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American music producer, songwriter, and executive From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William H. Mann (born December 20, 1968) is a Grammy-nominated American songwriter, record producer and founder of independent music publishing company Green & Bloom/Topline,[1] as well as being chairman of management firm Manncom.[2] In 2021, together with Benton James, he launched Proof Of Concept, a talent development and creative media services firm. Later that same year, in partnership with Warner Music Group’s ADA Worldwide, Mann and James announced the launch of joint venture label, icons+giants.[3]
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Billy Mann | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | William Isaiah Erlichman |
Also known as | William Hort-Mann, Billy Mann |
Born | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. | December 20, 1968
Genres | Pop, rock, dance, urban, country, world |
Occupations | Songwriter, record producer, creative executive, music publisher |
Years active | 1989-present |
Labels | EMI, BMG, Sony, Zomba, Universal, Warner Chappell, A&M, DV8, PolyGram |
Over a 25-year period, Mann has written songs and/or produced records for an array of artists, including Pink, Backstreet Boys, Kelly Rowland, and Jessica Simpson.[4]
Since writing his first top 10 hit in the UK for EMI in 1995 with "3 Is Family" by Dana Dawson,[5] Mann has achieved several Top 40 hits[6] around the world (including several Top 10s and number 1s),[7] with cumulative album sales of over 110 million.[8]
Mann was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[9] as the youngest of three children.[10] Born to middle class parents, Mann lived with his mother in Philadelphia’s inner city after his parents’ divorce. From early childhood, he began experimenting with songwriting and taught himself guitar, piano, bass, harmonica, baritone horn, and flute.[10] By age 12, Mann had put together several bands with other young local musicians, including musicians such as Steven Wolf,[11] Clayton Sears[12] and Adam Dorn (a.k.a. Mocean Worker).[13]
Mann attended the Philadelphia High School for the Creative & Performing Arts (CAPA)[14] for Vocal Music, alongside members of Boyz II Men, The Roots, Christian McBride and Joey DeFrancesco, receiving his diploma in three years. Three years after high school, in 1989, he received his bachelor’s degree from Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts.
Mann began his professional career by living in a car for nearly two years as a traveling musician.[15] After stops in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Miami and London, Mann landed in New York, where a chance encounter[16] with producer Ric Wake, put together by songwriter/performer Gregg Wattenberg,[17] saw Wake introduce Mann to then A&M Records label head, Al Cafaro; Mann was ultimately signed to Wake for publishing, to Wake’s production company, and to Wake’s imprint DV8 Records, distributed by A&M.[18]
The deal led to two solo releases: 1996’s Billy Mann[19] and 1998’s Earthbound.[20] Inspired by the loss of his first wife Rema Hort Mann, to stomach cancer nine months after they were married, Earthbound was co-produced by Mann and David Kershenbaum and featured co-writes with and an appearance by early mentor Carole King.
Mann has written songs for artists across a number of genres including pop, rock, dance, R&B, reggae, house and country.[21] Self-publishing his own catalog, he also has publishing credits with Sony/ATV, Warner/Chappell, Verse and BMG Chrysalis.[citation needed] Mann’s songwriting collaborators have included artists such as Carole King, Rudy Perez, Burt Bacharach, Desmond Child, Graham Lyle and Walter Afanasieff, as well as new producer/songwriters like Christian Medice, David Spencer and Supah Mario.[citation needed] Of particular note is Mann's long-standing collaboration with P!nk, another Philadelphia native, who was introduced to Mann in 2002 by her then co-manager Craig Logan.[citation needed] They since have co-written such songs as "God Is a DJ", "Stupid Girls", "Dear Mr. President", "Nobody Knows", "I’m Not Dead", "Crystal Ball", "Glitter in the Air", "Bridge of Light", "The Truth About Love" and "Beam Me Up".[citation needed] They have twice been nominated for Grammy Awards, for "Stupid Girls" and "The Truth About Love".[22] In 2017, Mann co-wrote and produced "I Am Here" on P!nk's million selling album Beautiful Trauma. Variety profiled the long-standing partnership between the artist and Mann just after the album's release.[23] P!nk and Mann continued their catalog of songs in 2019 on the #1 platinum Hurts 2B Human with "The Last Song Of Your Life."[24]
About.com named Mann one of the Top 10 Producers of 2006.[25] In addition to some of the artists listed above, he has worked in a production capacity with such Grammy-winning producer legends as Peter Asher, Walter Afanasieff, David Foster and James Stroud.
In the summer of 2021, Mann collaborated with Benton James along with Rainmaker Holding Group’s Clay Pecorin, Russell Geyser, Jason Halio, and Zak Tanjeloff to create Song House Live, a reality show that brought musical influencers/social media creators together in a luxury house in upstate New York for eight weeks as they create content and record music in a bid to win a record deal with Capitol Music Group.[26][27] The experience was live streamed on multiple cameras throughout the property. At the end of the competition, Tyler Brash was announced as the winner.[28] In addition to Song House Live, Mann is a Consulting Producer of The D'Amelio Show which was released on HULU in September 2021.
During the Covid-19 pandemic, a father of four, Mann noticed one of his kids really struggling with attending school via Zoom particularly when teacher feedback came back with challenges. Without the community of a classroom, moments of failure or self-doubt were done in isolation and were tough and Mann noticed a similar phenomenon with artists and business partners. Subsequently, a podcast about failure was born and the premise was simple: Can we get successful artists and celebrities to speak openly about their own failures and self-doubt and how did those moments transform them? On April 26, 2022, Warner Music Group launched their in-house podcast network, Interval Presents, and announced Billy Mann's podcast was coming.
Mann's podcast "Yeah, I F*cked That Up" launched on July, 11 2023. Notable guests on the show include Kelly Rowland, Steven Van Zandt, Renée Elise Goldsberry, and more. Drawing inspiration from one of his kids who really struggles with failure, Mann invites his guests to peel back the veneer of success and reveal the humanity beneath. From legendary musicians to top CEOs, the stories of failure, f*ck-ups and redemption inspire, enlighten, and entertain.
In 2001, Mann founded Stealth Entertainment[29] in New York City's garment district. The one-man studio grew into a team of a half dozen executives who went on to develop multi-platinum, award-winning and chart-topping artists, songwriters, producers and mixing engineers like Andy Zulla, Christopher Rojas, Teddy Geiger,[30] Esmee Denters[31] and Pete Wallace. Mann is widely known for discovering Oscar-winning actor Emma Stone, Teddy Geiger, Jacob Whitesides and Charli D'Amelio as well as sister Dixie D'Amelio, among others.[32]
In addition to developing talent, Stealth built partnerships with organizations like Seventeen Magazine,[33] Columbia Records, SonyBMG Special Projects, Target, Levi's and other brands on behalf of the company and its roster. Stealth was acquired as part of Mann's later move to EMI.
As a consultant, Mann has worked with Zomba Group, Sony Music Entertainment, Sony Pictures Television, Warner-Chappell, Red Bull Media House, BMG Chrysalis, Bliss Legal and BMG International. He has also been featured as a guest music commentator on The Today Show[34]
He is an advisor on Scenebot Stage[35][36][37] and sits on the investor board of Angel Ventures, Mexico.
In November 2007, Mann joined EMI Music as creative advisor and a member of the operating board.[38] Soon after, he was appointed chief creative officer.
His years with the company saw the development of some of EMI’s most successful international artists and partnerships, including David Guetta, Pablo Alboran, Helene Fischer, Bebe, Juan Luis Guerra, Tiziano Ferro, Robyn, Panda, Paty Cantu, Belinda, Wind Up and Movic. Additionally, he helped develop artist management initiatives in several countries (including Spain, Germany, Italy and the United States) in order to expand the way EMI developed talent. Throughout his EMI tenure, Mann also acted as the non-executive chairman for Stealth Entertainment, which in its latter years focused primarily on songwriter/producer management.
During EMI’s most turbulent period, Mann worked under four CEOs in a mere three years, and carried on through each regime change. EMI’s final CEO Roger Faxon announced Mann’s departure from the company.[39]
In January 2011, Mann was named president of creative, BMG North America, overseeing the creative staff in New York, Los Angeles, and Nashville in managing the roster integration of recently acquired companies, and leading efforts to attract, develop, and sign new content.[40]
At the end of 2011, Mann founded Manncom Creative Partners, a talent and services company alongside a publishing venture with BMG, Green & Bloom/Topline.[41] In 2013, BMG extended its investment in Green & Bloom.[citation needed] In 2019, Green & Bloom/Topline has celebrated a series of successes with lovelytheband,[42] Supah Mario,[43] Flawless, Dani Poppitt and others.
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