Ahmet Ertegün: Perbedaan antara revisi
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Pada 1960-an, Ahmet mendengar contoh rekaman [[Led Zeppelin]] dan mengetahui bahwa mereka akan menjadi kelompok terkenal setelah mendengar beberapa lagu pertamanya. Dengan segera ia mengontrak mereka. Ia juga meyakinkan [[Crosby, Stills & Nash (and Young)|Crosby, Stills and Nash]] untuk mengizinkan [[Neil Young]] untuk bergabung dengan tur mereka, dan dengan demikian membentuk [[Crosby, Stills & Nash (and Young)|Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young]]. Ertegün menolong memperkenalkan Amerika kepada [[blue-eyed soul]] (''soul bermata biru'') ketika ia menemukan [[The Rascals]] di sebuah kelab malam di [[Westhampton]] pada [[1965]] dan mengontrak mereka dengan Atlantic. Mereka berhasil menduduki tempat ke-13 dari rekaman tunggal [[top 40 (radio format)|top 40]] dalam empat tahun dan dimasukkan ke dalam [[Rock-n-Roll Hall of Fame]] pada [[1997]].
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Ahmet also used his considerable personal skills in negotiations with major stars, such as when [[The Rolling Stones]] were shopping for a record company to distribute their independent [[Rolling Stones Records]] label. Ertegun personally conducted the negotiations with [[Mick Jagger]], successfully completing the deal between The Stones and Atlantic, when other labels had actually offered the band more money.
The Ertegüns' primary musical interest was jazz. In the 1940s, while living in [[Los Angeles]], Nasuhi owned the Jazz Man Record Shop, which, in addition to selling jazz records produced by other labels, also produced their own on the Jazz Man and Crescent labels. At Jazz Man, Nasuhi produced the classic Kid Ory revival recordings in 1944 and 1945. In the early 1950s, Nasuhi worked at his friend, Lester Koenig's, [[Contemporary Records]]. When Les Koenig was approached by Lawrence Morton of the UCLA music department to teach a course in jazz at UCLA, he recommended Nasuhi. Nasuhi thus taught the first course in jazz taught at a major American university. At Atlantic, Nasuhi produced records for artists like [[John Coltrane]], [[Charles Mingus]], [[Ornette Coleman]], [[Les McCann]] and [[Hank Crawford]]. Both brothers promoted jazz concerts, founded jazz record companies, and organized jazz bands. Nevertheless, they were also open to more modern popular styles and worked with such famous artists as [[Sonny and Cher]].
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==Later career==
Many independent record executives, like the Ertegüns, were from immigrant backgrounds, including the [[Bihari brothers]] and the [[Chess Records|Chess brothers]].
In 1987, Ahmet was inducted into the [[Rock & Roll Hall of Fame]], of which he himself was the founder. Nasuhi Ertegün was inducted posthumously four years later. Ahmet received an [[honorary doctorate]] in music from the [[Berklee College of Music]] in Boston in 1991, and was awarded the [[Grammy Trustees Award]] for his lifetime achievements in 1993; Nasuhi was awarded the same posthumously two years later in 1995. The [[United States Library of Congress]] honored Ertegun as a "Living Legend" in 2000. The [[Nasuhi Ertegün Jazz Hall of Fame]] at [[Jazz at Lincoln Center]] was dedicated to Nasuhi in 2004. In 2005, the [[National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences]] presented Ahmet with the first "President's Merit Award Salute To Industry Icons". For their contributions to the sport of soccer, both were inducted into the [[National Soccer Hall of Fame]] in 2003.-->
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