Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Honorees Feted At Salute To Black Music Awards



(l-r) Honoree Lee Bailey, BBA Founder Earl "Skip" Cooper and Honoree Clarence Avant 
Los Angeles, CA — Last night at the Salute To Black Music Awards gala, the Black Business Association (BBA) (the oldest ethnic business organization in California), commemorated Black Music Month by recognizing two nationally-renowned African American entertainment icons: music executive and film producer Clarence Avant, and radio pioneer Lee Bailey. 

This year’s theme was “The Business Behind the Music.” Ethiopia Habtemariam, president, Motown Records & Urban Music-UMPG, Inc., served as the awards dinner chairperson, and  Quincy Jones was the honorary awards dinner chairman.

The ballroom was filled with hundreds of Black entrepreneurs and executives from every business sector. Danny Bakewell, Sr., owner of The Bakewell Company and the Los Angeles Sentinel, and co-founder of the National Black United Fund, spoke about how Black businesses must support each other. Also in attendance were Debra Lee, chairman & CEO BET Network, Honorary Gwen Moore, GeM Communications, Jon Platt, CEO/Chairman Warner Chappell Music, Mark Ridley-Thomas, chairman of the board of supervisors, Second District; Nicole Avant Sarandos (former US Ambassador to the Bahamas), Ted Sarandos (COO, Netflix), Jerry Moss (co-founder A&M Records), just to name a few.  Grammy Award winner/songwriter & producer BeBe Winans and young vocalist Zipporah Robinson both performed.

Clarence Avant and Lee Bailey are two highly influential executives in the music andentertainment industries, said BBA President and CEO Earl Skip Cooper II. They each are single-handedly responsible for opening doors and making the way for todaysblack music genres.  It is the BBA’s honor to acknowledge and highlight their contributions to disseminating African American culture around the world.

(l-r) Danny Bakewell, Ethiopia Habtemariam, Clarence Avant,
Quincy Jones and Lee Bailey
About Clarence Avant
Clarence Avant is known as the “Godfather of Black Music” for his deal-making acumen and business savvy. In addition to managing artists like Blues legend Little Willie John, jazz producer Creed Taylor and composer Lalo Schifrin, he launched two record companies, Sussex and Tabu, which cultivated the careers of Bill Withers, Dennis Coffey, and the S.O.S. Band.  As a businessman, Avant worked with Al Bell to finalize a deal to sell Stax Records to Gulf & Western Industries for $4.3 million, a record-setting amount in the late 1960s.

Over the span of six decades, Avant has diligently and steadily built a storied career, including promoting Michael Jacksons first solo tour and serving as chairman of Motown Records. Along the way, he has mentored such music producers as Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, and LaFace Records’ L.A. Reid and Kenneth Babyface” Edmonds. Avant has been honored with numerous awards including a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2016.

About Lee Bailey
Legendary broadcaster Lee Bailey launched Bailey Broadcasting Services out of his garage in 1979. This was the humble beginning of the iconic on-air magazine, RadioScope, which lasted for two decades. The show was a forerunner in syndicated urban radio programming, setting the stage for an entire genre of syndicated radio programming. An early adopter of technology, Bailey launched Electronic Urban Report, EURweb.com, in 1996. Since its inception, EURweb has become one of the premier urban entertainment and headline news sites on the web, with more than two million unique visitors per week.

During the course of his career, Bailey has interviewed music industry superstars rangingfrom Michael Jackson to Chaka Khan to Don Cornelius. Billboard magazine honored himas the Best Syndicated Urban Radio Program” and he received the Men of Courageaward from The Carnation Company.

On several occasions since 1980, the BBA has paid tribute to music industry legends. Some past honorees include: Berry Gordy Jr., Smokey Robinson, Jheryl Busby and Janet Jackson. 


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