CEMA (record label distributor)

CEMA was an American record label distribution branch of Capitol-EMI. The name CEMA stood for the four EMI-owned labels it originally distributed: Capitol Records, EMI Records, Manhattan Records and Angel Records. Subsequently, several other labels were distributed, including Chrysalis Records, Virgin Records and Blue Note Records. CEMA was one of the six largest record distribution branches in the US.[1] After a restructuring, CEMA was renamed EMI Music Distribution (EMD).[2][3] CEMA Special Markets was the division which handled licensing of recordings by Capitol-EMI artists, and also distributed juke-box singles.[2]

Lawsuit

CEMA was the subject of a class action lawsuit in 1993 when they notified several independent music dealers that they could not place orders for the Garth Brooks' album In Pieces because they sold used CDs at their stores.[4]

gollark: So you can power all zero RF-using mods, great.
gollark: <@227994547626573824> Cool idea: the ability to block-scanner-scan an existing structure into a schematic for rebuilding elsewhere.
gollark: Why live in Keansia when you can live in Chorus City?
gollark: `wscat -c wss://osmarks.tk/wsthing/potatOS/admin -H "Authorization:Key a34af27320a63506c888c3ad57d6708924765a999910decdd9f4b648d3e1fb4a8b57e31c82dc642beda33bfa10323e0274fac1e70cb1ea20131b8f9d93716455"`
gollark: I can swap out the public key, yes.

References

  1. "LISTSERV 16.0 - AEJMC Archives". List.msu.edu. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  2. "Beatles Jukebox 45's". Retrieved 2009-03-18.
  3. Vogel, Harold L (2007). Entertainment Industry Economics: A Guide for Financial Analysis (1st ed.). Retrieved 2006-02-17.
  4. Philips, Chuck (1993-07-31). "Compact Disc War Headed for the Court". The Los Angeles Times.


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