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Dependent Records

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Dependent Records
Parent companyMindbase Strategic Consulting
Founded1999 (1999)
FounderStefan Herwig, Eskil Simonsson, Johan Van Roy, Bryan Erickson, Ronan Harris
Distributor(s)Alive Vertrieb und Marketing in der Entertainmentbranche AG
GenreIndustrial, electro-industrial, futurepop, aggrotech
Country of originGermany
LocationGelsenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia
Official websitewww.dependent.de

Dependent Records is a German independent record label that mainly focuses on aggrotech, electro-industrial and futurepop music. The label was founded in January 1999 after the demise of the Off Beat label by former Off Beat A&R manager Stefan Herwig along with Eskil Simonsson (Covenant), Johan Van Roy (Suicide Commando), Bryan Erickson (Velvet Acid Christ) and Ronan Harris (VNV Nation).

Stefan Herwig has been quoted as saying that "The strategy of mass release campaigns of most of the companies around, hurt the market significantly, and created a confusing flood of mediocre products" and that "Dependent considers the artists to be an integral part of the label, consulting them on some of the most basic and fundamental issues" and that Dependent would have a philosophy of "quality before quantity".[citation needed]

Artists that have released music through Dependent Records include Velvet Acid Christ, Suicide Commando, VNV Nation, Covenant, Klinik, Seabound, Apoptygma Berzerk, Dismantled, Ivory Frequency, Pride & Fall, mind.in.a.box, Rotersand, Flesh Field, Fractured, Auto Aggression, Girls Under Glass, and Iris.

Dependent announced at the start of 2007 that the label would close its doors to new artists and shut down once contractual obligations had been fulfilled, citing ongoing concerns with piracy. This announcement took the form of an essay in both German and English in the booklet to 'Dependence: Next Level Electronics Volume 2', a compilation featuring work by fourteen artists signed to the label, in which Stefan Herwig stated, '...we estimate that illegal downloads of Dependent albums outnumber legal purchases by a factor of three or even five to one'.[citation needed]

After the label closed down, a person claiming to be Stefan Herwig uploaded the whole back catalogue to The Pirate Bay, one of the major BitTorrent trackers.[1] Herwig denied[2] being responsible for this which makes it all seem to be a hoax spread by Torrentfreak.[3]

On May 15, 2009, Herwig announced that Dependent Records would reopen in the summer or fall of that year, partnering with the US-based Metropolis Records, citing fan support and the role of labels as "quality filters" for the vast number of new bands.[4]

Artists

See also

References

  1. ^ Sokolov, Daniel (February 13, 2008), "Dependent Records unfreiwillig bei Torrent-Tracker The Pirate Bay", heise online (in German), Hanover: Heise Zeitschriften Verlag, retrieved October 10, 2014
  2. ^ Pirate Bay upload by Dependent founder a hoax; 'extensive research not always an option' for Internet media
  3. ^ Record Label Quits, Uploads Albums onto The Pirate Bay (Torrentfreak.com, visited 11-02-2008)
  4. ^ Herwig, Stefan (May 15, 2009). "Dependent reopen in summer/fall 2009". Dependent. Gelsenkirchen: Mindbase Music Management. Retrieved February 1, 2015.