Besides launching the careers of Talking Heads, the Ramones and The Pretenders, Stein worked with the Rolling Stones, Lou Reed and Depeche Mode, among others.
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Seymour Stein, the man who helped launch the careers of Madonna, the Talking Heads and the Ramones, died Sunday at the age of 80.
According to a statement by his family, he died of cancer in Los Angeles.
Over the course of his star-studded career, Stein worked with prominent bands and recording artists like the Rolling Stones, Lou Reed, Depeche Mode, The Pretenders, The Smiths and The Cure.
Madonna took to Twitter to mourn his loss, as well as express her gratitude, describing Stein as "one of the most influential" men in her life.
Early start in music industry
Stein was born in Brooklyn, New York City, in 1942, and by age 13 was already a clerk at music magazine Billboard. He helped develop the Billboard Hot 100, launched in August 1958.
By his late teens, Stein was working summers at the Cincinnati-based King Records, James Brown's label, and by his mid-20s had co-founded Sire Productions (which later became Sire Records).
Icons of the 80s
No decade is like the other — but the 1980s really were special. It was the decade of a new world order, along with technological and cultural revolutions that have indelibly left their mark.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/C. Charisius
A divided world
The Iron Curtain still divided the East and the West. Increased tensions between the US and Russia led them to become more militaristic. The nuclear missiles they aimed at each other would land in the middle of Europe if they were ever to be fired. Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets for peace and disarmament in Germany.
Image: picture alliance / Klaus Rose
The Rubik's Cube
The hype began in 1981: Before they had Nintendo and cell phones, kids of the 1980s passed time with a colorful cube, pivoting its rows to get only one color on each of its faces. It is widely considered to be the world's best-selling toy to this day. A world record was set in 2018 by an Australian who solved it in 4.22 seconds, but a robot can achieve that same feat in 0.38 seconds.
Image: picture alliance/dpa/B. Thissen
Boris Becker at Wimbledon
The 17-year-old red head triggered an unseen tennis boom in Germany by becoming the first German as well as the youngest player to win the traditional tennis tournament. After his victory on July 7, 1985, Boris Becker became a world-famous man — and has remained in the tabloids ever since.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R. Schrader
The mullet
Short at the front and sides, and long in the back. While women were into perms, many men wore this hairstyle in the 1980s. Among the world's most famous mullet heads at the time were tennis star Andre Agassi (photo) or singers George Michael and U2's Bono. In the US during that decade, the mullet also became popular within lesbian culture, serving as a public sign of a woman's homosexuality.
Image: Getty Images/B. Martin
Opel Manta, the cult car
The Opel Manta was the right car to go along with the mullet in the 1980s. With a fox tail hanging on the rearview mirror, you were all set up to be a classy redneck. The most famous model from Opel, the car has been built more than a million times to date. It starred alongside actor Til Schweiger in the German movie "Manta Manta" (photo).
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Music to go: The Walkman
The world was fascinated when suddenly, a small battery-driven device allowed people to carry their music with them. With your headset over your ears, pop in a cassette tape — another icon of the '80s — and if you turned the volume up high enough, everyone nearby could hear what you were listening to. Doctors were up in arms, predicting lasting hearing problems for an entire generation of youth.
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Home computers ... not much of a future?
The computer descended from the lofty heights of huge data processing centers to private homes in the 1980s. "There is no reason for any individual to have a computer in his home," said a skeptical Ken Olsen, the founder of Digital Equipment Corp DEC, in 1977. Well, we know how that went.
Image: Imago/United Archives International
Pac Man and the C 64
Olsen was wrong. In the 1980s, the Commodore 64 home computer was wildly popular, and it was affordable. Young people loved to play the computer game Pac Man. Players navigated a yellow ball through a maze, where it devoured blinking dots, always rushing to escape the four ghosts hunting the Pacman ball.
Image: Imago/M. Eichhammer
E.T. — a timeless story
In 1982, Steven Spielberg's blockbuster science fiction film E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial had people all over the world glued to the big screen, many in tears at the plight of the extraterrestrial creature left behind on earth and then befriends young Elliot. The line "E.T. phone home" is a top movie quote to this day.
Image: picture alliance/dpa/Universal
Michael Jackson, mega star
That same year saw the release of Michael Jackson's album Thriller, produced by the greatest producer of that decade, Quincy Jones. The whole world danced to "Beat it", "Billie Jean" and the title track, "Thriller." The video with its zombie dance routine was a huge hit that young audiences of the time will never forget either. Thriller holds the record of being the most-sold album ever.
Image: picture alliance/dpa
Madonna, the new pop icon
The 1980s also had Madonna on the music scene — and to this day, no other female musician has managed to top the US pop icon's success. Lace skirts, revealing bra tops and pouting red lips, Madonna Louise Ciccone had moralists up in arms. She wowed the young audience when she performed "Like a Virgin" at the 1984 MTV Video Music Awards dressed like a sexy bride, rolling around on stage.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Reimer
The Fall of the Berlin Wall
The infamous Berlin Wall came down late on November 9, 1989 — all of a sudden, the border between West Berlin and communist East Berlin was broached. The entire East Bloc opened up, and the Iron Curtain crumbled. Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, who led the way to open borders, was celebrated like a pop star. The world was moving toward a new order and an exciting decade came to a close.
Image: picture-alliance/W.Kumm
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Stein was married briefly to record promoter Linda Adler, with whom he had two children: filmmaker Mandy Stein and Samantha Lee Jacobs, who died of brain cancer in 2013. Stein and Adler divorced in the 1970s, and Stein later came out as gay.
Stein's label Sire was acquired by Warner Bros in 1978 and over the next two decades, Warner signed acts such as The Replacements, Echo & the Bunnymen, Madness, The Undertones, The Smiths and lead singer Morrissey.
Brian Wilson, Seal, Ice-T, Lou Reed and Everything But the Girl also joined the stable.
Signing Madonna while in the hospital
In the early 1980s, Stein made what turned out to be the biggest discovery of his illustrious career after hearing a demo tape of a little-known artist from the New York club scene: Madonna.
"I liked Madonna's voice, I liked the feel, and I liked the name Madonna," he wrote in his 2018 memoir Siren Song. "I liked it all and played it again."
Stein was in the hospital with a heart infection around the time of his career-defining discovery. He was so excited to meet the soon-to-be-legend, however, that he had her brought to his hospital room.
"She was all dolled up in cheap punky gear, the kind of club kid who looked absurdly out of place in a cardiac ward," he wrote. "She wasn't even interested in hearing me explain how much I liked her demo. 'The thing to do now,' she said, 'is sign me to a record deal.'"
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'He changed my world'
Many others who worked with Stein also posted tributes on social media, including Madonna.
"Seymour Stein Has Left Us! I need to catch my breath. He Was one of the most influential Men in my Life!! He changed and Shaped my world. I must Explain," she tweeted with a longer post on Instagram.
Johnny Marr, the guitarist and co-songwriter for The Smiths, tweeted: "Legendary record man. Signed me to Sire Records in 1984 and bought me my Red 355 from 48th Street to seal the deal. Worked with The Drifters, Rolling Stones & Shangri-Las. Discovered Talking Heads, Ramones & Madonna. Well done Seymour & thank you my friend."
American rap artist Ice-T posted: "It’s a Sad day for me and all of music. Love you Seymour."