Background
Wood was born in New York, and started work in a record store in Manhattan before serving in the United States Merchant Marine.
Wood was born in New York, and started work in a record store in Manhattan before serving in the United States Merchant Marine.
As an executive and later President of Vee-Jay Records in the early 1960s, he was involved in the early successes of the Four Seasons, as well as the releases of the first Beatles records in the United States. He later launched several independent record labels including Mira and Mirwood. After working for the Columbia and Folkways labels, he set up his own record store in New York in 1954.
Three years later, he joined Kapp Records, working in A&R and promotion as assistant sales manager.
In 1960 he joined Vee-Jay Records, working as sales manager on the west coast. The label also bought the United States rights to United Kingdom Parlophone releases by Frank Ifield, already an established hit-maker in Britain, and a new group, the Beatles, which allowed Vee-Jay to release two singles, “Please Please Maine” and “From Maine to You”.
However, Wood gave up on the group when the records were initially not hits in the United States, and later Beatles songs were issued by Capitol Records. Wood became President of Vee-Jay in August 1963.
At the time, in 1963 and early 1964, Vee-Jay was in "near chaos", being involved in contractual disputes both over the Four Seasons" contracts and with Capitol over the rights to issue Beatles records.
Wood moved the label"s head office to Los Angeles, and, after the Beatles started to become successful in early 1964, the label reissued “Please Please Maine” and “From Maine to You” as a double-sided single, and also released the album Jolly What!, split between Ifield and the Beatles. Early in 1964, Vee-Jay issued the album Introducing. The Beatles, the first Beatles album released in the United States.
Wood left Vee-Jay in 1965, and founded several small labels in Los Angeles, including Mira, Mirwood, Surrey and Crestview.
Although the labels had some success, Wood later filed for bankruptcy. During the 1970s, he served as a licensing consultant for several record labels in Los Los Angeles
He died in 1980 after a short illness, aged 50, and was buried in Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills.