Wikipedia:
This publishing house, which he ran for 30 years with associate Fernande Ray, was initially based at ''95 rue de la Boétie'' and relocated to ''5 rue Lincoln'' in 1946. If Marbot had initially worked exclusively with Fernande Ray, the number of employees increased to more than 30 by the 1960s. Marbot also operated a recording studio and a music engraving shop. From 1948, he worked with Ralph Peer senior in the Société d'Édition Musicale Internationale (SEMI), primarily representing Peer's Latin American production in France, whereas Peer saw to the dissemination of Marbot's offerings in the United States.
Marbot edited works by Maurice Thiriet, Henri Barraud, Roland Petit, and Raymond Queneau, among others.
The Edition Marbot branch was founded in Hamburg in 1958; in 1960 Marbot received compensation for his losses during the Third Reich.
Marbot was naturalized in France in 1947. He was chairman of SACEM and president of the Chambre Syndicale des Éditeurs de Musique Légère (CSDEM) from 1956 to 1973, as well as secretary general of the Société des Droits de Reproduction mécanique (SDRM).
After his death, the publishing group Peermusic took over his publishing houses in 1979.
The prix Rolf-Marbot was named after Rolf Marbot.
Note: Translated from a German version of Wikipedia into English.