GODS, GANGSTERS
AND HONOUR

A rock ’n’ roll odyssey

STEVEN MACHAT

First published in hardback 2009 UK

First published in paperback 2010 UK

E-published in 2013

Consciousness Manifesto Inc.

213 West 35th Street, 802A

New York, NY 10001

ISBN 0983905754

0 9 8 3 9 0 5 7 5 4

Copyright © Steven Machat 2013.

The right of Steven Machat to be identified as the author
of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

A catalogue reference for this book is available from the British Library.

Cover design by Ian Pickard.

Typeset by Misa Watanabe.

Contents

1. Meeting Frank Sinatra

2. Death Row

3. Voodoo child

4. ‘One day, you’ll understand’

5. Does Henry Kissinger do Blow?

6. Gangbangers, guns and crystal meth

7. Games Without Frontiers

8. The bitch

9. The most fun you can have in the business

10. Everybody wants to rule the world

11. Death of a ladies’ man

12. It’s a kind of magic

13. A New York gangster baptism

14. The devil gets to play the best tunes

15. ‘Hi, my name is George Bush’

16. On the road

17. ‘We do not understand your problem’

18. Who’s afraid of Don Arden?

19. How not to impress Gianni Versace

20. Heading south

21. Street fighting man

22. Phil Spector gets his gun out

23. Roses and blow

24. The Phil Collins effect

25. New Edition – the band and me

26. The birth of the Queen of Hearts

27. My wake-up call

28. Try being straight

29. Leonard Cohen, the troubled troubador

30. Man-made gods

31. The most hateful man

32. Working out with Donny Osmond

33. The crazy world of gangsta rap

34. Dad’s death

35. The last laugh

36. Margaux and Barron

37. When nuns lie

38. Comic characters

39. Grandpa Charlie

40. Taking the Mick

41. My greatest lesson

42. The Taj Mahal

43. Honour

For my mother

Do you believe that men have always been liars, rogues, traitors, ungrateful, thieving, weak, inconstant, mean- spirited, cowardly, envious, greedy, drunkard, miserly, self-seeking, bloodthirsty, slandererous, debauched, fanatic, hypocritical, and stupid?

Candide, by Voltaire

Preface

This book holds my recollections and memories of my life as a non-stop, moving picture show. A life spent in the world of popular music and entertainment. You know, we always seem to assume that life is linear, but it’s not – my journey has been a kaleidoscope of multicoloured experiences, not bound by linear time. This is how, today, I remember my life: a rush of people, events, deals, places, music, movies, politics – but mostly, sounds. In some instances, the participants may not have the same memories that I do. If so, I’m sorry. I’ve just tried to convey to you what it’s felt like being me. I hope you’ll enjoy the show.

CHAPTER ONE

Meeting Frank Sinatra

Frank Sinatra took a few easy steps across the carpet of the Governor’s Suite before stretching out his arm:

‘Good to meet you kid.’

As I gripped his hand, I felt his piercing blue eyes, moments before they locked onto mine. He was dressed in his signature style of crisp conservative with a razor-sharp edge, sporting a cashmere sweater, slacks, loafers and layers of charisma. In the background, his entourage of gangsters were watching a football game on television, when they weren’t studying the form on betting sheets or engaging in loud locker-room talk. No-one was paying attention to the grand piano.

It was 1968 and we were on the top floor of the Fontainebleau Hotel, a monument to Art Deco excess located on Miami Beach, designed like a Hollywood movie set. They featured it in James Bond’s Goldfinger, and by the late ’60s it was already an icon in its own right. Like Frank.

The penthouse had two floors and countless rooms. I was just sixteen years old, and I was about to meet my father’s God.

My Dad, Marty Machat, was one of the new breed of entertainment lawyers in a post-war America hungry to indulge its new found wealth and leisure time. His clients included James Brown, The Four Seasons, Sam Cooke, and the Rolling Stones. But there was only one person he really wanted and that was Sinatra.

Dad socialised with Sinatra every now and again, and I remember one night when my parents had been invited to eat dinner with Frank and Nancy at the singer’s New York Park Avenue apartment. On their return, they could barely contain their excitement as they told me about the state-of-the-art home with its designer orange and white furniture, its extravagant floral displays and bowls of orange candy.

My father was in awe of the man who could tell society what he wanted, with no regard to what society expected and no care for its conventions. Frank could live life outside the box. Who wouldn’t want that?

I knew why I was there. I could always read my father and his intentions, just the same way I could always beat him at chess. I knew that for Dad, there was a game in play, and even though I was just a kid, I was expected to perform. He could feel that he was getting close to signing Sinatra, and as his son, I had a role in what could be his greatest transaction.

‘What do you like kid?’ Sinatra said. I talked to him about my love of sports, my passion for football but above all else, baseball and the New York Yankees. I knew he loved sports, and baseball in particular, and I told him how I had seriously considered making the sport my career.

He asked what I was going to do about college. I told him that I wanted to find warmer weather because I couldn’t stand another winter in New York. The choice was between the University of Southern California and the University of Miami.

I said, ‘I want to study accounting before I go into law school. I want to work with Dad.’ The family, the business… I knew how our pitch was supposed to be working.

Sinatra smiled. ‘You’re a good looking boy, you’ve got a great Dad and you can enjoy the rest of your life in LA – but in LA, you’ve got to have power or money. Lots of money. It’s a city for older boys kid – men like your Dad. Women go out there and all they want are men that can make them famous or men that can keep them in minks and champagne.

‘If I was you kid, I’d go to Miami – you’ll have a field day with all the chicks. They’re not looking for the next movie or recording contract.’

From the penthouse I could look down onto Miami Beach and see the girls with reflectors around their necks to catch the rays. The reflectors would wink at you in the sunlight as if they knew you were watching and what you were thinking. I could even smell the coconut scent of the sizzling baby-oil lotion they basted themselves in. I can still smell it now.

I thanked him for the advice. Later on, in fact, I took it. I figured California could wait – I was determined to get those Miami girls.

But the Fontainebleau meeting was as close as my Dad ever got to signing the Chairman of the Board. Despite all his efforts, the gangsters that Sinatra reported to wouldn’t let Dad in, and he never got another chance to make his play.

Of course, that didn’t discourage Dad from copying Sinatra’s style. He began to abandon the suits and start dressing more leisurely, adopting the sweaters, trousers and shoes that Frank used. As his business expanded to include Britain’s new rock ‘n’ roll aristocracy, he even rented out the Mayfair penthouse flat in London that Frank had used as the lovepad for his mistress Mia Farrow. If Dad couldn’t represent Sinatra, then he hoped that the aura of this God would rub off on him, and what better way than to live in his former apartment?

But me, I was hooked. Looking out of the windows on the top floor of the Fontainebleu that day, I knew I wanted in on this world. I knew even at that age that I could hold my own in it. I just had no idea what it would cost.

CHAPTER TWO

Death Row

On Halloween 1999, I found myself in the visitor’s room of the Mule Creek State Prison, looking straight into the eyes of Marion ‘Suge’ Knight, one of the godfathers of gangster rap.

Even in the world of rap, where death was a way of life, Knight had an unrivalled reputation for menace and violence. He wasn’t in Mule Creek for stealing candy, but the charge they had him on was a trumped-up case that wouldn’t have held in a criminal court, so they’d revoked his parole, which is a lot easier. Knight was heavily implicated in the deaths of his prodigy and rap icon Tupac Shakur and Christopher Wallace, better known as the Notorious B.I.G. The stories about his business methods suggested that Suge could more than hold his own in this jail. I’d heard that white boy wannabe gangster Vanilla Ice had been held upside down by the ankles after Knight had muscled into his life with an offer he couldn’t refuse.

But as far as I was concerned, these were all just idle whispers. I was interested in Suge – I’d felt the heat generated by fear, and I liked it.

Suge’s Death Row Records boasted an impressive back catalogue that included dead icon Tupac, Snoop Dogg and Dr Dre, whose album The Chronic became one of the defining moments in this musical genre. This was why I was in a jail in the back of beyond in northern California: to strike a deal with Suge.

My friends and peers in the corporate music world at that time wouldn’t have been seen dead touching Suge, but that just added to the challenge. I’d been contacted by a Nasdaq dotcom company called Musicmaker, which was one of those internet tech companies that were supposed to be breathing new life into the ailing music business. In reality, Musicmaker just breathed more air into the internet bubble, but I hadn’t found that out yet. Set up by experienced music men, Wall Street con artists and backed by big business, including the likes of EMI, Musicmaker’s Nasdaq listing had given it the ring of authenticity.

The concept was that Musicmaker would sell tracks and albums over the internet with customers downloading them direct onto their desktop hard drives. But they needed content, and that’s where I came in. They’d been told that I was their man if they wanted to secure the kind of back catalogue that would make Musicmaker sing. In particular, they asked me whether I could secure the only rap music label whose catalogue was worth acquiring: Death Row.

Music was at a crossroads by 1999: no new artists, no new repertoire. Revenue across the industry was collapsing amid an explosion of illegal downloading. All we had was the music of the past, and gangster rap. So these guys thought, why not try to use the internet to generate new revenue streams from legal downloading, and who better to work with than gangster rap artists? White kids with money to burn in the suburbs were lapping up gangster rap. Grunge was dead. Now it was all heat, ho’s, and M*****F*****s, washed down with Cristal.

The label bosses who despised Suge also understood that gangster rap was now the only show in town. That was their problem. The corporate labels had missed the gangster rap boat, they knew it, but they also knew that they didn’t have the balls to go fishing for the rights. They needed someone to do it for them.

For all the distaste the white corporate record business had for this exclusively black genre of music, they could smell the money. And they knew that I had a track record in working with black artists, and gangster rap artists in particular, so they came to me. But even though I didn’t then know anyone at Death Row, there would be other problems too. With Knight in jail, was there anyone with enough seniority to kick-start a deal? Second, would any contract signed be worth the paper it was written on? I’d found out long ago that a signature, without the intent to honour the signature, guarantees nothing, least of all in the music business.

My first step towards Mule Creek prison came through a guy I’d helped before in the past. David Mishery ran Breakaway Records, a small rap music label. I’d helped keep him out of trouble after he had been accused of putting his hand in the cookie jar, so I figured he owed me. Death Row trusted Mishery because he had always held his tongue, and so he became the go-between for me and Suge. The plan was to get Suge’s people onside and then they would approach Suge to set up a meeting in prison.

Through Mishery, I met Suge’s right-hand man, Reggie Wright, at Death Row’s LA offices. When I walked into the room, the vibe was chilly – fridge chilly. In fact, Wright was built like The Fridge, standing 6’8” and with width to match. An ex-cop, he’d risen through the ranks and was predictably guarded and just shy of outright suspicious. I had to switch to hard-sell mode just to save the meeting from finishing before it had begun.

Napster and the rest, I explained, were letting music fans download for free. ‘Why not at least make money from people who want to pay for what is already being stolen? You have nothing to lose.’

Wright told me that I was nuts and that any deal done would have to be in the high six figures. He said he would pass on the message to Suge but just in case I hadn’t got the message, he let me know that he would do his level best to sink me. No problem there then. But I figured that as long as Suge got the message, I had a chance so bring it on.

Incredibly, Musicmaker bit. They agreed to a million bucks and this gave me the carrot to hold in front of Reggie. So along with Reggie and Suge’s girlfriend, Tammy, I flew to Sacramento and then we all squeezed into a rented Cadillac for a 90-minute drive to a town called Ione. Now I love to talk to anyone, but this trip was made in silence. Everyone kept their own counsel.

Once inside the perimeter of the prison, we were the property of the guards who made sure we were not carrying weapons or drugs. This was where the fun started. I’d notified the prison authorities on my permission-to-visit application that I not only had diabetes but had to carry insulin and syringes with which to inject myself. The guards, however, clearly couldn’t read because once they saw the syringes there was only one thing on their mind and it wasn’t insulin.

I stood my ground and explained, but the guards weren’t interested. Reggie told me this was one battle I could never win. So I told the guard I had to talk to his supervisor. We talked, then we compromised. His concession was that they would hold the medicine and I could access it during my impending four-hour visit. The cop in Reggie was clearly impressed. I had managed to work the system and come out on top. I’d scored some points.

After being signed in, we were escorted to the visiting room, where Suge was waiting at a table with an older couple. It turned out they were his parents. Suge was tall, very tall, and imposing with his barrel chest and ham-sized hands. All he did every day was work out, so this wasn’t surprising. Despite this intimidating package, he greeted me with a warm smile. His parents may have been present but that didn’t stop Suge putting his cards on the table from the moment we sat down.

‘Do you know that faggot Dr Dre?’ Clearly his former partner was not top of his Christmas card list.

Cautiously I answered, ‘Only by his musical reputation.’

Like some ego-filled rapper only without the backing tracks, Suge was off. He was the brains behind Dr Dre’s success story, he told me. He told me a whole lot more. Then he changed tack completely, looked me in the eye and asked a question that floored me.

‘Do you believe I shot Tupac?’

‘No,’ I answered. ‘Why would you even ask me that?’

‘If you’re working with me, I want you to know the truth.’ He touched his brow where he carried a scar that he claimed was where the bullet had grazed him as he sat alongside Tupac when his artist was shot dead.

‘If I had set him up to die,’ he said, ‘why would I have sat there in the car where bullets have no eyes?’

It made sense. I believed him. I began to realise that I actually quite liked this bear of a man. I understood him. Suge was the chief of a tribe and all still paid homage to him. He was their god and he was a gangster to the rest of society.

Having got that off his chest, he got up and walked off to talk with his girlfriend, Tammy, and I was left to fend for myself with his parents. They were humble people from rural Mississippi and offered sweet relief from the company of Reggie. Mrs Knight gave me a lesson in how to play dominoes. Cool game. We became instant friends.

Suge came back and said it was time to eat. I said I needed ten minutes. When Reggie told him about how I had both manipulated the system with the insulin and stood up to the guards, Suge looked at me with a sparkle in his eye. This hard man feared by so many couldn’t stop grinning at me. By outwitting the system, I had earned a little respect. I began to think that he was not only warming to me, but realising that I could get things done.

After lunch it was down to business. After explaining the logic of the deal I switched tack. ‘What are you going to do when you’re released?’ I told him that this would be the right time to change his public image. If he wanted to shed his media skin then perhaps he could start with a gesture towards his community.

Suge asked me what I meant. I told him that perhaps he could get kids in the ’hood into computers and that I could corner some corporate sponsors to put up the money. The bottom line was that this public makeover could only aid his future business opportunities. I would become the middleman, ferrying his product to the retailers.

This was no cynical gesture on my part. I had become tired over the years of watching so-called stars give to charity only at the insistence of their accountants. Rather than the words ‘give’ and ‘help’ it was ‘tax’ and ‘break’ that spurred them on. The performers who genuinely cared and wanted to give back to their community genuinely impressed me. I wanted to put in place the building blocks of an organisation whose sole aim was to help the wider community. I was tired of hearing ‘me, me, me’.

I could see that Suge was intrigued. After wandering off for a discussion with Reggie, he came back and green-lighted the Musicmaker deal, but he also wanted me to do some fighting legal work for Death Row. Suge had a beef with Dr Dre, Interscope and Iovine and wanted me to help start legal proceedings against all three. I would be their legal consultant rather than their attorney. After a round of handshaking and hugs, which seals the deal in gangster land, it was back to LA.

As we travelled, I felt vindicated. I had gambled and felt that Lady Luck was smiling on me. I had warmed to Suge, felt I was getting a hang on his business strengths and thought we could do business together. On the trip back, for once Reggie was talking and we compared notes on his favourite team, the Lakers. The season was to start in two days. But the sunny talk soon clouded over. Reggie told me he was determined to kill the Musicmaker deal because he thought it would hurt the label.

The next morning I called New York to set up a meeting with Musicmaker, to tell Irwin, the Boss, the good news, and find out exactly what they were prepared to put on the table for the deal.

In New York, I also called in on Sony to get a record distribution deal. Sony chief, Tommy Mottola, had cold-shouldered gangster rap until now, but they were beginning to look foolish. Gangster rap was selling. The chance to tie-up with Death Row on a distribution deal offered Sony the entrée they badly needed into this market. What better way than to sell Death Row product?

Then I moved on to Motorola, where I sounded them out about my ‘computers for the inner city’ concept. I felt it was the right match for us and the smart move for them. They even took up on my idea to launch Death Row Radio, a radio programme broadcast from Watts in LA. Sony and Mottola would get positive publicity, Sony would get the Death Row back catalogue, and I would get a project to benefit the disenfranchised and disadvantaged in LA. I was doing something for society. I was dreaming.

I was on a roll, and when I am on a roll, I can get relentless.

After some horse-trading with Alan Arrow, Musicmaker’s lawyer, they put their cards on the table: $1 million for the rights to the catalogue, plus $150,000 for each new album. The deal seemed too good to be true. I couldn’t really understand where they were going to get the money from and had genuine doubts about their business model. How were they going to generate enough revenue from Death Row downloads? But in this business, you don’t look a gift horse in the mouth. I decided to call their bluff and told them it had to be $2 million. They came back with $1.5 million and I would get 15 per cent. It pays never to underestimate.

The final piece in the jigsaw was persuading Musicmaker to back David Mishery’s infant label by buying his new artists. I felt he was due some payback and I got an additional percentage of that money. Contracts came, it was Christmas 1999 and I handed over the papers to Reggie before heading off on holiday.

When I called Death Row at the start of the year 2000, I discovered that nothing had happened. Reggie was sitting on the papers because he was still opposed to the deal. I was pissed, called Reggie and eventually he agreed to set up another meet with Suge. So back to Mule Creek we went. This time I had to watch on as Reggie and Wright held a procession of whispering conferences. Eventually the white smoke went up and Suge rubber-stamped the deal. The only problem was my 15 per cent commission: it was now 10 per cent. The pay-off was I could develop foreign deals for Death Row. All in all, not a bad pay day potentially, but I still had to close the deals.

Eventually, after further negotiations, we were ready for signatures. For once, Reggie was going to earn his corn. We had a problem: Californian law forbids a felon from making and signing a contract while in prison. But Reggie knew that Suge’s father shared his son’s real name: Marion Knight. Reggie suggested that Marion Senior sign on the dotted line.

When I knew I had this get out of jail card, I then told Musicmaker that they couldn’t get the signature. They went crazy and told me I should get the signature by any means necessary. So after I let the Musicmaker suits let off steam, I promised I would get Marion Knight’s signature and then had his father’s signature notarised for the final closing. The deal was complete. They were happy with Knight, so I didn’t feel the need to tell them Suge was Knight Jr.

Now the plan was to close the deal with Sony in time for the Grammies. It would be sweet if the announcement could be tied in with the main music industry event of the year. This was when things started to go wrong. Tommy Mottola hated rap because he couldn’t control the artists. They didn’t give a shit if he was a corporate god or not. Sony’s Head of Corporate refused to sign off on the deal claiming that stockholders would not appreciate being associated with the wrong kind of poor blacks – the gangster rappers – that this project would bring in. Tommy too had clearly decided that he didn’t want anything to do with gangster rap. When Motorola found out that their fellow corporation was backing out, they didn’t want to know, and so my inner city project hit the skids.

Suge Knight, however, couldn’t have cared less about the Sony deal going south. He really had no expectation that this deal would ever happen. Drenched in the racial paranoia that dominates the rap/hip-hop universe, he never thought a white corporation would come up with the goods and thought I was crazy for even trying.

Maybe he had a point. In January 2001, Musicmaker went bust – less than eighteen months after its launch. The internet bubble had well and truly burst. Strangely enough, EMI had the good sense to sell its shares that December while the going was good. A coincidence, perhaps. With the benefit of hindsight, so much about Musicmaker didn’t add up. They were listed on Nasdaq on the back of a music catalogue that was not all that it seemed.

In August of that year, Suge was released early and resumed his role at the top of the Death Row tree. And I moved on, still looking for something.

CHAPTER THREE

Voodoo child

In 1981, I was flying high and feeling blessed. Machat and Machat, the business my father and I ran jointly, had many of the world’s top artists as its clients. We covered the East and West coasts in America with huge bands like ELO and Genesis, and our London office was constantly busy with both established and burgeoning artists.

I felt the world was for the taking. I could go anywhere, do anything, but in reality I was getting tired of the grind of life inside the Western corporate music machine. I wanted to broaden my horizons, and I was fascinated by what seemed to me to be the potential globalisation of the music business. Why should popular music remain the preserve of just a limited range of artists? What about other styles, genres, cultures?

So in February, I decided to escape another New York winter and go down to Brazil to experience the Rio Carnival. The idea was to find out about the local music and, of course, to keep half an eye on a deal. I’d set up a meeting with the head of WEA Brazil, Andre Midani, having told him I was interested in breaking some Brazilian artists in the US, so I found myself invited along to the carnival.

Midani recommended that I make contact with legendary artists Gilberto Gil and Rita Lee. Gil, who is now the cultural minister of Brazil, asked me to put together a tour to Europe, which I duly did, but the deal collapsed over money disagreements with the tour promoter I’d found him.

Rita Lee, meanwhile, had made her name as a founding member of a group called Os Mutantes, which emerged in the late 1960s and was as much about art, revolution and defying the Brazilian military junta as it was about music. Their mix of local musical styles was blended with the influence of psychedelic acts like The Beatles, during their Sgt Pepper years, and Jimi Hendrix, and it was Os Mutantes that launched the so-called Tropicalia musical style.

Tropicalia was revolutionary in its impact and had replaced Bossa Nova, which had come to be seen as mind-numbing music that simply perpetuated the status quo. Beck, Nirvana’s Kurt Cobain, the Talking Heads’ David Byrne, Nelly Furtado – all have all cited Tropicalia as a big influence on their music.

Rita was a hippy. She dressed simply but with style and didn’t need designer labels to make her stand out from the crowd. She believed in spirits and was able to summon spirits into her body. She didn’t care about material possessions or the illusions that they brought in her wake. At the time, she had a big single in Brazil called Lanca Perfume – sweet perfume – that was about snorting amyl nitrate in the local nightclubs.

She told me that her great grandfather was an expatriate Confederate general, from Huntsville, Alabama, who had left the US for Brazil after the civil war was lost. His family believed in slavery and felt that Brazil offered the best chance to perpetuate their lifestyle. Since Brazil didn’t abolish slavery until the late 1880s, the story had more than a ring of truth about it.

Brazil fascinated me with its social and racial layers. At the top of the caste pile were the direct descendants of the European Catholic invaders. After them it was the Mixtas, which meant those of mixed race, then the indigenous peoples and last and least the blacks. As far as I could see, all the different castes seemed to hate each other and I was left feeling that white Europeans and colonialism had an awful lot of karma to correct.

Rita was an educated, cultured and urbane woman who could speak in at least five languages. But she was also a heroin addict who took drugs to call up or to quell her spirits. At times she could barely physically function, but in the business I came from, she was hardly unique in that respect. When we first met I promised her that I would help her to re-negotiate her contracts with the government-owned record label Son Libre. I realised that a whole new world was opening up.

When I arrived back in New York two months later, I had a verbal contract to manage Rita but little else. I was trying to work out the next move, when in walked a man from Son Libre who didn’t have an appointment but sure had a lot of nerve. He sat there in our reception and told the receptionist he wasn’t leaving until we talked with him.

Eventually he was ushered into my office and he was nothing if not blunt: ‘I want to make a simple deal. I will keep Rita Lee for Brazil and you can have Rita Lee for the rest of the world.’ He was very quick, straight to the point. ‘I am not interested in royalties outside Brazil, you can keep them. I will not pay Rita royalties either but I will pay for her lifestyle. Her house, cars, drugs and servants will all be paid for.

‘Now that we have sorted out Rita Lee, you can sort me out.’

The large satchel that he had dumped on the desk had caught my eye. He unzipped the top and out spilled a large amount of US dollars. More than I had ever seen before.

He continued: ‘This is $1 million. I need an American banking existence because our Brazilian currency is worthless.

‘I have done my research on you. You can be trusted. My wish is that Mr Machat Senior will accompany me to a bank, introduce me to the manager and help me open an account. Mr Machat Junior, you will handle Rita. Mr Machat Senior will handle me.’

I went to get Dad. The Son Libre guy repeated his story, and I could see that Dad was flipping out. He thought this man was a gangster and wanted nothing to do with him. We reconvened in a side office alone and my father said: ‘I want nothing to do with some Banana Republic hitman wandering the streets of New York.’

I told Dad that Son Libre was effectively owned by the Brazilian government, and after a while he agreed to introduce him to a bank manager downstairs. When that meeting was over, Dad wanted nothing more to do with him, and I could see that the man sensed Dad’s disrespect. But of course, he didn’t understand my Dad like I did. I knew that Dad wasn’t being disrespectful – he was just scared.

But for my part, the mysterious Son Libre guy was as good as his word. Later that year Lee and her man Roberto came up to New York and signed with me.

To celebrate, I decided to take them to Gino’s restaurant, which was just about as conservative an Italian restaurant as you could get. The Republican and Old Money New York establishment ate there and the clientele was seriously moneyed.

Everything was going fine, until suddenly Rita passed out and crashed backwards on her chair. I was stunned and looked at Roberto, who sat there as cool as a cucumber, while the waiters stood frozen in time and the ladies lunching looked on, mouths agape.

With a voice that was slow and spaced out, almost like he was talking backwards, Roberto said, ‘Don’t worry. She’s OK. She’s on the train.’

I realised he meant that she was on heroin. Although I knew all about blow, I had never engaged in heavy-duty drugs like heroin. We sat her upright and for the rest of the meal Rita stayed there with her chin on her chest, completely out cold, while we continued our meal as if nothing had happened.

Soon after, with Rita’s masters in my baggage, I set off for France and cut a record deal with Barclay Records in Paris, which was run by Parisian legend Eddie Barclay. His label boasted icons like Jacques Brel, Charles Aznavour, Fela Kuti and Jimi Hendrix. Barclay himself even worked with the Sex Pistols on their Great Rock and Roll Swindle film.

Eddie always used to wear white, like me, and seemed to have a different wife every time I met him. When he died in 2005, a friend told me that Eddie had racked up nine spouses over the years. The man himself boasted to me that he had had more wives than he could remember, and told me how the mayor conducting one of his later weddings said, ‘Bonjour, Monsieur Barclay, what a pleasure to see you again.’

With Rita’s Lanca Perfume, Barclay Records and I had a huge hit in France in September 1981 and suddenly it was game on because I had the leverage I needed for a big label deal. Before too long, I made contact with a business acquaintance called Rupert Perry, who was running Capitol Records in LA and I told him about Rita Lee. He told me that Capitol’s parent company EMI was setting up a Latin division out of London and Rita would be the perfect match.

In June 1982 Rita Lee and Roberto came over to Barcelona to sign the EMI contract and watch the World Cup. The idea was that Rita would issue four albums, each recorded in four different languages: Spanish, French, English and Italian. Remember, Son Libre kept the Portuguese recordings.

Everything would have been perfect if only it wasn’t Rita Lee.

The problem was Rita was the musical equivalent of a barbiturate. If everyone else was working at the equivalent of a 78 rpm record, Rita was on 33 and Roberto was on 45.

She didn’t like the sun, preferred darkness and worked, if she worked at all, to her own rhythm. Rather than live in Rio, she preferred the far more laid back Sao Paolo, which was her home town and which was more conducive to spending the day taking drugs to listen to or shut off the spirits in her head.

In those days, I still thought that what you saw in life was all there was. I had no knowledge of the occult, of different dimensions of consciousness. Rita was the first to really broaden my perspective.

I began to get an idea of this other world when, in March 1982, I was plunged into the mess left by the death of rocker Randy Rhoads, who had been killed trying to buzz his friend Ozzy Osbourne’s tour bus in a light airplane.

My wife Lisa and I were hanging out with Roberto and Rita on a rare free weekend, when they started becoming very agitated about Rhoads. Later on, I worked out that the timing was almost immediately after it had happened. But we hadn’t been informed at that point, and in fact, in the pre-internet era, no-one knew at that moment. But somehow, Rita sensed that he had been killed in an accident almost immediately after it happened, which completely freaked me out. I still don’t understand how she knew.

Rita turned to me: ‘We know all about Randy and we know all about Ozzy. We believe that he is someone who is in thrall to dark energy. He does not live for love and light. If you want to live a clean life you should shake him loose. We believe that Ozzy lives in spirit with Aleister Crowley and his black spirit worshippers.’ I hadn’t heard Crowley’s name mentioned since Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin became intererested in the old black magic guru.

‘If you do not get rid of Ozzy you do not work with us. We are people of light and we cannot stand the negative vibes.’

The impact of this occult world was soon to spread inside my business.

Rita’s first album, sung in Spanish, was finally delivered in 1984. Straight away, we had problems, but these were about language.

I got an emergency call from Raphael Hill, who was the head of EMI Latin: ‘This is the worst thing that has ever happened to me,’ he said. ‘This record is not in Spanish. It is Mexican trash. This is the worst Spanish dialect that you can find.’ We argued and then he taught me a valuable lesson. He said, ‘The Spanish have their own caste system based on how you speak the language.’ It was interesting to know how the imperialists kept their power, I thought. I played the record to my Honduran maid, and she told me it was really good and there was no doubt: it was in Spanish.

I called Rupert Perry and he proceeded to tell me that the record was not in Spanish. I said, ‘Have you heard it?’ He said, ‘No, but why would Raphael lie?’ I said, ‘D’you want to talk to my maid?’ It defused the situation and despite a fraught conference in New York, EMI was obliged to take the album. It was a Spanish contract: it had no mention of dialect.

But if I thought we were through the woods, I was badly wrong. By 1985, we were all beginning to wonder when the next album would arrive, when Rita called me in an agitated state.

‘Steven, I cannot do the French record,’ she said, before a lengthy pause. ‘I cannot do the Italian record,’ she continued, before another lengthy pause that was so long I wondered where she was. ‘And no English record.’

All I could muster was a muted, ‘Why?’

Rita replied, ‘Roberto and I are retiring from music. We are exhausted. My priestess has told us that the EMI deal will kill us.’

Trying to break the news to the EMI suits was not one of my easiest tasks.

‘What do you mean, a voodoo priest?’ barked Raphael Hill down the phone. ‘How the fuck are we going to sort this out?’

In the end Hill, along with EMI Latin marketing man Helmut Fest, and myself trekked down to Sao Paolo to try and sort it out. But the voodoo priestess wouldn’t talk to us: she was living in Rita’s head. EMI went crazy, and the Rita Lee show was over.

There was one comic moment from this period of my education into these unknown worlds. Over the Memorial Weekend holiday in May one year, I took my mother, my sister Helene and brother Michael for a holiday in Haiti with Lisa.

Over lunch, I had been telling the family about the Randy Rhoads death and Rita’s views about Ozzy’s interest in the occult. My family wanted to experience something outside of their comfort zone, so I approached some of the hotel staff to set up a voodoo ceremony.

The deal was $80 for eight voodoo practitioners and the chickens. It seemed like a bargain. So I dropped the three of them off in this shanty village outside Port Au Prince and promised them I would be back when the ceremony was over.

A couple of hours after my dinner I was parked up on the other side of this sports field when I saw my family running towards me, screaming and shouting. Behind them were the voodoo priests, shaking, rattling and rolling, apparently in a trance – although that didn’t stop them running at speed. As they got closer, I could see the priests had what must have been chicken’s blood streaming from their mouths.

I got out of my car and at the top of my voice bellowed ‘Stop!’ and sure enough, the voodoo hotel staff snapped out of their trance and my family stopped in their tracks. Truly, I could have made it as a voodoo priest.

My family was clearly traumatised and I had a huge row with Lisa on the drive back to the hotel. It turned out that my family had been ushered into this woman’s shack home, which was full of what looked like shrunken heads. There was a ceremony already in full swing, with all these people apparently in a trance. Then some men ripped the head off a live chicken and poured the blood over one of the women.

My mother thought that they were next in line as voodoo sacrifices and they’d turned and run.

You’d have had to have a heart of stone not to laugh at that.

CHAPTER FOUR

‘One day, you’ll understand’

Both my parents were Brooklyn born and bred. My mother Roslyn Golden and father Morton Machat were married on the 26th February 1950. I was born on 18th October 1952 in New York City and I was their first child. Two sisters and a brother followed.

My maternal grandmother’s family were originally from the Austro-Hungarian Empire. I am not sure where my maternal grandfather’s family were from, but he was Sephardic and gave me my olive-coloured skin.

Dad’s parents were also European immigrants. His mom, Rose Applebaum, was believed to have come from Venice and his father Hymie escaped from Lithuania during the Sino-Russian war of 1903-05.

I say escaped because, if you haven’t guessed already, they were Jewish. They had that in common – but that’s where the similarities ended.

My mother’s family were relatively well off, at least until my grandfather Sam Golden died and his building supplies business died with him. My maternal grandmother then remarried Charlie Freeman, who was to all intents and purposes, a clothes salesman. In reality, he was also a numbers runner for the mob. Grandpa Charlie would become one of my favourites and a very influential figure as I grew up.

By contrast, my father was ashamed of his parents. Hymie had been the first of his family to make Ellis Island and worked hard to bring his sister and brothers to the promised land. His siblings became somebodies. Hymie thought he was a nobody.

My Dad’s uncle Ben was a playboy dentist, Aunt Ruth became an opera singer and friend of Picasso, and Uncle Lou claimed to have invented the first credit card. (He told me never to use credit. Go figure.)

Hymie struggled to make a living and Rose compounded my father’s shame at his hand-to-mouth upbringing by being an extrovert who had no concept of embarrassment. When Dad joined the Army in 1942 – to escape his family as much as fight the Germans – she chased him down the street for him to come back, shouting in front of the whole neighbourhood because he had forgotten his galoshes. He never forgot or forgave her for that.

In 1974, I saw this burning resentment at first hand when me and Dad visited grandma at the Miami hotel she was staying at. There on the porch, she was holding court with all these old ladies, telling them about her brilliant son Marty, the lawyer and war veteran.

Dad looked at her and said: ‘Shut up!’

Everyone just froze. Dad repeated himself twice. I was horrified – I’d never really seen my father show any emotion before and here he was humiliating his mother, my grandma Rose. Dad just stalked off, leaving me to pick up the pieces – a pattern repeated later in life all too often. I hugged Rose, who was weeping, and told her that as I lived in Miami I would be back in a couple of days.

I caught up with Dad and confronted him: ‘Why did you do that?’

With tears welling in his eyes, my father looked at me: ‘Men forget that they are men and they allow women to destroy them. Men are hunters and protectors but men can be weak.

‘I grew up poor because of my mom and my weak dad. I will never be like that. Steven, I am raising you to learn truth: be a man, even if I cannot. Your grandma only has one major attribute worth having and that is the ability to engage people in conversation.

‘Steven, I just have to let go with my mother. One day, you’ll understand.’

In that moment, I felt we bonded as father and son. But my Dad would never see his mother alive again. She died four months later.

When my father had left the Army, he graduated as a lawyer after working his way through night college courtesy of the GI Bill. He swapped the name Morton for Martin. The war and, in its wake, the revelation of the Holocaust, gave my father a life-long shame of being Jewish. He was determined to shed his past and create a new successful Machat family.

My dad had spotted an opening in the burgeoning entertainment business and began by representing a few small-time music industry entrepreneurs and television producers, and by picking up some work for RKO film studios. His attempts at becoming an entrepreneur, however, were not blessed with success.

Unique was his first record label, which he ran with Joe Leye and Stanley Borden. When a man called Colonel Parker swanned into their offices, they were offered the chance to sign up a promising young singer from Memphis, Tennessee. The God-fearing Leye, however, did not like the music or the lyrics. They were a little too close to the Devil for his comfort.

So they passed on Elvis Presley. RCA got him instead.

My mother said that Unique was best known for passing on star acts. In fact, a rejection from Unique was a sure-fire signal of imminent success.

One of the first performers Machat Senior took under his wing and legally protected was a young Italian-American singer and musician called ‘Bobby’ Cassotto. From the Bronx, Cassotto was so dedicated to his art that he went without, and sometimes ended up sleeping on my father’s couch at the office. He had nowhere else to go and relied on my father for handouts. Eventually my father’s patience ran out and Cassotto was kicked out.

A couple of years later, Cassotto scored a huge hit at Atlantic Records with the single Splish Splash. Maybe the fact that he had changed his name to Bobby Darin helped. He would become one of America’s biggest stars of the late 1950s and early 1960s.

As I grew older, my father’s halo began to slip. As a child, he was my hero: a man whose clients were shaping popular culture. Heck, they were even changing the world. Or so it seemed.

Into my 20s, I began to realise that my father was a failed adventurer because he did not have the courage of his convictions. It would shape my approach to the entertainment business, because I realised that when you hesitate, you lose. You have to be prepared to back your judgement and be prepared to wade against the tide.

By 1956, however, my father’s luck as a lawyer was about to change, thanks to a phone call.

When my father used to pick up the phone, he had to pretend his secretary was out of the office. In truth, he couldn’t afford one. On this occasion, there was a taxi driver called Karl Shaw on the other end of the line, whose son went to public school with my father. He had been involved in a crash and his passenger needed representation.

That passenger turned out to be Sugar Ray Robinson, the World Middleweight champion, and widely acclaimed as the greatest ‘pound for pound’ boxer to grace the ring. Marty Machat became his attorney and encouraged Robinson along the comeback trail. Better still, Robinson gave my father an entrée into the world of black pioneers trying to carve out a career in the pop music charts. My father began representing The Coasters, The Platters, The Drifters and Clyde McPhatter.

Among his clients was Clyde Otis, the first black musician, songwriter and producer to really be accepted in white corporate executive circles. He would eventually become the first black American to be an A & R (Artists & Repertoire) executive for a major label. The A&R men went out scouting out new talent and developing the talent they found.

But what I remember best about him was the smile he wore when he gave me the baseball cards he used to bring over for me. Otis would come over with his wife, who was from the Dominican Republic, to play poker at my parent’s house along with what my mother called a great singer called Aretha Franklin, who Clyde was trying to woo on his side so he could produce her music. Dad loved these card games because mom was a card shark who always came out on top, and so he didn’t have to give her money.

One day the song Never Take A Pretty Woman For Your Wife came on the radio. Otis came over to me and said, ‘Steve, come over here.’ He ushered me outside and said: ‘You hear that song? Well listen to it.’ It was a practical piece of advice. But I didn’t listen to it.

What the procession of black artists visiting our house drummed home to me was the message that we were all the same. They laughed, smiled and shared happiness.

In my grammar school, I was the only white kid that would hang out with the black kids. I paid a price for it as well – many of my white peers were not impressed and told me so.

The irony was that, later in my professional life, Dad and I would repeatedly have problems with our black artists. Too often, the black racist community that made money out of perpetuating hate and fear wanted the white boys, my father and I, out. They accused us of ripping them off, but in reality they wanted the money for themselves. This colour bar would be a very bitter pill for me to swallow and I can still taste the residue today. Self-promoting blacks going out of their way to perpetuate the idea that blacks must stick together.

As a kid, I can well remember the calls we used to get in the early East Coast hours from the West Coast, as my father tried to sort out the latest mess that Sly Stone had got himself into. On one occasion, I fielded the call from Sly when we were staying at the Beverly Hills Hotel at Christmas in 1969. My father was asleep at about two in the morning, and had warned me that he didn’t want to deal with Stone’s shit any more. I listened to a wired Sly Stone at the other end of the line, talking about his friends being ‘popped’ or arrested.

After the high of his hit album Stand! and his performance at Woodstock, Stone was beginning to lose control as the drugs PCP and cocaine took over. He was not showing up because he was too high or he was getting busted all the time and Dad had to pick up the pieces. This was the age of black power and many of the black acts were coming under pressure to get rid of any whiteys in their entourage. My father was fired by many of his black artists.