Jon Zazula, co-founder of the influential metal label Megaforce Records, has died. He was 69.
Alongside his wife and Megaforce co-founder Marsha Zazula, who died last January, Zazula was instrumental in launching the burgeoning thrash-metal subgenre that exploded into the culture in the mid-to-early 1980s. Through Megaforce, the couple put out early records by pivotal bands including Anthrax, Testament, Overkill and future mainstream superstars Metallica, whose first two albums — triple-platinum Kill ‘Em All and six-times platinum Ride the Lightning — were released by the label in the first half of the decade.
“The world of rock and metal would not be what it is today without Jon Zazula,” wrote Megaforce Records in a tweet on Tuesday announcing his death. “Jon’s love of music and musicians was unwavering. A giant was lost today. Rest In Peace Jon.”
“Heavy music lost one of its great champions today when Jonny Z left this world far too soon,” wrote Metallica in a statement posted to Twitter. “In 1982, when no one wanted to take a chance on four kids from California playing a crazy brand of metal, Jonny and Marsha did, and the rest, as they say, is history. He was a mentor, a manager, a label head and a father figure to us all . . . Metallica would not be who we are or where we are today without Jon Zazula and his wife, Marsha. Our love and sympathy go out to Jonny’s children and his grandchildren, whom he cherished and brought to our shows from the time they were in diapers. We hope they will be able to take some comfort in knowing that he is reunited with Marsha, and that he helped bring so much incredible music to so many. Hopefully there’s a great show goin’ on up there tonight to welcome you! We’ll miss you Jonny!”
“I remember it like it was yesterday- Saturday afternoon, late ’82 at Rock & Roll Heaven with Jonny,” wrote Anthrax guitarist and co-founder Scott Ian on Instagram. “He’d just played me Metallica’s No Life ’Til Leather demo. We were standing there sweating, a post-headbanging/air-guitaring fever had overcome us, Jonny staring at me wild-eyed shaking his head in an enthusiastic ‘YES’ motion. My riff-induced smile back at him was all he needed. A beat passed, breathing subsided to a point where Jonny could speak and he excitedly raved at me, ‘I’m bringing them to NY, we’re going to make an album, and if nobody will put it out I’ll start my own label and I will put it out, and you guys will be next.’ And he did all of that. And he changed all of our worlds.”
Known as “Jonny Z” to his friends, Zazula grew up in the Bronx in the 1960s, when — contrary to the music that would come to define his career — he counted himself as an aficionado of opera and classical music, the Grateful Dead and jazz legend Rahsaan Roland Kirk.
In 1981, shortly after marrying Marsha, Zazula began selling vinyl imports and picture discs out of a flea market located along Route 18 in New Jersey. The couple quickly became known among local metalheads, including future Megaforce artists like Overkill lead singer Bobby “Blitz” Ellsworth and Anthrax drummer Charlie Benante, for carrying rare finds from across the Atlantic. The successful venture eventually led them to open a brick-and-mortar shop, Rock n’ Roll Heaven, in Clark, New Jersey.
“They would bring in all this vinyl that was just un-gettable in the States, unless you knew somebody overseas,” says Ellsworth. “Whether it be the early Raven stuff and the new wave of British heavy metal,” including bands like Tygers of Pan Tang and Venom, he continues, “They came on the scene locally and set the bar.”
The Zazulas’ future began to reveal itself after a customer brought Metallica’s demo cassette No Life ‘Til Leather by the store and insisted Jon play it on the spot. Struck by their sound, Zazula set about trying to get the band signed but was turned down by every record label he approached. Undaunted, the Zazulas took matters into their own hands, launching Megaforce Records in 1982. They released Kill ‘Em All on the imprint in July 1983.

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