Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum

Jerry Wexler

Induction Year: 1987

Induction Category: Non-Performer


Before the advent of rock and roll, the term producer wasn’t even part of the recording-industry vocabulary. “No one really knew how to make a record when I started,” Jerry Wexler has said. “You simply went into the studio, turned on the mike and said play.” However, with the proliferation of independent record labels in the 1950s came a new breed of hands-on music-industry entrepreneurs. Among the most influential and important of these was Wexler at Atlantic Records.

His entree into the music business came at Billboard magazine, where he worked as a reporter and helped change the name of the black-music charts from “Race Records” to “Rhythm & Blues.” He joined Atlantic founders Ahmet and in 1953 and began producing the company’s major rhythm & blues artists at all-night recording sessions that, in hindsight, were historic in their scope and impact on popular music. Wexler’s efforts at Atlantic helped bring black music to the masses - and in so doing built a significant and lasting bridge between the races.

In the Sixties, Wexler helped nurse soul music to a position of prominence by linking such singers as and with Southern house bands in Memphis and Muscle Shoals. Wexler has worked across the decade with artists ranging from , , , Solomon Burke and to Dr. John, Dire Straits, , Delaney and Bonnie, and .  He passed away on August 15, 2008.


Dickey Betts' (the Allman Brothers Band) 1957 Gibson Les Paul Electric Guitar

Photo by Tony Festa
Collection of Brian Nelson