working with Beatles producer George Martin. It marked the beginning of his successful, decades-long career.

He climbed the ranks, becoming chief executive of the Gramophone Company of India, an EMI subsidiary, and later managing director of internatio­nal operations in London and then chairman in 1969. He landed in Los Angeles two years later.

Meanwhile, at Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street, Capitol Records was in a state of decline after more than a decade of rapid growth. It had establishe­d itself as a powerhouse with acts such as Billie Holiday, Nat King Cole and Les Paul on its roster. But as rock ’n’ roll took over the airwaves, Capitol Records failed to adapt. For a while, the Beatles and the Beach Boys helped anchor the record label until the Fab Four formed their own label.

Concerned with the company’s direction, officials tapped Menon to fix the problem — and he was successful.

He ensured contracts were extended for acts such as Grand Funk Railroad. He also was instrument­al in Pink Floyd’s career in the U.S. After it failed to publicize “Meddle,” he made it the company’s priority to launch the band’s eighth studio album into stardom.

“The story in America was a disaster, in that we really hadn’t sold records,” Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason said in the 2003 documentar­y “The Making of the Dark Side of the Moon.” “And so, they brought in a man called Bhaskar Menon who was absolutely terrific. He decided he was going to make this work, and make the American company sell. And he did.”

Menon’s temporary move turned into his permanent home. In 1978, he was appointed chairman and chief executive of EMI Music Worldwide. He held that position for 12 years and expanded the company’s roster to include big-name acts such as the Rolling Stones, Queen, David Bowie, Iron Maiden, Duran Duran and Tina Turner. NME, Britain’s music and culture magazine, dubbed Menon as “The Man Who Really Runs Rock & Roll” in 1978.

In 1990, the Internatio­nal Federation of the Phonograph­ic Industry awarded Menon its Medal of Honor for his services to the worldwide music industry after serving as chairman of the IFPI for years.

Perry, his colleague of 25 years, described Menon as an “amazing intellect” with an “encycloped­ic knowledge of the worldwide record business.”

“He was a very special, unique individual to work for,” he said. “He was very encouragin­g. Very supportive of whatever it was you were trying to do or achieve. He was also a good listener.”

Menon’s motto for employees was: “Uncompromi­sing excellence in what you do goes without saying. We expect more than that.”

Menon is survived by his wife, Sumitra, sons Siddhartha and Vishnu, and a sister, Vasantha Menon.

 ?? Lester Cohen WireImage ?? ROCK-ERA CHAMPION Bhaskar Menon was dubbed in 1978 “The Man Who Really Runs Rock & Roll.”
Lester Cohen WireImage ROCK-ERA CHAMPION Bhaskar Menon was dubbed in 1978 “The Man Who Really Runs Rock & Roll.”

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