Susan Silver
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Susan Silver

Susan Jean Silver (born July 17, 1958) is an American music manager and businesswoman, best known for managing Seattle rock bands such as Soundgarden, Alice in Chains and Screaming Trees. Silver also owns the company Susan Silver Management, and co-owns the club The Crocodile in Seattle. Silver was named "the most powerful figure in local rock management" by The Seattle Times in 1991. In 2025, Variety called Silver "one of the most important female managers in music history".

Susan Jean Silver was born in Seattle, Washington, on July 17, 1958, to Emmogene Molly (Jean) Silver (née Higman) (1924–2017), who had Irish heritage, and Samuel Wilson Silver (1916–2015), who was born in North Dakota to Jewish parents from Belarus. She has two younger brothers, an older half-sister from her mother's first marriage, and an older half-brother from her father's first marriage. Her mother worked at Boeing in her early twenties during World War II as part of the war effort. Her father was the fourth pilot hired for Alaska Airlines and represented the company as one of many pilots that participated in Operation Magic Carpet in 1949–50, where he flew approximately 1,000 Yemenite Jews to Israel.

Silver played keyboards and clarinet during her youth. In college, Silver took choral classes and loved singing, but she said she realized she was bad at it and never considered being a musician as a career.

Silver majored in Chinese at the University of Washington.

Silver had attended all the major concerts in Seattle since she was 15. She started by booking concerts for the club The Metropolis and Sub Pop co-founder Jonathan Poneman's club parties. After The Metropolis was closed, Silver was putting shows on wherever she could find a venue, without working in a particular club. Later on, she was doing production work on bigger shows, such as working on catering or in the production office for the biggest promoters in Seattle. Silver organized shows for bands that were underground at the time, such as Soul Asylum, Faith No More, Meat Puppets and Sonic Youth.

Silver started working as a music manager in 1983. Her first clients were the bands The U-Men and First Thought. In 1985, Silver met Soundgarden, whose lead vocalist was her then-boyfriend and future husband Chris Cornell, and in the following year she started managing the band. Back then, Silver was also managing Screaming Trees. Silver said she became a manager because she wanted to help musicians achieve their dreams.

At the same time that she was managing rock bands, Silver was also the manager of a John Fluevog shoe store in Seattle where several local musicians would hang out. The store would become famous years later for selling the Dr. Martens boots worn by several members of Grunge bands from Seattle, which along with flannel shirts and jeans became known as "Grunge fashion". One of Silver's employees at the store circa 1987 was Kevin Martin, lead vocalist of Candlebox, when he was still a teenager and before the band was formed.

In 1988, Silver met music manager Kelly Curtis. Curtis and his friend Ken Deans owned a company, and Deans was the manager of the band Alice in Chains. Deans gave Silver an Alice in Chains cassette tape and she liked it. Silver then went to an Alice in Chains concert and thought they were fun and very energetic. When Curtis became interested in working with the band Mother Love Bone, Deans decided that he did not want to work with Alice in Chains anymore, so he offered the managing job to Silver and Curtis, who started co-managing the band. Curtis and Silver passed on the Alice in Chains demo tape The Treehouse Tapes to Columbia Records' A&R representative Nick Terzo, who set up an appointment with label president Don Ienner. Based on that demo, Terzo signed Alice in Chains to Columbia in 1989, and the band released their first studio album, Facelift, in 1990, which became the first album from the grunge movement to be certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Some time later, Curtis started managing the band Pearl Jam, and Silver became the sole manager of Alice in Chains. Alice in Chains' guitarist/vocalist Jerry Cantrell was living at Silver and Cornell's house at the start of 1991 when he wrote the band's hit song "Rooster". In the early 1990s, Alice in Chains' lead vocalist Layne Staley enrolled in several rehab programs, but he failed to stay clean for long. During the band's tour in support of their 1992 album Dirt, Silver hired bodyguards to keep Staley away from people who might try to pass him drugs, but he ended up relapsing on alcohol and drugs during the tour. Alice in Chains stopped touring in 1996 and Staley became a recluse.

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