As head of the A&R divisions at the four largest American Record corporations, Daly has overseen hundreds of artists, including their signings and album productions. These include multi-platinum artists such as
Janis Joplin,
the Cars,
Carlos Santana,
Tool,
Boz Scaggs,
Green Jellÿ, and others. Daly has also recorded
The Rolling Stones on tour, as well as recording
Huey Lewis (in Clover, Summers Here/Pyramid Records);
Gene Clark; Marc V (Too True/Elektra Records);
Family Brown (Imaginary World/United Artists Records);
Grammy-nominated internationally-known English composer
Michael Hoppé (Simple Pleasures/Seventh Wave);
Pamela Polland (Pamela Polland/Columbia Records); Boulder (Boulder, Elektra Records);
Alejandro Escovedo in the early punk/new wave band
The Nuns, with Jennifer Miro; Blue Train (Blue Train, All I Want Is You/BMG) which gave Bertelsmann/BMG/Zoo its first pop Top 40 US Billboard hit; Laura Allan, the singer often cited as the most important inspiration to
Joni Mitchell in her Blue and post Blue vocal style;
Booker T. Jones (Bittersweet/Epic Records); Skinny Songs for
Heidi Roizen; Mill Valley's Tim Hockenberry, (Back In Your Arms/About Records/Universal Music Group); Larkin Gayle (Two Hands/About Records/Universal Music Group); Jon Collins, (Jon Collins/Coliseum/About Records); Boston sourced and Mill Valley discovered
The Rowan Brothers, and the "sui generis"
YASSOU. At the request of
Keith Richards and
Rob Fraboni, Daly, starting at the 63,000-seat
Oakland Coliseum went on the road with
The Rolling Stones and recorded them during their
Bridges To Babylon tour. in 2014. In film, Daly was the Executive Producer and Co-Writer the globally multiple-award-winning music video The Girl Who Faded Away in partnership with Portland, Oregon Director, Editor and Co-Writer Brent Heise, which debuted at
Graumann’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, CA. The music video is based on a song released by the Hangmen band and written by Tom Guernsey and vocalist Joe Triplett. The film has won over 100 Film Festival awards internationally, including several "Academy Award feeding" festivals such as the Telly Award. Daly also produced all the music and sound design in the film, which includes piano performances by
Grammy nominated English composer and performer
Michael Hoppé and multi-Emmy award-winning composer Ron Alan Cohen. Daly wrote and produced the first digitally recorded (
SoundStream system) live music video and TV series, StudioLive, which was short-listed in the Emmy's technical category. StudioLive starred
Freddie Hubbard, with music composed and conducted by
Allyn Ferguson. Daly also wrote, produced and served as an Executive Producer of the multimedia life story of Carlos Santana, The River of Color and Sound, for Polygram Multimedia. Daly and Colin Farish created the pilot television show Sanctuary of Sound, with Daly on-screen and in discussion with such music business notables as
Narada Michael Walden and
Ben Fong-Torres. In public exhibition, Daly produced the most popular
Smithsonian exhibit of all time. While serving as a consultant to the
Smithsonian Institution’s
National Museum of American History, where he produced the major DC exhibit in which the original
Star Spangled Banner anthem was performed with period-accurate instruments. Daly recorded and produced the unique rendition of
Francis Scott Key's original song using a modern studio orchestra playing the original instruments from the mid-19th century. Daly acquired the rare instruments with the help of Dr. Arthur Molella, then Chairman of the museum’s department of the History of Science and Technology at the Smithsonian Institution. At his Advisor Intel consultancy (founded 2018), George Daly and William Daly identified and coordinated the acquisition for ACX Music/UFC of 65 million streaming music licenses as well as the design of the
UFC's Ultimate Sound streaming music service, one of the first corporate (the UFC) branded streaming music services. == Teen Hoot ==