Virgin
Records - EMI
In 2004 Media Man Australia promoted The Chemical
Brothers on its official website, and it is still
showcased today.
Virgin
Records began in the early 1970's as a small,
independent label based in London. Today, Virgin
Records is part of EMI, the third largest music
company in the world. A wide array of artists
call Virgin their recording home, including: A
Perfect Circle, Richard Ashcroft, Beenie Man,
Ben Harper, Boz Scaggs, Blue Man Group, Blur,
Chemical Brothers,
David Bryne, D'Angelo, Daft Punk, Fatboy Slim,
Perry Farrell, Gang Starr, Gorillaz, Janet Jackson,
Lenny Kravitz, Massive Attack, Mick Jagger, Keith
Richards, Rolling
Stones, Tina Turner and Yanni. The growth
of Virgin Records in the United States reflects
the maverick philosophy which has characterized
the entire Virgin organization since its humble
begining over a quarter century ago: a devotion
to seeking and embracing artists who possess the
talent, vision, and passion to create something
new and impactful.
Virgin
Records International
Virgin
UK maintains three distinct channels: The Raft
is the comprehensive site focused on trance, dance,
ambient, and techno (such as Massive Attack, Chemical
Brothers, and EBTG. Channel 3 is the pop based
site with pages for artists such as 911, Kavana
and The Spice Girls. This site has a magazine
type feel with an editorial "Pop Goss."
Eden provides an umbrella for the websites of
superstar artists such as Janet Jackson, The Rolling
Stones, and Enigma. Virgin Canada features materials
on favorite Canadian and international artists,
with extensive downloads and links to other label
sites. Virgin Denmark features artist info, news,
and downloads. Virgin Germany features artist
news, links, press and tour information. Virgin
Italy features artist info, news, tour information,
and links. The Virgin Sweden site is called Details
and features release information, news, and interactive
programming. You can also find material on Virgin
artists at our parent EMI company sites in Brazil,
Malaysia, and Japan.
Profile
Virgin
Records is a British recording label founded by
English entrepreneur Richard
Branson, Simon Draper and Nik Powell in 1972.
It was later sold to Thorn EMI, and then merged
with Capitol Records in 2006 to create Capitol
Music Group.
Kraut-
and Prog-rock origins
Branson
& Powell had initially run a small record
shop called Virgin Records and Tapes on Notting
Hill Gate, London, specialising particularly in
"krautrock" imports, and offering bean
bags and free vegetarian food for the benefit
of customers listening to the music on offer.
After making the shop into a success, they turned
their business into a fully-fledged record label.
The name Virgin, according to Branson (in his
autobiography), arose from a colleague of his
when they were brainstorming business ideas. She
suggested Virgin - as they were all new to business
- like "virgins". The original Virgin
logo (known to fans as the "Gemini"
or "Twins" logo) was designed by English
artist and illustrator Roger Dean : a young naked
woman in mirror image with a large long-tailed
serpent and the word "Virgin" in Dean's
familiar script. A variation on the logo was used
for the spin-off Caroline Records label.
The
first release on the label was the progressive
rock album Tubular Bells by multi-instrumentalist
Mike Oldfield in 1973. This was soon followed
by some notable krautrock releases, including
electronic breakthrough album Phaedra by Tangerine
Dream (which went Top 10), and The Faust Tapes
and Faust IV by Faust. The Faust Tapes album retailed
for 49p (the price of a 7" single) and as
a result allowed this relatively unknown band
to reach number 12 in the album charts. Other
early albums include Gong's The Flying Teapot
(Radio Gnome Invisible, Pt. 1) (V2002) and the
various artists Manor Live (V2004) album.
Post-punk rebranding
Although
Virgin was initially one of the key labels of
English progressive rock, the 1977 signing of
the Sex Pistols, who had already been asked to
leave both EMI and A&M, reinvented the label
as a new wave outpost. Shortly afterwards, the
Notting Hill record shop (above which the label's
office was located) was raided by police for having
a window display of the Sex Pistols' album Never
Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols in the
window. Afterwards they signed groups like XTC,
Human League, Culture Club, Gillan, Simple Minds,
and less successful bands like Shooting Star,
the Motors, Holly and the Italians and Fingerprintz.
A short-lived subsidiary label, DinDisc, had Orchestral
Manoeuvres in the Dark and The Monochrome Set
during its brief 1980-81 existence. Similarly,
Virgin Front Line became one of the UK's most
successful reggae labels in the late '70s and
early '80s.
The
current Virgin logo (known informally as "The
Scrawl") was created in 1982 as a hasty doodle
on a cocktail napkin; rather than hiring the graphic
designer, Branson simply paid him for the napkin.
The
group Genesis recorded various albums for this
record company beginning with 1983's self-titled
effort (Virgin reissued the group's prior albums,
which had originally been released on the Charisma
label in the UK).
After
several false starts licensing its bands to American
labels like Epic (Culture Club, Holly and the
Italians & Shooting Star), Atlantic (Genesis,
Julian Lennon) and A&M (UB40, Human League,
Simple Minds, Breathe), Virgin Records opened
up its American division, Virgin Records America,
in 1987 releasing the debut album by Cutting Crew
and the hit single "I Just Died In Your Arms";
other Virgin America signings included Camper
Van Beethoven, Bob Mould, Warren Zevon, Paula
Abdul and Steve Winwood. Virgin Records America's
releases were distributed by WEA until 1992. Prior
to the formation of Virgin Records America, its
artists were licensed in the United States to
labels such as CBS, A&M, Warner Bros. Records,
and others.
Purchase by Thorn EMI
Virgin
Records was sold by Branson to Thorn EMI in June
1992 for a reported US$1 billion (around £560
million), with a special non-competition clause
that would prevent Branson from founding another
recording company during the five years following
the agreement (see the final paragraph in E.U.
Merger Decission IV/M202 of 27.04.1992). It now
faces competition from Branson's new label: V2
Records. Branson sold Virgin Records to fund Virgin
Atlantic Airways which at that time was coming
under intense anti-competitive pressure from British
Airways. (In 1993 BA settled a libel action brought
by Branson, giving him £500,000 and a further
£110,000 to his airline).
After
being acquired by Thorn EMI, Virgin launched several
subsidiaries like Realworld Records, Innocent
Records, blues specialty label Point Blank Records,
and Hut Records, and continued signing new and
established artists like 30 Seconds to Mars, Brooke
Valentine (Contract ended in August 2007), Beenie
Man, Korn, Geri Halliwell, The Rolling Stones,
The Exies, The Smashing Pumpkins, We Are Scientists,
Darren Hayes, The Kooks, Bubba Sparxxx, Sharissa,
Bossman, Zeitia Massiah, Lenny Kravitz, Meat Loaf,
Purple Ribbon All-Stars, Placebo, Janet Jackson
(Contract ended in 2006), Daft Punk, Does It Offend
You, Yeah?, Massive Attack, Neneh Cherry, Blur,
the Chemical Brothers, Shape:UK, Juliet, the Spice
Girls, Melanie Chisholm (1995-2003), Gorillaz,
Paula Abdul, Brooke Allison, The Red Jumpsuit
Apparatus, Angela Via, The Almost, Mariah Carey
(Contract ended in 2002), N.E.R.D. and recently
RBD, Bizzy Bone, and Swami.
Merger
Capitol Music Group
Capitol
Records and Virgin Records were merged in 2006
to create Capitol Music Group after a massive
restructuring of the EMI company. Stepping down
as chief executive of Capitol Records was Andy
Slater, per the announcement, with Jason Flom,
former executive of Virgin, taking the reins as
Chairman and CEO of the newly created company.
(Credit:
Wikipedia).
Profiles
EMI
Virgin
Richard
Branson
The
Chemical Brothers
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