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Seymour Stein, record label boss who signed Madonna and top alternative acts, dead at 80

Seymour Stein, the brash, prescient and highly successful founder of Sire Records who helped launch the careers of Madonna, Talking Heads and many others, died on Sunday at age 80.

Stein helped lift Ramones, Talking Heads to larger audiences, signed U.K. acts the Smiths, Depeche Mode

Two men, one with facial hair and the other an older man in a blazer, pose for a photograph.
Sire Records boss Seymour Stein, right, is shown in New York City on March 13, 2005, with Ice-T, whose first four major label albums were released by Sire. (Evan Agostini/Getty Images)

Seymour Stein, the brash, prescient and highly successful founder of Sire Records who helped launchthe careers of Madonna, Talking Heads and many others, died on Sunday at age 80.

Stein, who helped found the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation and was himself inducted into the Rock Hall in 2005, died of cancer in Los Angeles, according to a statement by his family.

Born in 1942, Stein was a New York City native who as a teenager worked summers at Cincinnati-based King Records, James Brown's label, and by his mid-20s had co-founded Sire Productions with Richard Gottehrer, soon to become Sire Records.

Obsessed with the Billboard music charts since childhood, he was known for his deep knowledge and appreciation of music and would prove an astute judge of talent during the 1970s era of New Wave, a term he helped popularize, signing record deals with Talking Heads, the Ramones and the Pretenders.

"Seymour's taste in music is always a couple of years ahead of everyone else's," Talking Heads manager Gary Kurfirst told the Rock Hall around the time of Stein's induction.

Signed Madonna from a hospital bed

His most lucrative discovery happened in the early 1980s, when he heard the demo tape of a little known singer-dancer from the downtown New York club scene, Madonna.

"I liked Madonna's voice, I liked the feel, and I liked the name Madonna. I liked it all and played it again," he wrote in his memoir Siren Song, published in 2018, the same year he retired. Stein was hospitalized with a heart infection when he first learned of Madonna, but was so eager to meet that he had her brought to his room.

"She was all dolled up in cheap punky gear, the kind of club kid who looked absurdly out of place in a cardiac ward," he wrote. "She wasn't even interested in hearing me explain how much I liked her demo. 'The thing to do now,' she said, 'is sign me to a record deal."'

Sire artists also included Ice-T, the Replacements, and British alternative acts like the Smiths, Depeche Mode, the Charlatansand Echo and the Bunnymen, along with the more-established Lou Reed and Brian Wilson, who recorded with Sire later in their careers.

"He asked me, of all people, [to] induct him into the Rock [and] Roll Hall of Fame," said Ice-T in a social media post Monday,referencing many of those acts. "It's a sad day for me and all of music."

Praise for Canada's BNL, k.d.

Stein, on the history section of the label's website, extended praise to a pair of Canadian acts he signed to U.S. deals.

Barenaked Ladies, he said, were "a fine bunch of talented young men with a great sense of humour" who he signed in Scarborough, Ont., after hearing their first Canadian releases.

Stein also recalled being knocked out by k.d. lang's early output on Alberta's Bumstead Records.

"One listen and I was on the next plane to Edmonton, where I saw her perform and stayed up all night with her, singing old country songs originated by Kitty Wells, Hank Thompson, Lefty Frizzelland, of course, Hank Williams," said Stein, calling lang "a great artist and a brave and honest woman."

Lang, among the artists recognizing Stein's impact since his death was announced Sunday, was first picked up by Sire for 1988's Shadowland, achieving stardom four years later with the smash Ingnue.

Stein was married briefly to record promoter and real estate executive Linda Adler, with whom he had two children: filmmaker Mandy Stein and Samantha Lee Jacobs, who died of brain cancer in 2013.

Stein and his wife divorced in the 1970s, and years later he came out as gay.

"I am beyond grateful for every minute our family spent with him, and that the music he brought to the world impacted so many people's lives in a positive way," Mandy Stein said in a statement Sunday.

With files from CBC News