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Sylvia Rhone

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Sylvia Rhone

Sylvia Rhone (born March 11, 1952) is an American record executive. A fifty-year veteran of the music industry, she is the first Black woman to chair a major record company imprint and the first Black woman to hold dual CEO and chair positions at a major label.

Rhone served as the president of Epic Records from 2014 until 2019 and the label's chair and CEO from 2019 to 2025. Earlier in her career, she was the chairman of the Atlantic imprint East West America, chair and CEO of Elektra Entertainment Group, president of Universal Motown Records, and chair of the Universal Motown Record Group.. She also founded the Epic imprint Vested in Culture and held senior positions at Atlantic. She began her career as a secretary at Buddah Records.

Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on March 11,1952, and raised in Harlem, New York, Rhone said her attendance at R&B shows at the Apollo Theatre was central to her belief that music is an inspirational force, as were artists including Aretha Franklin, Ella Fitzgerald, Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin.

Rhone attended the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania and graduated with a BS in Economics.

Rhone got a job at Bankers Trust in New York City soon after graduating college, but pursued her passion for music by landing a job as a secretary for Buddha Records in 1974. In a succession of promotions over the next six years, she also held positions at ABC Records and Ariola Records. Rhone was previously part of the Elektra family in 1980 as northeast regional promotion manager for special markets, and she was eventually promoted to director of national black music marketing for Atlantic Records.

Credited with helping to realign Atlantic's black music business, Rhone took on broader responsibilities in A&R and marketing in 1986 with her promotion to senior vice president and general manager of Atlantic Records. At Atlantic, Rhone managed such artists as En Vogue, the System, Levert, Bob Baldwin, Brandy, Yo Yo, the D.O.C., MC Lyte, Chuckii Booker, Miki Howard, Gerald Albright and the Rude Boys and Chris Bender (singer). It was under her leadership that Billboard magazine named Atlantic the #1 Black Music Division in 1988.

Rhone's career has been highlighted by multiple firsts: In 1990 she became the first African American woman to lead a major record company when she was named CEO and president of Atlantic's EastWest Records. . A year later when the EastWest artist roster and operations were combined with those of Atco Records, Rhone was named chairwoman and CEO of Atco/EastWest and subsequently of EastWest Records America.

At EastWest, she was directly involved in introducing several newcomers as well as helping established stars gain new success, including En Vogue, Gerald Levert, Pantera and Das EFX. She also played a role in furthering the careers of AC/DC and Simply Red, who eventually became EEG artists. Atlantic Records' founder Ahmet Ertegun commented on Rhone's success during the period, calling her administration one of "innovation, imagination, and freshness."

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