4AD Records
4AD Records is an independent record label from the UK, started up in 1979 and still active today as part of the Beggars Group.[1]
The label was started by two former Beggars Banquet employees, Ivo Watts-Russell and Peter Kent, initially named Axis Records. After it was discovered that an Axis label already existed, it was renamed to 4AD, based on a promotional flyer where "1980 FORWARD" was gradually abbreviated to "4AD". Kent sold his share of the company to Watts-Russell in 1981, leaving him sole owner and president.
4AD first became famous in The Eighties as the home of critically acclaimed Dream Pop bands such as Cocteau Twins, Dead Can Dance and Watts-Russell's own collaborative project This Mortal Coil. These bands helped codify the genre's main characteristics, such as a combination between Ambient production and accessible melodies, complex arrangements, copious Echoing Acoustics, and a distinctive visual identity, courtesy of the label's in-house graphic designer Vaughan Oliver. The identification is so widespread that "4AD" is frequently used as a shorthand for "the classic dream pop sound".
However, this wasn't all 4AD had to offer, as was highlighted by its famous 1987 sampler compilation Lonely Is An Eyesore. The label soon expanded into American Alternative Rock, signing The Pixies, The Breeders and Throwing Muses, among others, and establishing a Los Angeles office in The Nineties.
Despite a minor hit with Modern English's "I Melt With You" in 1983 and a huge success with M/A/R/R/S' sampletastic "Pump Up the Volume" in 1987, 4AD were always more of a Cult Classic UK-focused label, which led them to signing a distribution deal with Warner Bros Records in 1992. This is considered a sign of the end of "classic 4AD", as many of its flagship bands were leaving or disbanding, and Watts-Russell himself left the label in 1999, but it remained active. Its importance was recognised by the Beggars Group in 2008 through a reorganisation that merged many of its subsidiary labels into 4AD (including Beggars' Banquet itself).
- The Cocteau Twins
- Dead Can Dance
- This Mortal Coil
- Dif Juz
- A.R. Kane
- Colourbox
- M/A/R/R/S[2]
- The Wolfgang Press
- Clan of Xymox
- Modern English
- Heidi Berry[3]
- The Pixies
- The Breeders
- Frank Black
- Throwing Muses
- Tanya Donnelly
- Belly
- Lisa Germano
- Pale Saints
- Lush
- Mojave 3
- Rachel Goswell
- Neil Halstead
- The Red House Painters
- His Name Is Alive
- The Birthday Party
- Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti
- The Big Pink
- Blonde Redhead
- Bon Iver (only in Europe, Jagjaguwar handles US distribution)
- Deerhunter
- Efterklang
- Iron and Wine (only in Europe, Warner Bros. handles US distribution)
- The National
- St. Vincent
- tUnE-yArDs
- TV On the Radio
- Scott Walker
- ↑ which includes other seminal indie labels like Matador and Rough Trade records
- ↑ a side-project involving Colourbox and A.R. Kane
- ↑ Was originally signed to Creation Records, but moved to 4AD in 1989