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Wikipedia

Allen Klein

Allen Klein (December 18, 1931 – July 4, 2009) was an American businessman whose aggressive negotiation tactics affected industry standards for compensating recording artists. He founded ABKCO Music & Records Incorporated. Klein increased profits for his musician clients by negotiating new record company contracts.[1] He first scored monetary and contractual gains for Buddy Knox and Jimmy Bowen, one-hit rockabillies of the late 1950s, then parlayed his early successes into a position managing Sam Cooke, and eventually managed the Beatles and the Rolling Stones simultaneously, along with many other artists, becoming one of the most powerful individuals in the music industry during his era.[2]

Allen Klein
Klein (center) signing the Beatles in 1969
Born(1931-12-18)December 18, 1931
DiedJuly 4, 2009(2009-07-04) (aged 77)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Alma materUpsala College
Occupation(s)Accountant, record label executive, business manager
Years active1956–2009
OrganizationABKCO Records

Rather than offering financial advice and maximizing his clients' income, as a business manager normally would, Klein set up what he called "buy/sell agreements" where a company that Klein owned became an intermediary between his client and the record label, owning the rights to the music, manufacturing the records, selling them to the record label, and paying royalties and cash advances to the client. Although Klein greatly increased his clients' incomes, he also enriched himself, sometimes without his clients' knowledge.[3] The Rolling Stones' $1.25 million advance from the Decca Records label in 1965, for example, was deposited into a company that Klein had established, and the fine print of the contract did not require Klein to release it for 20 years.[4] Klein's involvement with both the Beatles and Rolling Stones would lead to years of litigation and, specifically for the Rolling Stones, accusations from the group that Klein had withheld royalty payments, stolen the publishing rights to their songs, and neglected to pay their taxes for five years; thus had necessitated their French "exile" in 1971.[5]

After years of pursuit by the IRS, Klein was convicted of the misdemeanor charge of making a false statement on his 1972 tax return, for which, in 1980, he was jailed for two months.[6]

Early life edit

Klein was born in Newark, New Jersey, the fourth child and only son of Jewish immigrants.[7] His mother died of cancer soon afterward, and Klein lived for a time with his grandparents,[8] then subsequently in a Jewish orphanage,[9] until his father remarried shortly before Klein's 10th birthday.[10] An indifferent student, he graduated from Weequahic High School in 1950; fellow graduate Philip Roth was the only classmate to sign his yearbook.[11][12]

In early work experience with a magazine and newspaper distribution company he showed skill with numbers, and learned about how profits were often concealed from those who had been crucial in generating them. Eventually he would realize that much the same situation existed in popular music, where labels routinely took much profit from the transitory careers of the artists who created the profit-generating music, paying them less than what Klein thought they should.[13]

Klein enlisted in the US Army in 1951, where he served as a clerk typist on Governors Island, New York.[14] After military service, and with the assistance of the G.I. Bill, Klein majored in accounting at Upsala College, graduating in June 1957,[15] and was hired by a Manhattan accounting firm, Joseph Fenton and Company.[16] He was assigned to assist Joe Fenton in an audit of a music publishers' organization, the Harry Fox Agency, and several record companies, including Dot Records, Liberty Records, and Monarch Records.[17] In an early setback to Klein's career, he was fired by Joseph Fenton and Company after four months because of chronic lateness. The company wrote to the State of New Jersey urging officials not to approve him as a Certified Public Accountant, and Klein chose not to take the examination.[18] He briefly attended law school but soon dropped out.[19]

Aided by his friendship with music publisher Don Kirshner, a fellow alumnus of Upsala College,[20] Klein worked as an accountant for the next several years, assisted by Henry Newfeld, a CPA who was a friend from school and the Army, and Marty Weinberg, another CPA, under the name Allen Klein and Company.[21] Klein's clients included Ersel Hickey,[19] Dimitri Tiomkin,[22] Steve Lawrence,[22] Eydie Gormé,[22] Sam Cooke, Buddy Knox,[22] Jimmy Bowen,[22] Lloyd Price,[23] Neil Sedaka,[24] Bobby Darin,[25] Bobby Vinton,[26] Scepter Records,[24] and the estate of Mike Todd.[24] A key early contact was attorney Marty Machat, who frequently performed legal work for Klein over the years.[27]

In June 1958, Klein married Betty Rosenblum, a Hunter College student seven years his junior.[28] The couple had three children.[29]

Klein acquired a reputation as a tough negotiator who could bring money to his clients. Two of them, rockabilly singers Knox and Bowen, were owed royalties by Roulette Records. Morris Levy, co-owner of Roulette, was feared because of his organized crime connections. He was known to pay artists as little as possible. Klein persuaded him to pay Knox and Bowen the royalties they were owed over a four-year period. Klein's success with the Knox and Bowen negotiation brought him new clients, and he and Levy became lifelong friends.[30][29][31]

Sam Cooke edit

In 1963, Klein began a business partnership with Jocko Henderson, an urbane black disc jockey who had daily radio shows in both Philadelphia and New York.[32] Henderson hosted lavish, profitable live rhythm and blues shows at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, and formed a partnership with Klein to begin doing the same in Philadelphia.[33] As Henderson's partner, Klein was introduced to Sam Cooke, a pre-eminent talent who was equally adept at writing, producing, and performing his numerous hit records.[34] Cooke had scored four top ten hits between 1957 and 1963, including his number one hit, "You Send Me,"[35] among 33 records in the top 100 in that period. Although Cooke was clearly making his label, RCA Records, a great deal of money, label executives nonetheless repeatedly refused to honor his many requests for a review of his accounts.[36] Klein forced the reluctant label to open its books for a thorough audit. Shortly afterward, RCA agreed to re-negotiate Cooke's contract.[37]

Klein secured for his client a genuinely groundbreaking deal. Cooke created a holding company, Tracey Ltd., which was named after Cooke's middle daughter. Klein, Cooke's manager, sneakily changed paperwork and listed himself as owner instead (and Sam Cooke as his employee). Sam Cooke trusted him to protect him against crooked music executives but Klein used that trust to his advantage.

Tracey would manufacture Cooke's recordings and give exclusive rights to RCA to sell them for 30 years, after which the rights would revert to Tracey. Cooke would receive a cash advance of $100,000 per year for three years, followed by $75,000 for each of two option years. Instead of being paid the first $100,000 in cash, Cooke was paid in Tracey preferred stock, which would be taxed only when he sold it.[38] While the deal benefited Cooke, it also greatly benefited Klein, who ended up owning the rights to all of Cooke's recordings made since the contract re-negotiation when Cooke was killed in 1964 and his widow sold Cooke's remaining rights to Klein.[39]

Klein's successful negotiations on behalf of Cooke brought him new clients, including Bobby Vinton[40] and the Dave Clark Five.[41] As with Cooke, Klein arranged for his clients to be paid over a period of time to reduce their tax liability. This also benefited Klein, who took advantage of the earning potential of money over time to "make money from the money."[42]

According to the 2019 documentary Lady You Shot Me: The Life and Death of Sam Cooke, Klein was a predator in his relationship with the singer. As of 2019, Cooke's family received no royalties or benefits from his music. All royalties and publishing profits go to Klein's corporation.

Mickie Most and the British Invasion edit

In 1964, Klein became the American business manager of Mickie Most, a former singer who was the savvy producer of hits for the Animals and Herman's Hermits.[43] Klein extended to Most a million-dollar promise, adding that if he failed to deliver in only one month, Most owed him nothing.[44] Klein did deliver, through strategic re-negotiations of existing contracts and new producing opportunities for RCA, including offers for Most to produce for both Sam Cooke and Elvis Presley.[45] Though the latter two prospects did not materialize, Most was suddenly one of the most talked-about and financially gratified figures in the English recording industry, and Klein was a step closer to eventual agreements with both the Beatles and the Rolling Stones.[46]

His victories for Most won Klein access to several key English musicians. He eventually negotiated vastly improved deals for The Animals,[47] Herman's Hermits,[47] the Kinks,[48] Lulu,[49] Donovan,[50] and Pete Townshend of the Who.[51] However, Klein's help came at a price. To shelter his clients' money from Britain's high taxation rate on income earned abroad, Klein held the money for them at the Chemical Bank in New York City and paid it to them over periods of time of up to 20 years. Klein invested that money, which earned far more than Klein was obligated to pay to his clients, and he kept the difference in the accounts, thereby maintaining control over the money.[52]

The Rolling Stones edit

In the spring of 1965 Andrew Loog Oldham, co-manager of the Rolling Stones, saw in Klein a terrific business adviser and ally, one who could help him win an incipient power struggle with Eric Easton, a music business veteran who was then the other half of the band's management team.[53] Barely 21, Oldham was profoundly important in the development of the Stones' image, and in initiating the songwriting partnership of Keith Richards and Mick Jagger.[54][55] After some management mishaps, blame for which fell at Easton's feet, and Jagger's ascension in the band's hierarchy following "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction", the Stones' first number one record in America, Oldham sought and received Jagger's blessing to bring Klein aboard for re-negotiation of the group's contract with Decca Records.[56] The label offered the band the opportunity to make $300,000 if their records continued to sell. Klein countered with, and quickly secured, an arrangement paying the Stones twice as much, in the form of an advance. He also forced London Records, Decca's American subsidiary, to sign a separate contract. It too was for $600,000. By the time Klein subsequently re-negotiated the deal one year later, Easton having been removed as co-manager, the Stones were guaranteed $2.6 million—more than the Beatles were making.[57]

When Klein examined the Stones' management contract with Easton and Oldham he found that the two were receiving a disproportionate share of the group's income: not only did Easton and Oldham receive an 8 percent royalty on sales of the Stones' singles—the Stones themselves received only 6 percent—but they also received a 25 percent commission on the Stones' income. At Klein's insistence, Oldham increased the Stones' royalties to 7 percent and relinquished his commission.[58][59] Klein offered the Stones a million-dollar minimum guarantee, paid over a 20-year period to reduce the Stones' tax liability, to let him become their music publisher, based on his faith in the Jagger-Richards songwriting team. He also arranged for a level of tour support and publicity far above anything the band had ever previously experienced for the Stones' 1965 American tour in support of the album December's Children.[60]

Jagger, who had studied at the London School of Economics,[61] gradually became distrustful of Klein, particularly for the latter's ability to insert himself as a profit participant in the group's ever-growing financial affairs. For example, in 1968 Klein very profitably bought out Oldham's share in the band for $750,000.[62][63][64][65] By 1968 the Stones were so concerned with how their finances were being handled by Klein that they hired a London law firm, Berger Oliver & Co, to look into their financial situation and Jagger hired the titled merchant banker Prince Rupert Loewenstein to be his personal financial adviser.[66] Another possible factor in the Stones' dissatisfaction with Klein was that when the latter began to manage the Beatles he focused more of his attention on that band's affairs than on the concerns of the Stones. In 1970, on the occasion of needing to negotiate a new contract with Decca, Jagger announced that Klein would be replaced as manager by Loewenstein.[67]

The split between Klein and the Stones led to years of litigation. In 1971 the Stones sued Klein over U.S. publishing rights. The suit was settled the following year, with the Stones receiving $1.2 million as a settlement of all American royalties earned up to that point (and was essentially the $1.25 million advance that Decca had paid the Stones in 1965 that Klein had been withholding since August 1965).[4] However, the Stones were unable to break their contract with Klein, who held an additional $2 million of the Stones' money to be paid over a 15-year period, ostensibly for tax purposes. Klein's company, ABKCO, continued to control the rights to publish the Stones' music[68] and it was Klein who made a fortune off the band's all-time best-selling album, Hot Rocks 1964–1971.[4]

In 1972, Klein alleged that some of the songs on their album Exile on Main Street had been composed while the Stones were still under contract with ABKCO. As a result, ABKCO acquired ownership of the disputed songs and was able to publish another Rolling Stones album, More Hot Rocks (Big Hits and Fazed Cookies).[69] In 1974 negotiations over royalties led to a payment of $375,000 to the Stones and ABKCO's release of an additional Rolling Stones album, Metamorphosis.[70] In 1975 more lawsuits and negotiations resulted in a $1 million payment to the Stones for non-payment by Klein of songwriting royalties, and the release of four Rolling Stones albums including Rock and Roll Circus and Rolled Gold: The Very Best of the Rolling Stones.[71] In 1984 Jagger and Richards sued to break their publishing agreement with ABKCO because of non-payment of royalties. The judge encouraged the two sides to reach a settlement.[72]

Starting in 1986, when the introduction of compact discs brought great profits to the music industry, relations began to improve between Klein and the Stones.[73] In 2002, the Stones' album Forty Licks and the Licks Tour, celebrating the band's 40th anniversary, incorporated songs owned by ABKCO. The Stones agreed to a five-year payment plan suggested by Klein's son, Jody.[74] In 2003, Klein negotiated with Steve Jobs to make ABKCO's Rolling Stones songs available on iTunes.

Cameo-Parkway and ABKCO edit

In February 1967, with an eye toward producing films and finding a way to invest his clients' money, Klein attempted to acquire Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. His hopes were blunted when Edgar Bronfman, Sr., heir to the Seagram fortune, instead took control of the firm.[75] Klein then turned his attention to Cameo-Parkway Records, a Philadelphia-born, Los Angeles-based label which had enjoyed hits in the late 1950s and early 1960s, thanks to Chubby Checker, Bobby Rydell, Dee Dee Sharp and others, but which by 1967 was no longer prospering. It was one of the first publicly traded record companies, making it ideal for a financial maneuver Klein had in mind, known as a reverse acquisition. It was meant to take Allen Klein and Company public via its being acquired on paper by Cameo-Parkway. By July 1967, Klein and his associate Abbey Butler had acquired a controlling interest and filed to rename Cameo-Parkway as ABKCO, which is an acronym for "The Allen and Betty Klein Company." Fueled by speculation, the stock price increased from $1.75 a share in July 1967 to a peak of 76⅜ in February 1968 before the SEC halted trading. The American Stock Exchange declined to reinstate the stock; instead, ABKCO continued to trade over the counter, and the stock price dropped to more realistic levels. In 1987, Klein made ABKCO a privately held company.[76]

The Beatles edit

In 1964 Klein approached the Beatles' manager, Brian Epstein, with an offer for the Beatles to sign with RCA for $2 million but Epstein was not interested, saying that he was loyal to EMI.[77] After Epstein died in August 1967, the group formed Apple Corps in January 1968.[78][79] They hoped it would provide the means for correcting Epstein's unfortunate business decisions, which had both limited their incomes and ensured high tax burdens. Although "Hey Jude", the Beatles' first Apple release, was an enormous success, the label itself was a financial mess, with little accountability for how money was being spent.[80][81]

Klein contacted John Lennon after reading his press comment that the Beatles would be "broke in six months" if things continued as they were.[82] On January 26, 1969, he met with Lennon, who retained Klein as his financial representative, and the next day met with the other Beatles. Paul McCartney preferred to be represented by Lee and John Eastman, the father and brother respectively of McCartney's girlfriend Linda, whom he married on March 12. Given a choice between Klein and the Eastmans, George Harrison and Ringo Starr preferred Klein. Following rancorous London meetings with both Eastmans, in April, Klein was appointed as the Beatles' manager on an interim basis, with the Eastmans being appointed as their attorneys. Continued conflict between Klein and the Eastmans made this arrangement unworkable. The Eastmans were dismissed as the Beatles' attorneys, and on May 8 Klein was given a three-year contract as business manager of the Beatles. McCartney refused to sign the contract but was outvoted by the other Beatles.[83][84]

Once in charge of Apple, Klein fired a large number of the organization's employees, including Apple Records president Ron Kass, and replaced them with his own people.[85][86] He closed Apple Electronics, which was headed by Alexis Mardas. Mardas resigned his directorship in May 1971.[87] Klein's attempt to fire Neil Aspinall, a longtime confidant of the Beatles, was immediately thwarted by the band.[31]

Klein was hit with his first crisis in managing the Beatles when Clive Epstein, brother of Brian Epstein and chief heir to NEMS, the management company his brother had founded, sold NEMS to Triumph, a British investment group managed by Leonard Richenberg. NEMS held a 25% stake in the Beatles' earnings, which Klein as well as the Beatles themselves desperately wanted to buy out. This led to tough negotiations with Triumph. Klein ultimately secured the Beatles' rights in their previous work for just four annual payments amounting to 5% of their earnings. However, in the lead-up to those negotiations Richenberg commissioned a hostile investigative report on Klein, which The Sunday Times ran under the headline "The Toughest Wheeler-Dealer in the Pop Jungle".[88]

An even more important battle to secure the Beatles a financial situation commensurate with their worldwide popular acclaim was with Northern Songs Ltd., the publishing company. Northern Songs was managed by Dick James, whom Brian Epstein had rewarded with the Beatles' publishing rights in return for his helping them get placed on a TV show, Thank Your Lucky Stars, early in their career. But James had constructed a contract that gave him an outsized share, and Epstein had not understood its implications. James knew that Klein would soon eliminate his perks, so he quickly offered to sell Northern Songs to ATV, run by entertainment mogul Lew Grade, rather than allow Lennon and McCartney an opportunity to buy back publishing rights to their own songs. Klein worked feverishly to pull together a consortium which would beat Grade's offer, but ultimately his efforts were derailed by infighting between McCartney and Lennon themselves.[89][90][91]

In September 1969, while Klein was in the midst of renegotiating the Beatles' unsatisfactory recording agreements with EMI, Lennon told him of his plans to quit the group. It was agreed that this was the wrong time to either make or announce such a move.[92][93] EMI was loath to re-negotiate, but their American subsidiary, Capitol Records, was so impressed by Abbey Road that they agreed to vastly improved royalty terms. McCartney joined his bandmates in endorsing the deal Klein had secured.[94]

Abbey Road proved to be the Beatles' last true collaboration, but Klein recognised an opportunity in the band's shelved January 1969 album and related documentary project, both titled Get Back, to get another album release out of the splintered group while also fulfilling their obligation to provide one more film to United Artists, the studio that had previously released both A Hard Day's Night and Help! Phil Spector, the producer famous for his "wall of sound" recordings with artists such as the Ronettes and the Righteous Brothers, was eager to sign on as producer for the album, which was eventually titled Let It Be. McCartney did not approve of Spector, but the other Beatles did.[95] This proved to be McCartney and Klein's last face-to-face meeting. However, Apple made $6 million in the first month following the May 1970 release of the record and the film.[96]

Unhappy with production decisions on the Let It Be album and the other Beatles' decision to hire Klein as their manager, McCartney went public with his plans to leave the Beatles in April 1970.[97][98] He wanted to be released from his partnership with Lennon, Starr, and Harrison, who had in recent months proved a steady three-to-one majority against McCartney's proposals. The Eastmans convinced McCartney to file suit against his former bandmates for dissolution of the Beatles' partnership, which he did on December 31, 1970.[99]

The judge ruled in McCartney's favor in March 1971. He decided that the combined financial affairs of the former Beatles should be placed in the care of a receiver until mutually acceptable terms for their break-up could be found. Klein thereby retained a position in the post-breakup solo careers of Harrison, Starr, and Lennon, but was no longer in charge of their affairs as a partnership.[100][101]

Solo Beatles edit

For the first few years after the Beatles' contentious break-up, George Harrison was widely seen as the most accomplished and artistically successful former Beatle.[102][103][104] His November 1970 three-disc set, All Things Must Pass, was a sales triumph, and produced hit singles in "My Sweet Lord" and "What Is Life". In the spring of 1971, Harrison learned from his friend and mentor, Ravi Shankar, about the desperate people of Bangladesh, who had been devastated both by military violence and a vicious cyclone. Harrison immediately set about organizing an event which would take place in Madison Square Garden within just five weeks—the Concert for Bangladesh—from which a live album could raise further funds for the Bangladeshi refugees. Klein hustled to get the invited artists, including Bob Dylan and Eric Clapton, to play for free while donating their shares of royalties to charity, and convinced Capitol Records to grant an unprecedented 50% royalty rate.[105] The Concert for Bangladesh live album and film raised over $15 million. Klein had failed to register the shows as a UNICEF charity event, however;[106] as a result, the proceeds were denied tax-exempt status in Britain and the US.[107] The IRS attempted to tax the income, and $10 million of that amount was held back for years.[105]

Both Harrison and John Lennon soon became disenchanted with Klein.[108] By mid 1972, Harrison was incensed at the outcome of Klein's handling of the Bangladesh relief effort.[109] Aside from the question of its charity status, unwelcome attention had been drawn to the project after an article published in New York magazine accused Klein of pocketing $1.14 on each copy of the live album (priced at $10)[110][111]—allegations that raised suspicions among the three former Beatles with regard to his conduct in their business affairs.[112] Lennon also felt betrayed by Klein's lack of support for his and Yoko Ono's increasingly politically focused work, which was typified by the couple's 1972 album Some Time in New York City.[113][nb 1] In early 1973 Lennon, Harrison and Starr served notice that they would not be renewing Klein's management contract when it expired in March.[116] Early the following month, Lennon told an interviewer: "Let's say possibly Paul's suspicions were right … and the timing was right."[117]

Klein responded by suing the Beatles and Apple in New York, in order to recoup the loans he had made to his three former clients and other costs owing to ABKCO. They then sued him in the London courts, citing excessive commission fees, the mishandling of the Concert for Bangladesh, his misrepresentation of their individual financial standings, and his failure to ensure that the roster of artists at Apple Records prospered under his control.[118][nb 2] While the suits were ongoing, Klein made a play for the US portion of Harrison's publishing company, Harrisongs, in late 1974, without success.[120][121] He also attempted to influence the outcome of Lennon's arrangement with music publisher Morris Levy regarding an alleged copyright infringement (of the Chuck Berry song "You Can't Catch Me") in Lennon's 1969 Beatles composition "Come Together".[122] Lennon's song "Steel and Glass" from the 1974 album Walls and Bridges was his thinly veiled dig at Klein.[123][124][nb 3]

Klein's 1973 lawsuit against the Beatles was settled out of court in January 1977, with Ono representing the former bandmates.[127] Klein received a lump sum payment of approximately $5 million in lieu of future royalties and as repayment of the loans that ABKCO had made to the Beatles.[108]

Harrison had been sued for copyright infringement in 1971 because of the alleged similarity of his song "My Sweet Lord" to "He's So Fine", which had been recorded by the Chiffons in 1963 and was owned by Bright Tunes Music. The case was still pending in 1976; as an alternate strategy to access Harrison's US publishing,[128] Klein now purchased Bright Tunes and thus became the plaintiff in the lawsuit against Harrison. The judge ruled that Harrison had infringed on Bright Tunes' copyright, and the ruling was upheld on appeal. The judge initially assessed damages of $2,133,316, which Harrison would have to pay to Klein, then reduced the figure to $1,599,987, but finally ruled in 1981 that Klein still had a fiduciary responsibility to Harrison and should not be allowed to profit from his acquisition of Bright Tunes. Klein was ordered to hold "He's So Fine" in trust for Harrison provided that Harrison reimburse him the $587,000 that it had cost Klein to purchase the company.[129]

Films and theater edit

The multi-Academy Award-winning 1955 film Marty, an independently produced movie that undercut the Hollywood studio system, provided a business template which Allen Klein closely studied and later adapted to the recording industry. In the late 1950s Klein shared an office with press agent Bernie Kamber, who represented Burt Lancaster, one of Marty's producers. Klein absorbed much from Kamber on how the producers had structured their business model, a paradigm whose strength derived from the fact that artists, not film studios or record labels, drove marketplace success and that intense preparation and canny negotiation could lavishly reward artists and their representatives. In 1961 Klein did accountancy work for an independent film, Force of Impulse, where he formed lasting relationships that he would turn to for many film projects of his own. In 1962 Klein produced a film called Without Each Other. He took it to the Cannes Film Festival and later claimed that it had won the "Best American Picture Award" there, though no such award existed. A distributor never materialized, but Klein's enthusiasm for film persisted.[130]

Starting in 1967 Klein produced four films in the Spaghetti Western genre, a lean-and-mean style of cowboy movie with taciturn heroes and explosive violence. Klein utilized actor Tony Anthony, whom he'd met on Force of Impulse, in all four. Their films included a trilogy comprising A Stranger In Town,[131] The Stranger Returns (1967), and The Silent Stranger (shot in 1968 but not released until 1975 by United Artists).[132][133] Blindman (1970) featured Ringo Starr as a Mexican bandit, Anthony as its lead, and Klein as an extra.[134] The first two "Stranger" films were released by MGM, the studio where Klein produced Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter starring the popular Herman's Hermits. Klein, who had tried to purchase MGM in the mid '60s,[135] became involved with a lawsuit against MGM with each accusing the other of not performing on their contracts with each other.[136]

In 1971, John Lennon directed Klein's attention to El Topo, a surrealistic western by the Chilean director Alejandro Jodorowsky. Inspired by Lennon's enthusiasm, Klein bought the film and put it in American release. He then produced and financed Jodorowsky's next film, The Holy Mountain, an allegorical journey with psychedelic overtones. Later the producer and the director's planned collaboration on a proposed film version of Story of O was halted when Jodorowsky refused to make the film and to return substantial advance monies. Klein retaliated by withdrawing both El Topo and The Holy Mountain from distribution.[137] In 2008 Jodorowsky released the films in Europe and was sued by Klein. After a face-to-face reconciliation between the two men Klein dropped his lawsuit and ABKCO released the films on video, paying Jodorowsky to remaster them.[138]

Klein's legs appeared in Lennon and Yoko Ono's 1971 film Up Your Legs Forever.[139] With George Harrison, Klein co-produced the 1972 concert film The Concert for Bangladesh.[105] Klein also produced the 1978 film The Greek Tycoon, in which Anthony Quinn and Jacqueline Bisset played characters based on Aristotle Onassis and Jacqueline Kennedy.[140] In the early 1980s Klein produced two Broadway plays. It Had to be You, a romantic comedy starring Renée Taylor and Joseph Bologna, ran for barely a month. Next Klein produced The Man Who Had Three Arms, written by Edward Albee. Although Albee had also written big successes in The Zoo Story and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, the play Klein produced had an even shorter run than his previous attempt.[141]

Criminal conviction and jail time edit

In 1977, Klein and ABKCO's former head of promotion, Pete Bennett, were each charged with three felony counts of income tax evasion for 1970, 1971, and 1972, and related misdemeanor counts of making false statement on their income tax returns for each of those years. The IRS, which had been investigating Klein for several years, claimed that Klein and Bennett had sold promotional copies of Beatles and post-Beatles albums—common practice in the music industry at the time—without declaring the sales on their tax returns. Klein was alleged to have received over $200,000. Bennett pleaded guilty to a single misdemeanor charge and became a witness against Klein. Klein testified that he had not instructed Bennett to sell promotional copies of albums and that although he'd received cash payments from Bennett the payments were a return of cash advances which Bennett had been given. Klein's first trial ended in a mistrial because the jury was deadlocked. At his second trial in 1979, the jury found Klein not guilty of the felony charges, but guilty of a single misdemeanor charge for false statements on his 1972 tax return. Klein was fined $5,000 and sentenced to two months in jail, which he served in July–September 1980.[142][63]

Phil Spector edit

In 1988 Klein began managing Phil Spector's business affairs, including his publishing and recording assets. Although Spector had not been active as a producer for several years, his early work was still frequently broadcast and also licensed for film soundtracks. Spector's publishing company, Mother Bertha Music, Inc, was controlled by Trio, a Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller company, which was in turn administered by Warner/Chappell Music. Warner/Chappell was making appropriate payments, but significant amounts were not being passed on to Spector. Klein's goal was to get Spector all the money owed him, and also to wrest a concession allowing Spector to co-administer the future licensing of his music. Klein and Spector brought suit in federal court, where a courtroom win would secure the first goal but not the second. Klein accordingly then advised a settlement strategy which proved successful.[143]

The Verve edit

On their 1997 single "Bitter Sweet Symphony", the English band the Verve sampled a 1965 orchestral version of the Rolling Stones song "The Last Time" by the Andrew Oldham Orchestra.[144] Klein, who owned the copyrights to the Rolling Stones' early work, refused clearance for the sample; following a lawsuit, the Verve ceded the songwriting credits and royalties. In 2019, Klein's son and the Rolling Stones returned the credits and royalties to Richard Ashcroft of the Verve.[145]

The song became a hit, popular for use at sporting events, and it was a big money-maker for ABKCO, which licensed its use for commercials advertising Nike shoes and Opel automobiles.

Death edit

Klein was diagnosed with diabetes at age 40.[146] He suffered several heart attacks over the years, of varying severity. In 2004, the same year that ABKCO collected a Grammy Award for a Sam Cooke documentary, Legend, Klein fell and broke bones in his foot, requiring surgery. He was subsequently diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease.[147] He died on July 4, 2009 in New York City. The cause of his death was respiratory failure. Yoko Ono and Sean Ono Lennon attended Klein's funeral. Andrew Loog Oldham commented at a subsequent memorial service that Klein had greatly magnified the success of the Rolling Stones.[148]

In June 2015, American journalist Fred Goodman published a biography of Klein, Allen Klein: The Man Who Bailed Out the Beatles, Made the Stones, and Transformed Rock & Roll.[149]

Legacy edit

In the 1978 television mockumentary The Rutles: All You Need is Cash, which parodies the career of the Beatles, Allen Klein is portrayed as "Ron Decline", played by John Belushi. Introduced as "the most feared promoter in the world", Decline is so intimidating to his colleagues that they choose to throw themselves out of skyscraper windows rather than face him.[150]

In his book You Never Give Me Your Money: The Battle for the Soul of the Beatles, Peter Doggett says that Klein has come to be seen as one of the controversial "intruders" in the Beatles' story. Doggett writes:

Suspected for their motives, hated for their disruptive power, they all arrived from America and were all regarded as suspects for the crime of breaking up the Beatles, on the assumption that without them the group would have continued happily in each other's company until their dying days. The first of these intruders was Yoko Ono; the second was Linda Eastman; and the third was Allen Klein.

With the possible exception of Alexis Mardas, who occupied a far less central role, nobody in the Beatles' milieu has received a more damning verdict from historians than Allen Klein. He was, one said, "a tough little scorpion"; for another, "fast-talking, dirty-mouthed … sloppily dressed and grossly overweight"; again, "short and fat, beady-eyed and greasily pompadoured". Beatles aide Alistair Taylor said, "He had all the charm of a broken lavatory seat" ... So consistent was the vilification that when biographer Philip Norman merely described Klein as "a tubby little man", it sounded like a compliment.

… No such rehabilitation [as was later afforded Ono and Eastman] was available for Allen Klein, who entered the Beatles' story as a villain from central casting, and never escaped that role. Yet we are asked to believe that three of the four Beatles found this "beady-eyed" "grossly overweight" "scorpion" such an attractive figure that they were prepared to trust him with their futures. Clearly the Demon King didn't always exude the stench of sulphur.[151]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Klein's opposition to Some Time in New York City was based on the likelihood that its US sales would fall short of 500,000 units, which would disqualify the former Beatles from receiving their second royalty increase, under the terms of their agreement with Capitol.[114] Before its release, Klein negotiated with the record company to have the album discounted from this contractual stipulation, so demonstrating a degree of foresight that, author Peter Doggett writes, "Lennon never gave him credit for" when discussing Klein's contribution.[115]
  2. ^ Klein immediately countersued in London, in November 1973, for $19 million in unpaid fees. He also sued McCartney separately, for $34 million, but the suit was thrown out of court.[119]
  3. ^ In 1970, Harrison had included the line "Beware of ABKCO" in an early demo version of the song "Beware of Darkness".[108] During his 1974 North American tour—the end of which he spent avoiding Klein's process server in New York[125]—Harrison introduced a gag in the lyrics to "Sue Me, Sue You Blues": "Bring your lawyer and I'll bring Klein / Get together and we could have a bad time."[126]

References edit

  1. ^ Goodman 2015, p. xiii.
  2. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 178.
  3. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 133–35.
  4. ^ a b c McMillian 2013, p. 199.
  5. ^ McMillian 2013, pp. 199–223.
  6. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 252–53.
  7. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 2.
  8. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 3.
  9. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 4.
  10. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 6.
  11. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 8.
  12. ^ Distinguished Weequahic Alumni, Weequahic High School Alumni Association. Accessed December 19, 2019. "Allen Klein (1950) a music producer with Sam Cooke, the Beatles and Rolling Stones as clients."
  13. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 9.
  14. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 9–10.
  15. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 12.
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  19. ^ a b Goodman 2015, p. 19.
  20. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 17, 19.
  21. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 21.
  22. ^ a b c d e Goodman 2015, p. 22.
  23. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 25.
  24. ^ a b c Goodman 2015, p. 27.
  25. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 28–29.
  26. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 29.
  27. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 21–24.
  28. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 14, 19.
  29. ^ a b Laing, Dave (July 5, 2009). "Allen Klein: US business manager who made sure the Rolling Stones and the Beatles got paid". The Guardian. Retrieved January 16, 2016.
  30. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 22–24.
  31. ^ a b Perrone, Pierre (July 5, 2009). "Allen Klein: Notorious business manager for the Beatles and the Rolling Stones". The Independent. from the original on July 9, 2009. Retrieved October 20, 2017.
  32. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 34.
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  55. ^ Rej 2006, pp. 298–300.
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  59. ^ Rej 2006, p. 298.
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  61. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 89.
  62. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 121–122, 144–145, 150–151.
  63. ^ a b Sisario, Ben (July 5, 2009). "Allen Klein, 77, Dies; Managed Music Legends". The New York Times. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  64. ^ Perrone 2009.
  65. ^ Todd, Patrick (August 11, 2010). . rollingtimes.org. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved January 21, 2016.
  66. ^ McMillian 2013, p. 202.
  67. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 148–149, 197–203.
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  71. ^ News staff (June 5, 1975). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on February 3, 2013. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
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  77. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 62.
  78. ^ Beatles 2000, pp. 268–70, 287.
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  80. ^ Beatles 2000, p. 324.
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  82. ^ Staff writer (July 5, 2009). "Allen Klein". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
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  84. ^ Beatles 2000, pp. 324–326, 330.
  85. ^ Beatles 2000, pp. 326–327.
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  87. ^ . The Independent. August 21, 2006. Archived from the original on April 1, 2011. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
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  89. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 168–173.
  90. ^ Coleman 1984, pp. 377–389.
  91. ^ Beatles 2000, p. 328.
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  98. ^ Coleman 1984, p. 379.
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  100. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 209–214.
  101. ^ Coleman 1984, p. 380.
  102. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 232: "the former Beatle was now a huge artistic and commercial power in his own right ... [Lennon] hated the idea that George Harrison was suddenly the most popular and successful Beatle."
  103. ^ Rodriguez 2010, p. 159: "[Band on the Run] restored Paul's good name and put him back in the game for good, redefining perceptions of who was the ex-Beatle most capable of carrying on their legacy. Until Band on the Run, that ex-Fab had been widely assumed to be George."
  104. ^ Inglis 2010, pp. 23, 36: "[All Things Must Pass] elevate[d] 'the third Beatle' into a position that, for a time at least, comfortably eclipsed that of his former bandmates ... By mid-1972, Harrison, his music, and his humanitarian concerns were universally acclaimed ... his efforts to draw attention to the tragedies in Bangladesh had propelled him to the position of popular music's first statesman."
  105. ^ a b c Goodman 2015, pp. 217–222.
  106. ^ Soocher 2015, pp. xii, 200.
  107. ^ Doggett 2011, pp. 180–81, 206.
  108. ^ a b c Goodman 2015, pp. 241–42.
  109. ^ Doggett 2011, p. 192.
  110. ^ Doggett 2011, pp. 188, 192.
  111. ^ Fong-Torres, Ben (March 30, 1972). "Did Allen Klein Take Bangla Desh Money?". Rolling Stone. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  112. ^ Clayson 2003, pp. 332–33.
  113. ^ Doggett 2011, pp. 185, 192.
  114. ^ Doggett 2011, p. 185.
  115. ^ Doggett 2011, p. 191.
  116. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 234, 237.
  117. ^ Badman 2001, p. 95.
  118. ^ Doggett 2011, pp. 211–12.
  119. ^ Badman 2001, p. 111.
  120. ^ Doggett 2011, pp. 213–15.
  121. ^ Soocher 2015, pp. 176–77.
  122. ^ Soocher 2015, p. xii.
  123. ^ Coleman 1984, p. 476.
  124. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 242.
  125. ^ Soocher 2015, pp. 173–76.
  126. ^ Doggett 2011, p. 226.
  127. ^ Doggett 2011, p. 253.
  128. ^ Soocher 2015, p. 177.
  129. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 238–41.
  130. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 31–32.
  131. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 125.
  132. ^ Marco Giusti (2007). Dizionario del western all'italiana. Mondadori, 2007. pp. 157–158. ISBN 978-88-04-57277-0.
  133. ^ Mavis, Paul (May 6, 2015). "The Stranger Trilogy (Warner Archive Collection: A Stranger in Town, The Stranger Returns, The Silent Stranger)". DVDTalk.com. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
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  135. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 126-127.
  136. ^ News staff (July 4, 1970). "Not So, Says AKKCO in Reply to MGM Pact Breach Charge". Billboard. p. 4. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  137. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 227–228.
  138. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 275–276.
  139. ^ Jonathan Cott (2013). Days That I'll Remember: Spending Time With John Lennon & Yoko Ono. Omnibus Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-1-78323-048-8.
  140. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 247–248.
  141. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 258.
  142. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 245–253.
  143. ^ Goodman 2015, pp. 264–265.
  144. ^ Fricke, David (April 16, 1998). "The Verve: Richard Ashcroft's bittersweet triumph". Rolling Stone. Retrieved July 14, 2022.
  145. ^ Beaumont-Thomas, Ben (May 23, 2019). "Bittersweet no more: Rolling Stones pass Verve royalties to Richard Ashcroft". The Guardian. Retrieved July 14, 2022.
  146. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 268.
  147. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 273.
  148. ^ Goodman 2015, p. 275.
  149. ^ Greene, Andy (June 26, 2015). "Reconsidering Music-Business Boogeyman Allen Klein". Rolling Stone. Retrieved October 20, 2017.
  150. ^ Doggett 2011, p. 65.
  151. ^ Doggett 2011, pp. 65–66.

Sources edit

  • Badman, Keith (2001). The Beatles Diary Volume 2: After the Break-Up 1970–2001. London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-0-7119-8307-6.
  • Beatles, The (2000). The Beatles Anthology. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books. ISBN 0-8118-2684-8.
  • Clayson, Alan (2003). George Harrison. London: Sanctuary. ISBN 1-86074-489-3.
  • Coleman, Ray (1984). Lennon. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-011786-1.
  • Doggett, Peter (2011). You Never Give Me Your Money: The Beatles After the Breakup. New York, NY: It Books. ISBN 978-0-06-177418-8.
  • Goodman, Fred (2015). Allen Klein: The Man Who Bailed Out the Beatles, Made the Stones, and Transformed Rock & Roll. New York, NY: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-547-89686-1.
  • Inglis, Ian (2010). The Words and Music of George Harrison. Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger. ISBN 978-0-313-37532-3.
  • McMillian, John (2013). Beatles vs. Stones. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-14391-5969-9.
  • Rej, Bent (2006). The Rolling Stones: In the Beginning. New York, NY: Firefly Books. ISBN 978-1-55407-230-9.
  • Rodriguez, Robert (2010). Fab Four FAQ 2.0: The Beatles' Solo Years, 1970–1980. Milwaukee, WI: Backbeat Books. ISBN 978-1-4165-9093-4.
  • Soocher, Stan (2015). Baby You're a Rich Man: Suing the Beatles for Fun and Profit. Lebanon, NH: University Press of New England. ISBN 978-1-61168-380-6.

External links edit

  • Allen Klein – Daily Telegraph obituary
  • Allen Klein at IMDb
  • Beaumont, Mark (September 12, 2017). "'I signed Bitter Sweet Symphony away for one dollar': the unholy rows behind The Verve's Urban Hymns". Daily Telegraph.

allen, klein, american, author, author, english, singer, songwriter, alan, klein, december, 1931, july, 2009, american, businessman, whose, aggressive, negotiation, tactics, affected, industry, standards, compensating, recording, artists, founded, abkco, music. For the American author see Allen Klein author For the English singer songwriter see Alan Klein Allen Klein December 18 1931 July 4 2009 was an American businessman whose aggressive negotiation tactics affected industry standards for compensating recording artists He founded ABKCO Music amp Records Incorporated Klein increased profits for his musician clients by negotiating new record company contracts 1 He first scored monetary and contractual gains for Buddy Knox and Jimmy Bowen one hit rockabillies of the late 1950s then parlayed his early successes into a position managing Sam Cooke and eventually managed the Beatles and the Rolling Stones simultaneously along with many other artists becoming one of the most powerful individuals in the music industry during his era 2 Allen KleinKlein center signing the Beatles in 1969Born 1931 12 18 December 18 1931Newark New Jersey U S DiedJuly 4 2009 2009 07 04 aged 77 New York City New York U S Alma materUpsala CollegeOccupation s Accountant record label executive business managerYears active1956 2009OrganizationABKCO RecordsRather than offering financial advice and maximizing his clients income as a business manager normally would Klein set up what he called buy sell agreements where a company that Klein owned became an intermediary between his client and the record label owning the rights to the music manufacturing the records selling them to the record label and paying royalties and cash advances to the client Although Klein greatly increased his clients incomes he also enriched himself sometimes without his clients knowledge 3 The Rolling Stones 1 25 million advance from the Decca Records label in 1965 for example was deposited into a company that Klein had established and the fine print of the contract did not require Klein to release it for 20 years 4 Klein s involvement with both the Beatles and Rolling Stones would lead to years of litigation and specifically for the Rolling Stones accusations from the group that Klein had withheld royalty payments stolen the publishing rights to their songs and neglected to pay their taxes for five years thus had necessitated their French exile in 1971 5 After years of pursuit by the IRS Klein was convicted of the misdemeanor charge of making a false statement on his 1972 tax return for which in 1980 he was jailed for two months 6 Contents 1 Early life 2 Sam Cooke 3 Mickie Most and the British Invasion 4 The Rolling Stones 5 Cameo Parkway and ABKCO 6 The Beatles 7 Solo Beatles 8 Films and theater 9 Criminal conviction and jail time 10 Phil Spector 11 The Verve 12 Death 13 Legacy 14 Notes 15 References 16 Sources 17 External linksEarly life editKlein was born in Newark New Jersey the fourth child and only son of Jewish immigrants 7 His mother died of cancer soon afterward and Klein lived for a time with his grandparents 8 then subsequently in a Jewish orphanage 9 until his father remarried shortly before Klein s 10th birthday 10 An indifferent student he graduated from Weequahic High School in 1950 fellow graduate Philip Roth was the only classmate to sign his yearbook 11 12 In early work experience with a magazine and newspaper distribution company he showed skill with numbers and learned about how profits were often concealed from those who had been crucial in generating them Eventually he would realize that much the same situation existed in popular music where labels routinely took much profit from the transitory careers of the artists who created the profit generating music paying them less than what Klein thought they should 13 Klein enlisted in the US Army in 1951 where he served as a clerk typist on Governors Island New York 14 After military service and with the assistance of the G I Bill Klein majored in accounting at Upsala College graduating in June 1957 15 and was hired by a Manhattan accounting firm Joseph Fenton and Company 16 He was assigned to assist Joe Fenton in an audit of a music publishers organization the Harry Fox Agency and several record companies including Dot Records Liberty Records and Monarch Records 17 In an early setback to Klein s career he was fired by Joseph Fenton and Company after four months because of chronic lateness The company wrote to the State of New Jersey urging officials not to approve him as a Certified Public Accountant and Klein chose not to take the examination 18 He briefly attended law school but soon dropped out 19 Aided by his friendship with music publisher Don Kirshner a fellow alumnus of Upsala College 20 Klein worked as an accountant for the next several years assisted by Henry Newfeld a CPA who was a friend from school and the Army and Marty Weinberg another CPA under the name Allen Klein and Company 21 Klein s clients included Ersel Hickey 19 Dimitri Tiomkin 22 Steve Lawrence 22 Eydie Gorme 22 Sam Cooke Buddy Knox 22 Jimmy Bowen 22 Lloyd Price 23 Neil Sedaka 24 Bobby Darin 25 Bobby Vinton 26 Scepter Records 24 and the estate of Mike Todd 24 A key early contact was attorney Marty Machat who frequently performed legal work for Klein over the years 27 In June 1958 Klein married Betty Rosenblum a Hunter College student seven years his junior 28 The couple had three children 29 Klein acquired a reputation as a tough negotiator who could bring money to his clients Two of them rockabilly singers Knox and Bowen were owed royalties by Roulette Records Morris Levy co owner of Roulette was feared because of his organized crime connections He was known to pay artists as little as possible Klein persuaded him to pay Knox and Bowen the royalties they were owed over a four year period Klein s success with the Knox and Bowen negotiation brought him new clients and he and Levy became lifelong friends 30 29 31 Sam Cooke editIn 1963 Klein began a business partnership with Jocko Henderson an urbane black disc jockey who had daily radio shows in both Philadelphia and New York 32 Henderson hosted lavish profitable live rhythm and blues shows at the Apollo Theater in Harlem and formed a partnership with Klein to begin doing the same in Philadelphia 33 As Henderson s partner Klein was introduced to Sam Cooke a pre eminent talent who was equally adept at writing producing and performing his numerous hit records 34 Cooke had scored four top ten hits between 1957 and 1963 including his number one hit You Send Me 35 among 33 records in the top 100 in that period Although Cooke was clearly making his label RCA Records a great deal of money label executives nonetheless repeatedly refused to honor his many requests for a review of his accounts 36 Klein forced the reluctant label to open its books for a thorough audit Shortly afterward RCA agreed to re negotiate Cooke s contract 37 Klein secured for his client a genuinely groundbreaking deal Cooke created a holding company Tracey Ltd which was named after Cooke s middle daughter Klein Cooke s manager sneakily changed paperwork and listed himself as owner instead and Sam Cooke as his employee Sam Cooke trusted him to protect him against crooked music executives but Klein used that trust to his advantage Tracey would manufacture Cooke s recordings and give exclusive rights to RCA to sell them for 30 years after which the rights would revert to Tracey Cooke would receive a cash advance of 100 000 per year for three years followed by 75 000 for each of two option years Instead of being paid the first 100 000 in cash Cooke was paid in Tracey preferred stock which would be taxed only when he sold it 38 While the deal benefited Cooke it also greatly benefited Klein who ended up owning the rights to all of Cooke s recordings made since the contract re negotiation when Cooke was killed in 1964 and his widow sold Cooke s remaining rights to Klein 39 Klein s successful negotiations on behalf of Cooke brought him new clients including Bobby Vinton 40 and the Dave Clark Five 41 As with Cooke Klein arranged for his clients to be paid over a period of time to reduce their tax liability This also benefited Klein who took advantage of the earning potential of money over time to make money from the money 42 According to the 2019 documentary Lady You Shot Me The Life and Death of Sam Cooke Klein was a predator in his relationship with the singer As of 2019 Cooke s family received no royalties or benefits from his music All royalties and publishing profits go to Klein s corporation Mickie Most and the British Invasion editIn 1964 Klein became the American business manager of Mickie Most a former singer who was the savvy producer of hits for the Animals and Herman s Hermits 43 Klein extended to Most a million dollar promise adding that if he failed to deliver in only one month Most owed him nothing 44 Klein did deliver through strategic re negotiations of existing contracts and new producing opportunities for RCA including offers for Most to produce for both Sam Cooke and Elvis Presley 45 Though the latter two prospects did not materialize Most was suddenly one of the most talked about and financially gratified figures in the English recording industry and Klein was a step closer to eventual agreements with both the Beatles and the Rolling Stones 46 His victories for Most won Klein access to several key English musicians He eventually negotiated vastly improved deals for The Animals 47 Herman s Hermits 47 the Kinks 48 Lulu 49 Donovan 50 and Pete Townshend of the Who 51 However Klein s help came at a price To shelter his clients money from Britain s high taxation rate on income earned abroad Klein held the money for them at the Chemical Bank in New York City and paid it to them over periods of time of up to 20 years Klein invested that money which earned far more than Klein was obligated to pay to his clients and he kept the difference in the accounts thereby maintaining control over the money 52 The Rolling Stones editIn the spring of 1965 Andrew Loog Oldham co manager of the Rolling Stones saw in Klein a terrific business adviser and ally one who could help him win an incipient power struggle with Eric Easton a music business veteran who was then the other half of the band s management team 53 Barely 21 Oldham was profoundly important in the development of the Stones image and in initiating the songwriting partnership of Keith Richards and Mick Jagger 54 55 After some management mishaps blame for which fell at Easton s feet and Jagger s ascension in the band s hierarchy following I Can t Get No Satisfaction the Stones first number one record in America Oldham sought and received Jagger s blessing to bring Klein aboard for re negotiation of the group s contract with Decca Records 56 The label offered the band the opportunity to make 300 000 if their records continued to sell Klein countered with and quickly secured an arrangement paying the Stones twice as much in the form of an advance He also forced London Records Decca s American subsidiary to sign a separate contract It too was for 600 000 By the time Klein subsequently re negotiated the deal one year later Easton having been removed as co manager the Stones were guaranteed 2 6 million more than the Beatles were making 57 When Klein examined the Stones management contract with Easton and Oldham he found that the two were receiving a disproportionate share of the group s income not only did Easton and Oldham receive an 8 percent royalty on sales of the Stones singles the Stones themselves received only 6 percent but they also received a 25 percent commission on the Stones income At Klein s insistence Oldham increased the Stones royalties to 7 percent and relinquished his commission 58 59 Klein offered the Stones a million dollar minimum guarantee paid over a 20 year period to reduce the Stones tax liability to let him become their music publisher based on his faith in the Jagger Richards songwriting team He also arranged for a level of tour support and publicity far above anything the band had ever previously experienced for the Stones 1965 American tour in support of the album December s Children 60 Jagger who had studied at the London School of Economics 61 gradually became distrustful of Klein particularly for the latter s ability to insert himself as a profit participant in the group s ever growing financial affairs For example in 1968 Klein very profitably bought out Oldham s share in the band for 750 000 62 63 64 65 By 1968 the Stones were so concerned with how their finances were being handled by Klein that they hired a London law firm Berger Oliver amp Co to look into their financial situation and Jagger hired the titled merchant banker Prince Rupert Loewenstein to be his personal financial adviser 66 Another possible factor in the Stones dissatisfaction with Klein was that when the latter began to manage the Beatles he focused more of his attention on that band s affairs than on the concerns of the Stones In 1970 on the occasion of needing to negotiate a new contract with Decca Jagger announced that Klein would be replaced as manager by Loewenstein 67 The split between Klein and the Stones led to years of litigation In 1971 the Stones sued Klein over U S publishing rights The suit was settled the following year with the Stones receiving 1 2 million as a settlement of all American royalties earned up to that point and was essentially the 1 25 million advance that Decca had paid the Stones in 1965 that Klein had been withholding since August 1965 4 However the Stones were unable to break their contract with Klein who held an additional 2 million of the Stones money to be paid over a 15 year period ostensibly for tax purposes Klein s company ABKCO continued to control the rights to publish the Stones music 68 and it was Klein who made a fortune off the band s all time best selling album Hot Rocks 1964 1971 4 In 1972 Klein alleged that some of the songs on their album Exile on Main Street had been composed while the Stones were still under contract with ABKCO As a result ABKCO acquired ownership of the disputed songs and was able to publish another Rolling Stones album More Hot Rocks Big Hits and Fazed Cookies 69 In 1974 negotiations over royalties led to a payment of 375 000 to the Stones and ABKCO s release of an additional Rolling Stones album Metamorphosis 70 In 1975 more lawsuits and negotiations resulted in a 1 million payment to the Stones for non payment by Klein of songwriting royalties and the release of four Rolling Stones albums including Rock and Roll Circus and Rolled Gold The Very Best of the Rolling Stones 71 In 1984 Jagger and Richards sued to break their publishing agreement with ABKCO because of non payment of royalties The judge encouraged the two sides to reach a settlement 72 Starting in 1986 when the introduction of compact discs brought great profits to the music industry relations began to improve between Klein and the Stones 73 In 2002 the Stones album Forty Licks and the Licks Tour celebrating the band s 40th anniversary incorporated songs owned by ABKCO The Stones agreed to a five year payment plan suggested by Klein s son Jody 74 In 2003 Klein negotiated with Steve Jobs to make ABKCO s Rolling Stones songs available on iTunes Cameo Parkway and ABKCO editIn February 1967 with an eye toward producing films and finding a way to invest his clients money Klein attempted to acquire Metro Goldwyn Mayer His hopes were blunted when Edgar Bronfman Sr heir to the Seagram fortune instead took control of the firm 75 Klein then turned his attention to Cameo Parkway Records a Philadelphia born Los Angeles based label which had enjoyed hits in the late 1950s and early 1960s thanks to Chubby Checker Bobby Rydell Dee Dee Sharp and others but which by 1967 was no longer prospering It was one of the first publicly traded record companies making it ideal for a financial maneuver Klein had in mind known as a reverse acquisition It was meant to take Allen Klein and Company public via its being acquired on paper by Cameo Parkway By July 1967 Klein and his associate Abbey Butler had acquired a controlling interest and filed to rename Cameo Parkway as ABKCO which is an acronym for The Allen and Betty Klein Company Fueled by speculation the stock price increased from 1 75 a share in July 1967 to a peak of 76 in February 1968 before the SEC halted trading The American Stock Exchange declined to reinstate the stock instead ABKCO continued to trade over the counter and the stock price dropped to more realistic levels In 1987 Klein made ABKCO a privately held company 76 The Beatles editFurther information Break up of the Beatles In 1964 Klein approached the Beatles manager Brian Epstein with an offer for the Beatles to sign with RCA for 2 million but Epstein was not interested saying that he was loyal to EMI 77 After Epstein died in August 1967 the group formed Apple Corps in January 1968 78 79 They hoped it would provide the means for correcting Epstein s unfortunate business decisions which had both limited their incomes and ensured high tax burdens Although Hey Jude the Beatles first Apple release was an enormous success the label itself was a financial mess with little accountability for how money was being spent 80 81 Klein contacted John Lennon after reading his press comment that the Beatles would be broke in six months if things continued as they were 82 On January 26 1969 he met with Lennon who retained Klein as his financial representative and the next day met with the other Beatles Paul McCartney preferred to be represented by Lee and John Eastman the father and brother respectively of McCartney s girlfriend Linda whom he married on March 12 Given a choice between Klein and the Eastmans George Harrison and Ringo Starr preferred Klein Following rancorous London meetings with both Eastmans in April Klein was appointed as the Beatles manager on an interim basis with the Eastmans being appointed as their attorneys Continued conflict between Klein and the Eastmans made this arrangement unworkable The Eastmans were dismissed as the Beatles attorneys and on May 8 Klein was given a three year contract as business manager of the Beatles McCartney refused to sign the contract but was outvoted by the other Beatles 83 84 Once in charge of Apple Klein fired a large number of the organization s employees including Apple Records president Ron Kass and replaced them with his own people 85 86 He closed Apple Electronics which was headed by Alexis Mardas Mardas resigned his directorship in May 1971 87 Klein s attempt to fire Neil Aspinall a longtime confidant of the Beatles was immediately thwarted by the band 31 Klein was hit with his first crisis in managing the Beatles when Clive Epstein brother of Brian Epstein and chief heir to NEMS the management company his brother had founded sold NEMS to Triumph a British investment group managed by Leonard Richenberg NEMS held a 25 stake in the Beatles earnings which Klein as well as the Beatles themselves desperately wanted to buy out This led to tough negotiations with Triumph Klein ultimately secured the Beatles rights in their previous work for just four annual payments amounting to 5 of their earnings However in the lead up to those negotiations Richenberg commissioned a hostile investigative report on Klein which The Sunday Times ran under the headline The Toughest Wheeler Dealer in the Pop Jungle 88 An even more important battle to secure the Beatles a financial situation commensurate with their worldwide popular acclaim was with Northern Songs Ltd the publishing company Northern Songs was managed by Dick James whom Brian Epstein had rewarded with the Beatles publishing rights in return for his helping them get placed on a TV show Thank Your Lucky Stars early in their career But James had constructed a contract that gave him an outsized share and Epstein had not understood its implications James knew that Klein would soon eliminate his perks so he quickly offered to sell Northern Songs to ATV run by entertainment mogul Lew Grade rather than allow Lennon and McCartney an opportunity to buy back publishing rights to their own songs Klein worked feverishly to pull together a consortium which would beat Grade s offer but ultimately his efforts were derailed by infighting between McCartney and Lennon themselves 89 90 91 In September 1969 while Klein was in the midst of renegotiating the Beatles unsatisfactory recording agreements with EMI Lennon told him of his plans to quit the group It was agreed that this was the wrong time to either make or announce such a move 92 93 EMI was loath to re negotiate but their American subsidiary Capitol Records was so impressed by Abbey Road that they agreed to vastly improved royalty terms McCartney joined his bandmates in endorsing the deal Klein had secured 94 Abbey Road proved to be the Beatles last true collaboration but Klein recognised an opportunity in the band s shelved January 1969 album and related documentary project both titled Get Back to get another album release out of the splintered group while also fulfilling their obligation to provide one more film to United Artists the studio that had previously released both A Hard Day s Night and Help Phil Spector the producer famous for his wall of sound recordings with artists such as the Ronettes and the Righteous Brothers was eager to sign on as producer for the album which was eventually titled Let It Be McCartney did not approve of Spector but the other Beatles did 95 This proved to be McCartney and Klein s last face to face meeting However Apple made 6 million in the first month following the May 1970 release of the record and the film 96 Unhappy with production decisions on the Let It Be album and the other Beatles decision to hire Klein as their manager McCartney went public with his plans to leave the Beatles in April 1970 97 98 He wanted to be released from his partnership with Lennon Starr and Harrison who had in recent months proved a steady three to one majority against McCartney s proposals The Eastmans convinced McCartney to file suit against his former bandmates for dissolution of the Beatles partnership which he did on December 31 1970 99 The judge ruled in McCartney s favor in March 1971 He decided that the combined financial affairs of the former Beatles should be placed in the care of a receiver until mutually acceptable terms for their break up could be found Klein thereby retained a position in the post breakup solo careers of Harrison Starr and Lennon but was no longer in charge of their affairs as a partnership 100 101 Solo Beatles editFor the first few years after the Beatles contentious break up George Harrison was widely seen as the most accomplished and artistically successful former Beatle 102 103 104 His November 1970 three disc set All Things Must Pass was a sales triumph and produced hit singles in My Sweet Lord and What Is Life In the spring of 1971 Harrison learned from his friend and mentor Ravi Shankar about the desperate people of Bangladesh who had been devastated both by military violence and a vicious cyclone Harrison immediately set about organizing an event which would take place in Madison Square Garden within just five weeks the Concert for Bangladesh from which a live album could raise further funds for the Bangladeshi refugees Klein hustled to get the invited artists including Bob Dylan and Eric Clapton to play for free while donating their shares of royalties to charity and convinced Capitol Records to grant an unprecedented 50 royalty rate 105 The Concert for Bangladesh live album and film raised over 15 million Klein had failed to register the shows as a UNICEF charity event however 106 as a result the proceeds were denied tax exempt status in Britain and the US 107 The IRS attempted to tax the income and 10 million of that amount was held back for years 105 Both Harrison and John Lennon soon became disenchanted with Klein 108 By mid 1972 Harrison was incensed at the outcome of Klein s handling of the Bangladesh relief effort 109 Aside from the question of its charity status unwelcome attention had been drawn to the project after an article published in New York magazine accused Klein of pocketing 1 14 on each copy of the live album priced at 10 110 111 allegations that raised suspicions among the three former Beatles with regard to his conduct in their business affairs 112 Lennon also felt betrayed by Klein s lack of support for his and Yoko Ono s increasingly politically focused work which was typified by the couple s 1972 album Some Time in New York City 113 nb 1 In early 1973 Lennon Harrison and Starr served notice that they would not be renewing Klein s management contract when it expired in March 116 Early the following month Lennon told an interviewer Let s say possibly Paul s suspicions were right and the timing was right 117 Klein responded by suing the Beatles and Apple in New York in order to recoup the loans he had made to his three former clients and other costs owing to ABKCO They then sued him in the London courts citing excessive commission fees the mishandling of the Concert for Bangladesh his misrepresentation of their individual financial standings and his failure to ensure that the roster of artists at Apple Records prospered under his control 118 nb 2 While the suits were ongoing Klein made a play for the US portion of Harrison s publishing company Harrisongs in late 1974 without success 120 121 He also attempted to influence the outcome of Lennon s arrangement with music publisher Morris Levy regarding an alleged copyright infringement of the Chuck Berry song You Can t Catch Me in Lennon s 1969 Beatles composition Come Together 122 Lennon s song Steel and Glass from the 1974 album Walls and Bridges was his thinly veiled dig at Klein 123 124 nb 3 Klein s 1973 lawsuit against the Beatles was settled out of court in January 1977 with Ono representing the former bandmates 127 Klein received a lump sum payment of approximately 5 million in lieu of future royalties and as repayment of the loans that ABKCO had made to the Beatles 108 Harrison had been sued for copyright infringement in 1971 because of the alleged similarity of his song My Sweet Lord to He s So Fine which had been recorded by the Chiffons in 1963 and was owned by Bright Tunes Music The case was still pending in 1976 as an alternate strategy to access Harrison s US publishing 128 Klein now purchased Bright Tunes and thus became the plaintiff in the lawsuit against Harrison The judge ruled that Harrison had infringed on Bright Tunes copyright and the ruling was upheld on appeal The judge initially assessed damages of 2 133 316 which Harrison would have to pay to Klein then reduced the figure to 1 599 987 but finally ruled in 1981 that Klein still had a fiduciary responsibility to Harrison and should not be allowed to profit from his acquisition of Bright Tunes Klein was ordered to hold He s So Fine in trust for Harrison provided that Harrison reimburse him the 587 000 that it had cost Klein to purchase the company 129 Films and theater editThe multi Academy Award winning 1955 film Marty an independently produced movie that undercut the Hollywood studio system provided a business template which Allen Klein closely studied and later adapted to the recording industry In the late 1950s Klein shared an office with press agent Bernie Kamber who represented Burt Lancaster one of Marty s producers Klein absorbed much from Kamber on how the producers had structured their business model a paradigm whose strength derived from the fact that artists not film studios or record labels drove marketplace success and that intense preparation and canny negotiation could lavishly reward artists and their representatives In 1961 Klein did accountancy work for an independent film Force of Impulse where he formed lasting relationships that he would turn to for many film projects of his own In 1962 Klein produced a film called Without Each Other He took it to the Cannes Film Festival and later claimed that it had won the Best American Picture Award there though no such award existed A distributor never materialized but Klein s enthusiasm for film persisted 130 Starting in 1967 Klein produced four films in the Spaghetti Western genre a lean and mean style of cowboy movie with taciturn heroes and explosive violence Klein utilized actor Tony Anthony whom he d met on Force of Impulse in all four Their films included a trilogy comprising A Stranger In Town 131 The Stranger Returns 1967 and The Silent Stranger shot in 1968 but not released until 1975 by United Artists 132 133 Blindman 1970 featured Ringo Starr as a Mexican bandit Anthony as its lead and Klein as an extra 134 The first two Stranger films were released by MGM the studio where Klein produced Mrs Brown You ve Got a Lovely Daughter starring the popular Herman s Hermits Klein who had tried to purchase MGM in the mid 60s 135 became involved with a lawsuit against MGM with each accusing the other of not performing on their contracts with each other 136 In 1971 John Lennon directed Klein s attention to El Topo a surrealistic western by the Chilean director Alejandro Jodorowsky Inspired by Lennon s enthusiasm Klein bought the film and put it in American release He then produced and financed Jodorowsky s next film The Holy Mountain an allegorical journey with psychedelic overtones Later the producer and the director s planned collaboration on a proposed film version of Story of O was halted when Jodorowsky refused to make the film and to return substantial advance monies Klein retaliated by withdrawing both El Topo and The Holy Mountain from distribution 137 In 2008 Jodorowsky released the films in Europe and was sued by Klein After a face to face reconciliation between the two men Klein dropped his lawsuit and ABKCO released the films on video paying Jodorowsky to remaster them 138 Klein s legs appeared in Lennon and Yoko Ono s 1971 film Up Your Legs Forever 139 With George Harrison Klein co produced the 1972 concert film The Concert for Bangladesh 105 Klein also produced the 1978 film The Greek Tycoon in which Anthony Quinn and Jacqueline Bisset played characters based on Aristotle Onassis and Jacqueline Kennedy 140 In the early 1980s Klein produced two Broadway plays It Had to be You a romantic comedy starring Renee Taylor and Joseph Bologna ran for barely a month Next Klein produced The Man Who Had Three Arms written by Edward Albee Although Albee had also written big successes in The Zoo Story and Who s Afraid of Virginia Woolf the play Klein produced had an even shorter run than his previous attempt 141 Criminal conviction and jail time editIn 1977 Klein and ABKCO s former head of promotion Pete Bennett were each charged with three felony counts of income tax evasion for 1970 1971 and 1972 and related misdemeanor counts of making false statement on their income tax returns for each of those years The IRS which had been investigating Klein for several years claimed that Klein and Bennett had sold promotional copies of Beatles and post Beatles albums common practice in the music industry at the time without declaring the sales on their tax returns Klein was alleged to have received over 200 000 Bennett pleaded guilty to a single misdemeanor charge and became a witness against Klein Klein testified that he had not instructed Bennett to sell promotional copies of albums and that although he d received cash payments from Bennett the payments were a return of cash advances which Bennett had been given Klein s first trial ended in a mistrial because the jury was deadlocked At his second trial in 1979 the jury found Klein not guilty of the felony charges but guilty of a single misdemeanor charge for false statements on his 1972 tax return Klein was fined 5 000 and sentenced to two months in jail which he served in July September 1980 142 63 Phil Spector editIn 1988 Klein began managing Phil Spector s business affairs including his publishing and recording assets Although Spector had not been active as a producer for several years his early work was still frequently broadcast and also licensed for film soundtracks Spector s publishing company Mother Bertha Music Inc was controlled by Trio a Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller company which was in turn administered by Warner Chappell Music Warner Chappell was making appropriate payments but significant amounts were not being passed on to Spector Klein s goal was to get Spector all the money owed him and also to wrest a concession allowing Spector to co administer the future licensing of his music Klein and Spector brought suit in federal court where a courtroom win would secure the first goal but not the second Klein accordingly then advised a settlement strategy which proved successful 143 The Verve editOn their 1997 single Bitter Sweet Symphony the English band the Verve sampled a 1965 orchestral version of the Rolling Stones song The Last Time by the Andrew Oldham Orchestra 144 Klein who owned the copyrights to the Rolling Stones early work refused clearance for the sample following a lawsuit the Verve ceded the songwriting credits and royalties In 2019 Klein s son and the Rolling Stones returned the credits and royalties to Richard Ashcroft of the Verve 145 The song became a hit popular for use at sporting events and it was a big money maker for ABKCO which licensed its use for commercials advertising Nike shoes and Opel automobiles Death editKlein was diagnosed with diabetes at age 40 146 He suffered several heart attacks over the years of varying severity In 2004 the same year that ABKCO collected a Grammy Award for a Sam Cooke documentary Legend Klein fell and broke bones in his foot requiring surgery He was subsequently diagnosed with Alzheimer s disease 147 He died on July 4 2009 in New York City The cause of his death was respiratory failure Yoko Ono and Sean Ono Lennon attended Klein s funeral Andrew Loog Oldham commented at a subsequent memorial service that Klein had greatly magnified the success of the Rolling Stones 148 In June 2015 American journalist Fred Goodman published a biography of Klein Allen Klein The Man Who Bailed Out the Beatles Made the Stones and Transformed Rock amp Roll 149 Legacy editIn the 1978 television mockumentary The Rutles All You Need is Cash which parodies the career of the Beatles Allen Klein is portrayed as Ron Decline played by John Belushi Introduced as the most feared promoter in the world Decline is so intimidating to his colleagues that they choose to throw themselves out of skyscraper windows rather than face him 150 In his book You Never Give Me Your Money The Battle for the Soul of the Beatles Peter Doggett says that Klein has come to be seen as one of the controversial intruders in the Beatles story Doggett writes Suspected for their motives hated for their disruptive power they all arrived from America and were all regarded as suspects for the crime of breaking up the Beatles on the assumption that without them the group would have continued happily in each other s company until their dying days The first of these intruders was Yoko Ono the second was Linda Eastman and the third was Allen Klein With the possible exception of Alexis Mardas who occupied a far less central role nobody in the Beatles milieu has received a more damning verdict from historians than Allen Klein He was one said a tough little scorpion for another fast talking dirty mouthed sloppily dressed and grossly overweight again short and fat beady eyed and greasily pompadoured Beatles aide Alistair Taylor said He had all the charm of a broken lavatory seat So consistent was the vilification that when biographer Philip Norman merely described Klein as a tubby little man it sounded like a compliment No such rehabilitation as was later afforded Ono and Eastman was available for Allen Klein who entered the Beatles story as a villain from central casting and never escaped that role Yet we are asked to believe that three of the four Beatles found this beady eyed grossly overweight scorpion such an attractive figure that they were prepared to trust him with their futures Clearly the Demon King didn t always exude the stench of sulphur 151 Notes edit Klein s opposition to Some Time in New York City was based on the likelihood that its US sales would fall short of 500 000 units which would disqualify the former Beatles from receiving their second royalty increase under the terms of their agreement with Capitol 114 Before its release Klein negotiated with the record company to have the album discounted from this contractual stipulation so demonstrating a degree of foresight that author Peter Doggett writes Lennon never gave him credit for when discussing Klein s contribution 115 Klein immediately countersued in London in November 1973 for 19 million in unpaid fees He also sued McCartney separately for 34 million but the suit was thrown out of court 119 In 1970 Harrison had included the line Beware of ABKCO in an early demo version of the song Beware of Darkness 108 During his 1974 North American tour the end of which he spent avoiding Klein s process server in New York 125 Harrison introduced a gag in the lyrics to Sue Me Sue You Blues Bring your lawyer and I ll bring Klein Get together and we could have a bad time 126 References edit Goodman 2015 p xiii Goodman 2015 p 178 Goodman 2015 pp 133 35 a b c McMillian 2013 p 199 McMillian 2013 pp 199 223 Goodman 2015 pp 252 53 Goodman 2015 p 2 Goodman 2015 p 3 Goodman 2015 p 4 Goodman 2015 p 6 Goodman 2015 p 8 Distinguished Weequahic Alumni Weequahic High School Alumni Association Accessed December 19 2019 Allen Klein 1950 a music producer with Sam Cooke the Beatles and Rolling Stones as clients Goodman 2015 p 9 Goodman 2015 pp 9 10 Goodman 2015 p 12 Goodman 2015 p 15 Goodman 2015 p 16 Goodman 2015 p 18 a b Goodman 2015 p 19 Goodman 2015 pp 17 19 Goodman 2015 p 21 a b c d e Goodman 2015 p 22 Goodman 2015 p 25 a b c Goodman 2015 p 27 Goodman 2015 pp 28 29 Goodman 2015 p 29 Goodman 2015 pp 21 24 Goodman 2015 pp 14 19 a b Laing Dave July 5 2009 Allen Klein US business manager who made sure the Rolling Stones and the Beatles got paid The Guardian Retrieved January 16 2016 Goodman 2015 pp 22 24 a b Perrone Pierre July 5 2009 Allen Klein Notorious business manager for the Beatles and the Rolling Stones The Independent Archived from the original on July 9 2009 Retrieved October 20 2017 Goodman 2015 p 34 Goodman 2015 pp 35 36 Goodman 2015 p 38 Goodman 2015 p 37 Goodman 2015 p 39 Goodman 2015 pp 40 42 Goodman 2015 pp 44 46 Goodman 2015 pp 57 58 Goodman 2015 p 47 Goodman 2015 p 48 Goodman 2015 p 49 Goodman 2015 p 69 Goodman 2015 p 71 Goodman 2015 p 76 Goodman 2015 p 80 a b Goodman 2015 pp 120 134 Goodman 2015 pp 112 113 Goodman 2015 pp 69 245 Goodman 2015 pp 112 119 Goodman 2015 p 248 Goodman 2015 pp 121 122 Goodman 2015 pp 77 80 Goodman 2015 pp 77 90 96 Rej 2006 pp 298 300 Goodman 2015 pp 96 106 Goodman 2015 pp 107 108 Goodman 2015 pp 90 108 Rej 2006 p 298 Goodman 2015 pp 108 111 Goodman 2015 p 89 Goodman 2015 pp 121 122 144 145 150 151 a b Sisario Ben July 5 2009 Allen Klein 77 Dies Managed Music Legends The New York Times Retrieved April 23 2010 Perrone 2009 Todd Patrick August 11 2010 Who What Is Nanker Phelge rollingtimes org Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved January 21 2016 McMillian 2013 p 202 Goodman 2015 pp 148 149 197 203 Goodman 2015 pp 230 231 Goodman 2015 pp 235 236 Goodman 2015 p 243 News staff June 5 1975 Stones Settle With Allen Klein Four More Albums Rolling Stone Archived from the original on February 3 2013 Retrieved February 4 2016 Goodman 2015 pp 261 262 Goodman 2015 p 261 Goodman 2015 p 272 Goodman 2015 pp 123 127 Goodman 2015 pp 128 133 Goodman 2015 p 62 Beatles 2000 pp 268 70 287 Goodman 2015 pp 154 55 Beatles 2000 p 324 Goodman 2015 pp 156 57 Staff writer July 5 2009 Allen Klein The Daily Telegraph Retrieved October 21 2017 Goodman 2015 pp 159 175 Beatles 2000 pp 324 326 330 Beatles 2000 pp 326 327 Goodman 2015 pp 187 191 John Alexis Mardas The Independent August 21 2006 Archived from the original on April 1 2011 Retrieved October 21 2017 Goodman 2015 pp 167 168 Goodman 2015 pp 168 173 Coleman 1984 pp 377 389 Beatles 2000 p 328 Goodman 2015 p 181 Beatles 2000 p 347 Goodman 2015 p 168 Beatles 2000 p 323 Goodman 2015 p 185 Beatles 2000 pp 349 352 Coleman 1984 p 379 Goodman 2015 p 208 Goodman 2015 pp 209 214 Coleman 1984 p 380 Goodman 2015 p 232 the former Beatle was now a huge artistic and commercial power in his own right Lennon hated the idea that George Harrison was suddenly the most popular and successful Beatle Rodriguez 2010 p 159 Band on the Run restored Paul s good name and put him back in the game for good redefining perceptions of who was the ex Beatle most capable of carrying on their legacy Until Band on the Run that ex Fab had been widely assumed to be George Inglis 2010 pp 23 36 All Things Must Pass elevate d the third Beatle into a position that for a time at least comfortably eclipsed that of his former bandmates By mid 1972 Harrison his music and his humanitarian concerns were universally acclaimed his efforts to draw attention to the tragedies in Bangladesh had propelled him to the position of popular music s first statesman a b c Goodman 2015 pp 217 222 Soocher 2015 pp xii 200 Doggett 2011 pp 180 81 206 a b c Goodman 2015 pp 241 42 Doggett 2011 p 192 Doggett 2011 pp 188 192 Fong Torres Ben March 30 1972 Did Allen Klein Take Bangla Desh Money Rolling Stone Retrieved October 21 2017 Clayson 2003 pp 332 33 Doggett 2011 pp 185 192 Doggett 2011 p 185 Doggett 2011 p 191 Goodman 2015 pp 234 237 Badman 2001 p 95 Doggett 2011 pp 211 12 Badman 2001 p 111 Doggett 2011 pp 213 15 Soocher 2015 pp 176 77 Soocher 2015 p xii Coleman 1984 p 476 Goodman 2015 p 242 Soocher 2015 pp 173 76 Doggett 2011 p 226 Doggett 2011 p 253 Soocher 2015 p 177 Goodman 2015 pp 238 41 Goodman 2015 pp 31 32 Goodman 2015 p 125 Marco Giusti 2007 Dizionario del western all italiana Mondadori 2007 pp 157 158 ISBN 978 88 04 57277 0 Mavis Paul May 6 2015 The Stranger Trilogy Warner Archive Collection A Stranger in Town The Stranger Returns The Silent Stranger DVDTalk com Retrieved January 22 2016 Goodman 2015 p 203 Goodman 2015 p 126 127 News staff July 4 1970 Not So Says AKKCO in Reply to MGM Pact Breach Charge Billboard p 4 Retrieved October 21 2017 Goodman 2015 pp 227 228 Goodman 2015 pp 275 276 Jonathan Cott 2013 Days That I ll Remember Spending Time With John Lennon amp Yoko Ono Omnibus Press p 74 ISBN 978 1 78323 048 8 Goodman 2015 pp 247 248 Goodman 2015 p 258 Goodman 2015 pp 245 253 Goodman 2015 pp 264 265 Fricke David April 16 1998 The Verve Richard Ashcroft s bittersweet triumph Rolling Stone Retrieved July 14 2022 Beaumont Thomas Ben May 23 2019 Bittersweet no more Rolling Stones pass Verve royalties to Richard Ashcroft The Guardian Retrieved July 14 2022 Goodman 2015 p 268 Goodman 2015 p 273 Goodman 2015 p 275 Greene Andy June 26 2015 Reconsidering Music Business Boogeyman Allen Klein Rolling Stone Retrieved October 20 2017 Doggett 2011 p 65 Doggett 2011 pp 65 66 Sources editBadman Keith 2001 The Beatles Diary Volume 2 After the Break Up 1970 2001 London Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 7119 8307 6 Beatles The 2000 The Beatles Anthology San Francisco CA Chronicle Books ISBN 0 8118 2684 8 Clayson Alan 2003 George Harrison London Sanctuary ISBN 1 86074 489 3 Coleman Ray 1984 Lennon McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 011786 1 Doggett Peter 2011 You Never Give Me Your Money The Beatles After the Breakup New York NY It Books ISBN 978 0 06 177418 8 Goodman Fred 2015 Allen Klein The Man Who Bailed Out the Beatles Made the Stones and Transformed Rock amp Roll New York NY Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0 547 89686 1 Inglis Ian 2010 The Words and Music of George Harrison Santa Barbara CA Praeger ISBN 978 0 313 37532 3 McMillian John 2013 Beatles vs Stones New York NY Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 14391 5969 9 Rej Bent 2006 The Rolling Stones In the Beginning New York NY Firefly Books ISBN 978 1 55407 230 9 Rodriguez Robert 2010 Fab Four FAQ 2 0 The Beatles Solo Years 1970 1980 Milwaukee WI Backbeat Books ISBN 978 1 4165 9093 4 Soocher Stan 2015 Baby You re a Rich Man Suing the Beatles for Fun and Profit Lebanon NH University Press of New England ISBN 978 1 61168 380 6 External links editAllen Klein Daily Telegraph obituary Allen Klein at IMDb Beaumont Mark September 12 2017 I signed Bitter Sweet Symphony away for one dollar the unholy rows behind The Verve s Urban Hymns Daily Telegraph Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allen Klein amp oldid 1217108938, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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