Few people behind a desk shaped what America listened to more than Clive Davis. On Monday, the artists he made gathered to say goodbye.

A city pauses for a giant

Mourners filed into Central Synagogue on Manhattan's Upper East Side for a service befitting a man who reshaped the American songbook. Davis, who died June 22 after being hospitalized for a respiratory illness, was 94; he was born in Brooklyn in 1932. The service, closed to the public but livestreamed, drew a cross-section of the music world — Barry Manilow, Stevie Wonder, Dionne Warwick — alongside figures from beyond it, including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and broadcaster Gayle King, ABC7 reported. Kenny G played saxophone; Jennifer Hudson, a Davis protégée, sang.

'He changed my life forever'

Bruce Springsteen, whom Davis signed to Columbia Records in the early 1970s, delivered one of the morning's most arresting tributes, recalling Davis's first words to him — "Welcome to Columbia Records" — and adding, "In those few words, he changed my life forever." Alicia Keys, discovered by Davis at 15, told the gathering, "You saw something in me that I was just beginning to see in myself." Warwick credited him with engineering a late-career pairing with Manilow that won two Grammys; Manilow recalled that Davis pushed him to record the song that became "Mandy," Variety reported.

A career that rewrote the rules

Davis joined Columbia as a lawyer in 1960 and became its president by 1967, signing Janis Joplin, the Grateful Dead and Santana before being dismissed in 1973. He founded Arista Records the next year, building a hit machine that developed Manilow, Warwick, Kenny G and a teenage Whitney Houston, whom he discovered in 1983 and guided to some of the best-selling recordings in history; he also revived Aretha Franklin's career. In 2000 he launched J Records, through which he introduced Alicia Keys, whose debut sold millions, and helped propel artists from the American Idol era. His annual pre-Grammy gala became one of the industry's most coveted invitations.

An enduring imprint

Davis is survived by four children, eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. The breadth of Monday's gathering — soul to rock to R&B, the 1960s to the 2020s — was itself a measure of his reach. For the artists who eulogized him, the grief was bound up with gratitude: Davis had not merely signed them. In many cases, he had seen them before they fully saw themselves.