
There’s a version of this story where Benjy Grinberg stays at Arista Records, keeps his head down, climbs the corporate ladder, and becomes another name in a long list of music executives who worked for someone else their entire career. That version doesn’t exist. Instead, in March 2003, Benjy walked away from what most people would have called a dream job and started something in Pittsburgh that nobody was expecting to matter. That something became Benjy Rostrum Records — and what followed. People in the industry still talk about Benjy Rostrum Records the way they talk about Def Jam in its prime. What Benjy Rostrum Records built is one of the most genuinely interesting stories in modern music.
I’ve been following indie labels for a long time. Most of them flame out within three years. They sign one promising act, spend everything chasing that act’s momentum, and then collapse when the artist either blows up and gets poached by a major or simply doesn’t break through. Benjy Rostrum Records did neither of those things. It survived. It grew. It launched two of hip-hop’s most beloved artists. And it did all of that from Pittsburgh, a city that — with all due respect — nobody was watching for the next wave of rap music.
How It Actually Started
Benjy Grinberg grew up in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh. His father tells a story about Benjy wanting a paper route at nine years old, running it for a few years, and using the money — along with some bar mitzvah savings — to eventually fund his first real venture. He was a disc jockey in school. He always saw music as something you could actually build a life around, not just something you listened to on the way to a real job.
After college at Penn, he moved to New York, lived on his brother’s couch, and eventually landed at Arista Records working under L.A. Reid. That’s not a small thing. L.A. Reid was one of the most powerful figures in the music industry. Most people in their mid-twenties would have held onto that position with both hands and not let go.
Benjy let go.
He came back to Pittsburgh in 2003 to start what would become Benjy Rostrum Records — not because he had a master plan or a huge roster lined up, but because he wanted to develop artists the way he thought they should be developed. Patient. Personal. Long-term. The kind of approach that gets squeezed out of corporate label structures where quarterly numbers matter more than whether an artist has actually found their voice yet.
The Wiz Khalifa Years
The first real turning point for Benjy Rostrum Records came during Thanksgiving of 2004 at ID Labs — a Pittsburgh studio that served as a hub for local hip-hop. That’s where Grinberg first encountered a sixteen-year-old rapper named Wiz Khalifa. He wasn’t fully formed yet. The potential was there, but it needed time and the right environment to develop.
Grinberg signed him anyway. And then he waited. Not passively — they were working constantly on mixtapes, shows, building a local fanbase — but Benjy understood that breaking an artist nationally wasn’t something you could force on a timeline. From 2004 until around 2009, Benjy Rostrum Records and Wiz were essentially planting seeds. The mainstream wasn’t paying attention yet.
Then it started clicking. The mixtapes caught fire. The street buzz became national buzz. By 2011, Rolling Papers — released as a co-release with Atlantic Records — debuted at number two on the Billboard 200. Wiz Khalifa had gone from an unsigned teenager in Pittsburgh to one of the biggest names in rap music. Benjy Rostrum Records had made that journey with him.
Mac Miller Changes Everything
If Wiz Khalifa proved that Benjy Rostrum Records could develop an artist to mainstream success, Mac Miller proved the label could do it entirely on its own terms.
Mac Miller joined Rostrum in 2010. In 2011, his debut album Blue Slide Park dropped — independently, no major label co-release, no Atlantic deal helping it across the finish line. It debuted at number one on the Billboard 200. The last independently distributed debut album to do that had been in 1995. Sixteen years.
That moment changed how the industry looked at Benjy Rostrum Records. Major labels had been circling since Wiz started blowing up, making offers to buy in. Grinberg turned them down. “We wanna buy fifty percent” — calls from everyone, he’s said in interviews. He wasn’t interested. He’d built something that could compete at the highest level without being absorbed into a corporate structure, and he wasn’t about to hand over the keys just because the offers were there.
Mac Miller left Rostrum in 2014 when his contract expired — no drama, no lawsuits, just a natural end of a chapter. He signed with Warner Bros. and continued making some of the most critically praised music of his career before his passing in 2018. The impact he made during his years with Benjy Rostrum Records defined a generation of fans who grew up with him.
The Lawsuit That Nearly Derailed Everything
The story of Benjy Rostrum Records wouldn’t be honest without talking about what happened in 2016. Wiz Khalifa filed a lawsuit against the label and Grinberg personally, seeking to terminate a 360 deal he had signed in 2005 — when he was a teenager. The lawsuit alleged that the deal had given Rostrum a cut of virtually every aspect of his professional earnings for over a decade.
These things are messy. There’s rarely a clean villain or a clean victim in music industry disputes, and the details of the Rostrum-Khalifa situation were complicated. What matters for the story of Benjy Rostrum Records is what came after: both parties settled in 2017, the lawsuits were dismissed, and the label kept moving forward. It wasn’t a clean resolution in any emotional sense, but it was a resolution. The label survived something that would have permanently damaged lesser operations.
What Benjy Rostrum Records Looks Like Now
In January 2023, Grinberg made a significant move. Rather than selling the label — which he had been approached about — he expanded it. He brought in Erika Montes, formerly the global vice president for artist and label relations at SoundCloud, as president of Rostrum Records. Then he launched Rostrum Pacific, a parent company designed to house multiple entertainment properties under one umbrella.
The pivot was deliberate. Benjy Rostrum Records wasn’t just surviving on nostalgia for its Wiz and Mac era. It was evolving. Rostrum Pacific acquired Fat Beats Records — a legendary hip-hop distribution label and retail operation — in early 2024. New hires came in with backgrounds from Universal Music Group. The roster expanded to include artists across genres, with Montes specifically pushing to broaden the label’s identity beyond hip-hop.
Meanwhile Grinberg himself has been clear that the decision not to sell was about belief in what Rostrum could still become. In interviews around the 20th anniversary, he’s spoken about the company being in a position to grow beyond what it had already done. That’s not a small thing to say when you’ve already launched two artists whose combined streaming numbers run into the billions.
What Makes the Benjy Rostrum Records Story Worth Paying Attention To
I think about Benjy Rostrum Records a lot when people ask me whether independent labels can still matter in an era dominated by three major label groups and their endless subsidiaries. The answer, based on everything Rostrum has done, is yes — but only if you actually commit to the thing that makes being independent worth it.
For Rostrum, that thing has always been artist development. Grinberg said it in one of the earliest interviews after founding the label, and it’s still true twenty-plus years later: find artists early, give them time, build real relationships, treat them like partners instead of products. That philosophy is why Wiz Khalifa spent years developing before breaking nationally. It’s why Mac Miller was given the space to evolve from a Pittsburgh kid making mixtapes to an artist making genuinely experimental music.
Not every label that starts with those values keeps them when the money gets serious. Benjy Rostrum Records largely has. That’s the story. That’s why it matters.
And it’s still going. Benjy Rostrum Records is proof that patience, vision, and genuine care for artists can outlast any trend in the music industry.

