The Grammy-winning record producer and
executive - and subject of a new documentary "Clive Davis: The
Soundtrack of Our Lives" - met the future star singer when she
was an untested teenager.
"Whitney and I formed this creative collaboration, right from
the beginning when she was 19 years old, and chose together
every song that she ever recorded," Davis said.
Houston won six of her own Grammys in a 25-year career that was
marred by drug and alcohol problems and a turbulent marriage to
singer Bobby Brown. She died in 2012 aged 48, after drowning in
a hotel bathtub.
"Her death was so startling and unexpected – there is that
analogy when someone dear to you, and it brought back the loss
of my parents - how you can be affected by this tragedy," he
told Reuters.
"The film does make clear that I might have been a little bit
more vigilant earlier. But once I became aware of the
seriousness of Whitney's addiction, I acted," he added.
The documentary ranges further over his career, with interviews
with other artists he worked with from Aretha Franklin and
Alicia Keys to Sean "Puffy" Combs, Patti Smith and Paul Simon.
He was there in the early days of rap, financing the LaFace and
Bad Boy labels which launched the careers of some of the first
artists to attain mainstream success, such as Notorious B.I.G.
and Combs.
Davis said Combs convinced him that they could convince
mainstream audiences to embrace hip-hop. "He was very articulate
in expressing that vision and I bought into it," Davis said.
"Clive Davis: The Soundtrack To Our Lives," is released on Oct.
3 via the Apple Music streaming service.
(Reporting by Jayson Mansray; Writing by Mark Hanrahan; Editing
by Andrew Heavens)
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