Allan Meltzer Poker
Meltzer was a wealthy music executive who made regular trips to Las Vegas to compete in some of the toughest cash games in the world. In 2009, Meltzer made an appearance on High Stakes Poker. Alan Meltzer Leaves Former Chauffeur $1 Million Published on 2012-01-30 14:14:00 When Alan Meltzer passed away in October of 2011, there was a real outpouring of sadness from the high stakes poker community. Alan, who was seen on the fifth season of High Stakes Poker, was a regular in some of the largest cash games in the world.
- Full Tilt Poker Game #: $25,000 Guarantee (8748380), Table 132 - 60/120 - No Limit Holdem - 23:17:33 ET - 2006/11/23Seat 1: l3cl3c (7,195)Seat 2: joules360.
- Alan Meltzer, also a prolific poker player, left $1 million to his chauffeur and $500,000 to his doorman after his sudden death last October. The 67-year-old founder of Wind-Up Records had divorced.
- Music entrepreneur: At his death, he was described by The New York Post as “the colorful former head of the New York-based Wind-Up Records and a celebrity high-stakes poker player.” In 1985 he founded CD One Stop, a distributor of pre-recorded music in the late 1980s through the 90s; the business, operated out of his.
When the 67-year-old died back on Halloween last year, he left behind a 10 million dollar estate. Meltzer formed the label with his wife Diana after purchasing indie label Grass Records. Together, they helped grow the company, signing such bands as Creed and Seether. Wind-Up is now the largest independently owned record label in the world.
Things didn’t work out with Meltzer and his wife. She left him and he retreated to two service workers for kindness and compassion. During the split, Meltzer routinely confided in chauffeur Jean Laborde and doorman Chamil Demiraj. After his death, Meltzer left a million bucks to Laborde and a cool $500,000 to Demiraj.
Allan Meltzer Poker
“I appreciate it,” Demiraj said recently in a New York Post article about the inheritance. “He was a generous guy. He was a really good friend of mine, and I was a good friend of his. It’s a surprise. Peace and rest to him. That’s all I can say.”
But what about ex Diana? Turns out, the split denied Diana at least a guaranteed 33 percent of the estate. She says she doesn’t care about the money.
“If he wants to give it to the bums, he can give it to the bums. He could f— a nun. I couldn’t give a s—. He can give his money to whoever he wants. We’re divorced. The man is dead,” the former Mrs. Meltzer said to the New York Post.
According to The Dailymail, Wind-Up Records founder and part-time poker player Alan Meltzer left a total of $1.5 million to his driver and doorman when he passed away last October.
Jean Laborde, Meltzer’s personal chauffeur, received $1 million and his doorman, Chamil Demirag, received $500,000. Demirag, a Brooklyn, New York resident, said, “He was a generous guy. It’s a surprise. Peace and rest to him.”
Before he founded Wind-Up Records, which includes bands such as Creed, Evanescence, O.A.R., Seether, People in Planes and Five For Fighting, Meltzer was a pretzel vendor on the streets of New York.
In the last few years, Meltzer had frequented the poker tournament circuit and even appeared multiple times on GSN’s High Stakes Poker.
Allan Meltzer Poker
The 67-year-old had no children and recently divorced his wife of 13 years. The cause of his death is still unknown.