Susan Silver

Manager

Birthday July 17, 1958

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Seattle, Washington, U.S.

Age 65 years old

Nationality United States

#17440 Most Popular

1958

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 born in Seattle, Washington on July 17, 1958, to Samuel and Emmogene (Jean) Silver.

She is the oldest of three children.

Her father was Jewish and came from Russia.

Silver majored in Chinese at the University of Washington and had been to all the major concerts in Seattle since she was 15.

She started by booking for the club The Metropolis and Sub Pop co-founder Jonathan Poneman's club parties.

1983

Silver started working as a music manager in 1983.

Her first clients were the bands The U-Men and First Thought.

1985

In 1985, Silver met Soundgarden, whose lead vocalist was her then-boyfriend 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.

The store would become famous years later for selling the Dr. Martens boots worn by several members of Grunge bands from Seattle.

One of Silver's co-workers at the store at the time was Kevin Martin, lead vocalist of Candlebox.

1988

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 a cassette tape of Alice in Chains 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.

1989

Based on that demo, Terzo signed Alice in Chains to Columbia in 1989.

Some time later, Curtis started managing the band Pearl Jam, and Silver became the sole manager of Alice in Chains.

1990

In May 1990, record label Sub Pop sent Nirvana a new proposed contract, but vocalist Kurt Cobain was reluctant to sign it, complaining about the label's lack of promotion for their debut album, Bleach.

Cobain and bassist Krist Novoselic consulted Silver for advice, and she looked at the contract and told them they needed a lawyer.

They met Silver in Los Angeles and she introduced them to agent Don Muller and music business attorney Alan Mintz, who specialized in finding deals for new bands.

Mintz started sending out Nirvana's demo tape to major labels looking for deals.

Among Silver's clients in the 1990s were the bands Hater, Inflatable Soule, Crackerbox, Sweet Water, Sponge, singer Kristen Barry, and producer Terry Date.

1991

Silver was named "the most powerful figure in local rock management" by The Seattle Times in 1991.

MCA Records expressed interest, but the band ended up choosing DGC (part of Geffen Records) following advice from Sonic Youth, and the label released their hit album Nevermind in 1991.

Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic offered her the opportunity to manage them, but she refused because she was too busy with her bands.

"There aren't many things I regret about my life, but of course not managing Nirvana was a mistake", Silver said in 2022.

1995

In 1995, Silver supported Krist Novoselic's political-action committee, Joint Artists and Music Promotions (JAMPAC), to defend the rights of artists and their fans.

1996

In 1996, Silver was featured on the Doug Pray documentary Hype!, talking about the Seattle music scene.

Alice in Chains was inactive from 1996 until 2005.

1998

In 1998, Silver retired from the music business to concentrate on her family.

2002

After lead vocalist Layne Staley died of a drug overdose in 2002, the band only performed in public again in February 2005 for a benefit concert with guest vocalists in Seattle.

2005

In 2005, Silver and Deborah Semer formed a new company in Seattle, Atmosphere Artist Management.

Their first client was the music and dance group Children of the Revolution.

2014

When Nirvana was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2014, Novoselic thanked Silver during his speech for "introducing them to the music industry properly".