One of the most prominent producers in pop and jazz,
Joel Dorn helmed records from some of the biggest names in music, among them
Charles Mingus,
Bette Midler and
the Allman Brothers Band. He began his career in 1961 as a disc jockey with Philadelphia jazz station WHAT-FM; his radio success led to a meeting with Atlantic Records founder
Nesuhi Ertegun, resulting in an offer allowing
Dorn to produce the artist of his choice for the company's jazz imprint. He selected flutist
Hubert Laws, and the resulting LP, 1964's The Laws of Jazz, proved so successful that by 1967,
Dorn was employed at Atlantic full-time as Ertegun's assistant. Working not only as a producer but also in the A&R and marketing departments, he quickly rose to the position of Vice President; the records he helmed were primarily jazz and R&B efforts, informed by a pop sensibility which became his signature. Among
Dorn's hits as a producer were
Roberta Flack's "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" and "Killing Me Softly," Keith Jarrett and Gary Burton, and Midler's debut, The Divine Miss M; he left Atlantic in 1974, going on to work with a wide range of performers including
the Neville Brothers,
Leon Redbone,
Mink DeVille,
Lou Rawls and
Asleep at the Wheel. During the mid-1980s,
Dorn formed Night Records, a label devoted to issuing previously unreleased live material from the likes of
Rahsaan Roland Kirk,
Cannonball Adderley and
Les McCann; in 1995, he formed another reissue label, 32 Records. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide