Manhattan Records
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Manhattan Records | |
---|---|
Parent company | EMI |
Founded | 1984 |
Founder(s) | Bruce Lundvall |
Distributing label | Capitol Music Group (In the US) |
Genre(s) | Adult Contemporary |
Country of origin | US |
Official Website | http://manhattanrecords.com |
Manhattan Records is an American record label, owned by EMI and operates as a subsidiary of Capitol Records.
[edit] Company history
Manhattan Records was formed in 1984 by Bruce Lundvall, and was later renamed EMI Manhattan Records after absorbing EMI's EMI America Records imprint. In addition to being a fully functional label in its own rite, EMI Manhattan was also used to reissue back catalogue title from Capitol Records, as well as other EMI imprints, such as: United Artists Records and Liberty Records.
The primary artist released on EMI Manhattan Records was Kenny Rogers. His hugely successful United Artists Records and Liberty albums, including "The Gambler" and "We've Got Tonight" were reissued on CD via EMI Manhattan. The label was also used to reissue singles (at that time, issued on vinyl 45s). Again, the main artist was Kenny Rogers. His biggest hits, including "The Gambler," "Lucille," and "Lady" were reissued on single in the 1980s.
Notable artists signed to EMI Manhattan Records included: Queensryche, Richard Marx, Robbie Nevil, and Thomas Dolby. In 1992, EMI Manhattan was dismantled and absorbed into Capitol Records with the catalog bearing the EMI label.
In 2001, the Manhattan label was relaunched (sans the “EMI” prefix) as a division of Capitol Jazz and Classics by veteran record producer Arif Mardin. Richard Marx, one of the its flagship artists during the labels heyday, returned to the label upon its revival.