Jerry Moss, co-founder of A&M Records, in June 2012.Photo:Theo Wargo/Getty

Jerry Moss speaks onstage at the Songwriters Hall of Fame 43rd Annual induction and awards at The New York Marriott Marquis on June 14, 2012 in New York City.

Theo Wargo/Getty

Legendary music executive Jerry Moss, a co-founder of A&M Records whose roster included such hit acts asJanet Jackson, The Police,Sting, the Carpenters andSheryl Crow, died Wednesday. He was 88 years old.

The death was attributed to natural causes, said Moss’ widow, Tina Morse, per theAssociated Press, which also reported that Moss died at his home in Bel Air, California, via a statement from his family.

“They truly don’t make them like him anymore and we will miss conversations with him about everything under the sun, the twinkle in his eyes as he approached every moment ready for the next adventure,” according to the statement,

A&M Records co-founder Jerry Moss.SGranitz/WireImage

Jerry Moss during Jerry Moss Honored with a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California, United States.

SGranitz/WireImage

“Herb’s record was a hit. It sold several thousand copies, which was enough to get us going,” Moss toldRolling Stone at the time.

A&M Records signed some of music’s popular acts in the following decades, including Joe Cocker, Styx, Joe Jackson, Squeeze, Suzanne Vega, the Human League, Cat Stevens,Amy Grantand Soundgarden. Among the label’s smash hit albums were Carole King’sTapestry, Jackson’sControl, The Police’sSynchronicity, Bryan Adams’RecklessandPeter Frampton’s “Frampton Comes Alive!” Even Alpert himself found success on A&M with his 1965 albumWhipped Cream & Other Delightsand his 1979 single “Rise.”

Moss was born in Brooklyn, New York, and got his start in the music business doing radio promotion for Coed Records, perVariety.  He later moved to California and launched an independent record promotion company; his work as a record producer brought him in contact with Alpert, both of whom started A&M in Alpert’s garage. “We had a huge advantage,” Alpert toldRolling Stonein 2012. “There was no board of directors – just Jerry and myself. We made decisions quickly, and signed artists we liked.”

In 1989, A&M was sold to Polygram for $500 million, and Moss and Alpert continued with the label until 1993,Varietyreported. The two executives were inducted into theRock and Roll Hall of Famein 2006.

“What we built we’re very proud of,” Moss told music writer Barney Hoskyns for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s program notes. “We were able to communicate with people that the label really meant something unique in the music world.”

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Some of the artists who were on the roster paid tribute to Moss on social media following the news of his death.

“I am so sorry to hear Jerry Moss has left us,”Peter Framptonwrote on Twitter (now known as X). “Jerry was a true gentleman and if it weren’t for him, so many lives might have turned out very differently…He loved great music and went out of his way to make a place where artists could find themselves and create with his lovely encouragement and patience. I love you, Jerry, and my thoughts are with wife Tina and the entire family. Rest now my dear friend.”

“A gentleman, a mentor, a friend, and utterly irreplaceable,” Stingshared in an Instagram postthat featured a photo of him and Moss. “A devastating loss.”

“Jerry Moss was an honest man,”tweetedYusuf/Cat Stevens, “and was a great patron of musical talent. It was at his Malibu house I re-connected with God, out there in the Ocean. May he rest in peace.#jerrymoss”

Former Police guitarist Andy Summers also wrote about Mossvia X: “Very sad to hear of the passing of the great Jerry Moss. He was a kind, clever and thoughtful man who was fun to be around and be involved with. It never felt like business but rather a fruitful and creative partnership. He will be missed. Thanks Jerry.”

source: people.com