Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Stephen H Sholes

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Birth name
  
Stephen Henry Sholes

Name
  
Stephen Sholes

Occupation(s)
  
Record producer

Role
  
Record producer

Instruments
  
Saxophone, clarinet

Record label
  
RCA Records

Labels
  
RCA Victor


Stephen H. Sholes smhttp47704nexcesscdnnet801EC7Dassetsimages

Born
  
February 12, 1911 Washington, D.C. (
1911-02-12
)

Died
  
April 22, 1968, Nashville, Tennessee, United States

Books
  
Country Music Hall of Fame

Genres
  
Rock music, Country, Pop music

Associated acts
  
Elvis Presley, Chet Atkins, Eddy Arnold, Hank Snow, Jim Reeves

Similar People
  
Chet Atkins, Al Hirt, Billy May, Curtis Gordon, Conrad Gozzo

Stephen Henry Sholes (February 12, 1911 – April 22, 1968) was a prominent recording executive with RCA Victor.

Stephen H. Sholes httpsimgdiscogscomNSM8E1H2XEnPWP5SSRsTF46tv

Career

Sholes was born in Washington, D.C. and moved with is family to Merchantville, New Jersey, at the age of nine, near where his father worked in the Victor Talking Machine Company plant in Camden. Sholes started work at Victor as a messenger boy in 1929 and worked part-time for the firm while a student at Rutgers University.

Scholes worked for a time in RCA Victor's radio division, but his experience playing saxophone and clarinet in dance bands led him to the record division. During World War II, he worked in the Army's V-disc operation, which made records for radio broadcast and for personal use by army personnel.

In 1945, he became head of the country division in Nashville, Tennessee and was responsible for recruiting such talent as Chet Atkins for RCA Victor. When he left Nashville, Atkins took over as head of the country music division. He also recruited Eddy Arnold, The Browns, Hank Locklin, Homer and Jethro, Hank Snow, Jim Reeves, and Pee Wee King. In 1955, he signed Elvis Presley for RCA Victor. He eventually had fifteen chart topping hit singles in the UK as a record producer for Presley. In 1982 he reached fourth place on the list of most successful record producers on the UK charts.

He convinced RCA to build its own recording studio in Nashville on Seventeenth Avenue South in 1957. He became the company's pop singles manager the same year, pop singles and albums manager in 1958, and West Coast manager in 1961. The latter promotion took him to Los Angeles, California. In 1963, Sholes became RCA Victor vice president for pop A&R and returned to New York.

He served on the Country Music Association (CMA) and Country Music Foundation (CMF) boards of directors. Sholes was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, which he had worked to create, in 1967.

Sholes died in Nashville of a heart attack at the age of 57.

References

Stephen H. Sholes Wikipedia