Manhattan Records
Manhattan Records | |
---|---|
Parent company | Universal Music Group |
Founded | 1984 |
Founder | Bruce Lundvall |
Distributor(s) | Capitol Music Group |
Genre | Adult Contemporary, classical |
Country of origin | U.S. |
Manhattan Records is an American record label, owned by Universal Music Group and operates as a branch of Capitol Music Group.
Company history
Manhattan Records was formed in 1984 by Bruce Lundvall[1] and was later renamed EMI Manhattan Records after absorbing the EMI America Records imprint. EMI Manhattan was used to reissue back catalogue titles from Capitol Records and other EMI labels such as United Artists Records and Liberty Records. It also distributed new albums from Gamble and Huff's Philadelphia International Records during the later half of the 1980s, after a 15-year stint with CBS Records. The deal gave EMI distribution rights to PIR's back catalog from 1976 onward (CBS, later Sony Music, would retain the rights to PIR's catalog up to 1975).
Notable artists signed to EMI Manhattan included Kenny Rogers, Richard Marx, Natalie Cole, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Queensrÿche, and Thomas Dolby. In 1992, EMI Manhattan was dissolved and absorbed into Capitol Records with the catalog bearing the EMI label.
In 1985 Manhattan Records and Island Records entered into a joint venture to release the U.S. version of Grace Jones' album "Slave to the rhythm". The album used the Manhattan prefix number. In the UK the album was released by ZTT via Island Records without neither Manhattan nor Capitol nor EMI being part of the release.
From 1988 to 1992 albums by D'Atra Hicks, Phil Perry, Gary Brown, and Rachelle Ferrell were released under the Capitol Manhattan label. All releases in the U.S: used both the Capitol and Manhattan logos respectively. The vinyl versions (Brown and Ferrell were not released on LP) were still using the original Manhattan Records colored bricks graphics on the record even though the Capitol logo was added.
In 2001, the Manhattan label was relaunched (without the EMI prefix) as a division of EMI Classics by veteran record producer Arif Mardin. Richard Marx, one of its flagship artists during the label's heyday, returned to the label upon its revival. In 2006, EMI reorganized its adult music operations and put the Manhattan label under the aegis of the Blue Note Label Group. As of 2013, following the reorganization of labels as a result of Universal Music Group's acquisition of EMI, Manhattan currently operates under the umbrella of the Capitol Music Group.
Artists
- 12 Girls Band
- Anne Murray
- Anoushka Shankar
- Art Garfunkel
- Baltimora (US and Canada)
- Bernadette Peters
- Kate Bush (US and Canada)
- Celtic Woman
- Cheryl Lynn
- Curtains
- Diana Ross
- Emerson Hart
- Evelyn "Champagne" King
- Giorgia Fumanti
- Glass Tiger (outside Canada)
- Grace Jones
- The High Kings
- Heavenly Voices
- Hollie Smith
- Kristinia DeBarge
- Lila Downs
- Linda Eder
- Louise Setara
- Melissa Errico
- Merc And Monk
- Miami Horror
- Mutulu
- Mýa
- Marz
- Natalie Cole
- The Partland Brothers
- Raul Midon
- Ravi Shankar
- Richard Julian
- Richard Marx
- Rob Jungklas
- Robbie Nevil
- Rosanne Cash
- Ryland Angel
- Sarah Brightman
- Sasha & Shawna
- The Color Purple
- The Subdudes
- Tim Finn
- Tim Sheff
- Urgent
- Van Morrison
- Vixen
References
- ^ Kennedy, Gary (2002). Kernfeld, Barry (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. Vol. 2 (2nd ed.). New York: Grove's Dictionaries Inc. p. 172. ISBN 1-56159-284-6.