Elliot Cahn, Esq.
Elliot
Cahn started his music career as a singer and guitarist. While at Columbia
University he and some friends started a band called Sha Na Na (named after
a scat line in the '50's hit "Get A Job"). The band found international fame
after playing at the Woodstock Festival, and Elliot toured and recorded with
them for 4 album cycles. Elliot left the band and played with ex-Sha Na Na
member Henry Gross for another year, before moving to Bay Area and continuing
his education at the University of California Berkeley where he earned his
Bachelor's Degree, Law Degree, and a Master's Degree in Jurisprudence &
Social Policy.
After finishing school, Elliot worked as the director of the litigation support
program at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI International), where he specialized
in advising attorneys on jury selection in high stakes trials, taught at the law
school of the University of Santa Clara, and returned to the music business in 1975.
Over the past twenty-three years, Elliot has served as attorney for Primus,
Papa Roach, Rancid, Exodus, The Offspring, Luce, Charlie Hunter, Ocean Park Music
Group, and producers Mark Needham, Jim Scott, and Bryan Todd, as well as a number
of independent record labels, publishing companies, merchandise companies, and
film producers. He has managed the careers of Green Day (through the Dookie
album which sold fifteen million albums worldwide and won a Grammy for best
rock album), Testament, Fisher, and currently R&B songstress Goapele and
guitarist Justin King.
Elliot was the CEO of a joint venture label with MCA Records and has music
supervised two major studio films: Kevin Smiths' Mall Rats and Angus. He has
appeared on music panels for conferences run by South By Southwest, CMJ, The
Austin Music Foundation, California Lawyers for the Arts, and the Westcoast
Songwriters Association, and is a frequent guest lecturer at colleges and law
schools around the Bay Area.