Danny Goldberg
From 1999-2006 Goldberg was Chairman of Artemis Records whose roster included Warren Zevon, The Pretenders and Steve Earle and which released the Baha Men hit song and album Who Let The Dogs Out. He was the CEO of Air America Radio from 2005 until mid-2006. Prior to forming Artemis Goldberg was Chairman and CEO of the Mercury Records Group, (MRG)which was the number one U.S. label group in terms of market share in 1998. MRG labels included music from virtually all major genres; pop, R&B, hip-hop, country, jazz and rock and roll via the labels Def Jam, Mercury, Motown, Verve, and Deutsche Gramophone. Goldberg was Chairman and CEO of Warner Bros. Records in 1995. From 1993-94, he was President of Atlantic Records, also a division of the Warner Music Group.
Earlier in his career, Goldberg formed and co-owned Modern Records, which released Stevie Nicks’ first two solo albums. Goldberg was Vice-President of Led Zeppelin’s Swan Song Records and worked with the band from 1973 - 1976. In 1980, Goldberg co-produced and co-directed the rock documentary feature, “No Nukes,” starring Bruce Springsteen, Bonnie Raitt, and Jackson Browne, among others. Goldberg was Executive Producer of Just An American Boy the 2004 documentary about Steve Earle. He was Executive Producer of the multi-platinum soundtrack of music from the television series Miami Vice and was Music Supervisor on numerous feature films including Dirty Dancing .
Goldberg was Chair of the American Symphony Orchestra from 2008-2013 and is on the Board of Directors of The Nation Institute, The ACLU Foundation of Southern California, Americans for Peace Now, Brave New Films, and Public Citizen.