Rhone got a job at Bankers Trust in New York City soon after graduating college, but pursued her passion for music by landing a job as a secretary for Buddha Records in 1974. In a succession of promotions over the next six years, she also held positions at ABC Records and Ariola Records. Rhone was previously part of the Elektra family in 1980 as northeast regional promotion manager for special markets, and she was eventually promoted to director of national black music marketing for Atlantic Records.
Rhone's career has been highlighted by multiple firsts: In 1990 she became the first African American woman to head a major record company when she was named CEO and president of Atlantic's EastWest Records America division. A year later when the EastWest artist roster and operations were combined with those of Atco Records, Rhone was named chairwoman and CEO of Atco/EastWest and subsequently of EastWest Records America.
At EastWest, she was directly involved in introducing several newcomers as well as helping established stars gain new success, including En Vogue, Gerald Levert, Pantera and Das EFX. She also played a role in furthering the careers of AC/DC and Simply Red, who eventually became EEG artists. Atlantic Records' founder Ahmet Ertegun commented on Rhone's success during the period, calling her administration one of "innovation, imagination, and freshness."[2]
In 1993, she was cited by Ebony magazine as one of the top up-and-coming black executives in the entertainment industry.
Rhone declined to sign Drake,[18] who would later sign a distribution deal with Universal for one of the largest advances to an unsigned artist in history.
Rhone stepped down from being president of the company in 2011.[19]
Sony Music Entertainment/Epic and Vested In Culture
In 2012, Rhone became CEO of her self-established label Vested In Culture, which was distributed through Epic Records.[20] In 2014, Rhone was named President of Epic Records, where she has overseen the release of projects including Travis Scott's No. 1 album Astroworld, Camila Cabello's #1 debut album Camila, and the smash single "Havana," which was recently named the biggest single of 2018 by the IFPI.[21][22] Since 2017, Rhone has been the head of Epic Records' operations.[23]
Rhone was named Chairwoman and CEO of Epic Records in 2019.[24] Under Rhone's leadership, the label has placed three artists simultaneously in the Top 10 of the Billboard 200 Albums chart twice, with Travis Scott's album Astroworld debuting at the top spot and returning to No. 1 again at the end of 2018. Rhone has guided multiple artists to the top of the charts at Epic Records, including Travis Scott, Camila Cabello, 21 Savage, Future, DJ Khaled, French Montana, Meghan Trainor and others.
She has also been recognized for bringing unprecedented hip hop success to the label and projects from Future, 21 Savage, and others.[25]
Honors and awards
Rhone was ranked No. 35 on Billboard's Annual Power 100 List in 2019.[26]
Rhone received the City Of Hope's Spirit Of Life Award in October, 2019, presented by former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder.[27][28][29][30]
Rhone received the Midem 2019 Hall Of Fame Award,[31] in association with Billboard, at their 53rd annual conference in June, 2019, where Rhone gave the keynote address.
2018 Rhone was profiled in Billboard Magazine as "Sony Music's Most powerful African-American Woman."[34]
In 2018, Rhone received the Culture Creators Icon Award,[35][36] where Rhone stated in her acceptance speech "Our one common goal is to protect the culture."