Anticon

Anticon (often styled as anticon.) is an independent record label based in Los Angeles, California.[1] It was founded in 1998 by seven musicians and manager Baillie Parker.[2][3] It is now collectively owned among six musicians, co-founder Parker, and manager Shaun Koplow.[4] The original musicians signed to Anticon were once referred to as the Anticon collective.[5]

Anticon
Founded1998 (1998)
Founder
Distributor(s)Revolver USA
Southern
GenreIndie hip hop
Electronic music
Indie rock
Country of originUnited States
LocationLos Angeles, California
Official websitewww.anticon.com

History

The label's roster of artists has been described as "the hip-hop equivalent of post-rock" and "avant-garde hip-hop".[3] Releases feature material created by its members, affiliates, and extended musical family. Although Anticon cohered originally within alternative hip hop circles, Anticon's founders have become only tangentially related to hip hop, and the label has begun releasing music in the indie rock and electronica genres.[6] Artists signed to Anticon are based in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom.

The artists within the collective have been known to perform and release music in solo and group form. Artists on the label are known for frequent collaboration, both within and outside of their own collective. However, the Anticon collective has over time evolved into a group of separate artists who, despite sharing a similar progressive and often challenging indie quality, explore different styles of music including electronica and rock.[7] Many of the artists on Anticon are signed to multiple labels, and some have their own small, independent labels through which they have self-released material.

Anticon has also organized art exhibitions featuring visual art by several of the artists on the label.[8][9]

On February 9, 2010, co-founder Sole (Tim Holland) left Anticon exclaiming that it is time to try to push forward and find new opportunities.[10] He leaves citing business and ideological differences while maintaining his love for the artists on Anticon. He said, "There are no ill feelings between myself and members of anticon. I will continue to work with many of the artists and will always love them as brothers and consider them allies." He officially renounced his 1/8 of ownership and formal affiliations.[11][12]

Owners

Roster

Current

Former

License

Collaborators

Slug, Ant, Eyedea, DJ Abilities, Mr. Dibbs, Aesop Rock, J. Rawls, Dax Pierson, DJ Signify, Daddy Kev, Josh Martinez, The Notwist, Tunde Adebimpe, Mike Patton, Jessica Bailiff, Andrew Bird, Dark Dark Dark, A Grape Dope, Andrew Broder of Fog, Wise Intelligent of Poor Righteous Teachers, Stefanie Böhm of Ms. John Soda, Circus of Shape Shifters, Scott Matelic, Moodswing9, Matth, Controller 7, D-Styles among others.

Projects

The Anticon collective is known for its many musical projects. Not all of these projects are released on the Anticon label. Artists within the Anticon collective have released collaborative albums on different labels or on their own independent labels.

Some notable projects of the Anticon collective include the following:

  • Clouddead (Doseone, Why?, Odd Nosdam) on Mush Records
  • Reaching Quiet (Why?, Odd Nosdam) on Mush Records
  • So-Called Artists (Sole, Alias, DJ Mayonnaise) on Mush Records
  • Hymie's Basement (Why?, Andrew Broder) on Lex Records
  • Subtle (Doseone, Jel, Dax Pierson, Jordan Dalrymple, Alexander Kort, Marty Dowers) on Lex Records
  • Greenthink (Doseone, Why?) on A Purple 100
  • Presage (Jel, Mr. Dibbs) on Future Primitive Sound
  • Object Beings (Doseone, Pedestrian & Why?)

Discography

gollark: What? No. If you're running the same model on a lot of GPUs then yes, but if you're running something bigger than VRAM it has to shuffle a lot of tensors around.
gollark: There is a reason big GPU clusters involve such fancy high-speed interconnects.
gollark: The internet is *not fast enough*.
gollark: What? You literally cannot do that.
gollark: I'm aware. But those are bought from large companies in data centres and sometimes in clusters.

See also

References

  1. Burns, Todd (September 1, 2003). "Anticon - Label Profile". Stylus Magazine. Archived from the original on March 29, 2006.
  2. "Anticon Records, Info". Facebook.
  3. Torreano, Bradley. "Anticon". Allmusic.
  4. Kerr, Dave (November 5, 2007). "anticon: ten years after it hit the prism". Drowned in Sound.
  5. Burns, Todd (July 21, 2003). "The Anticon Collective: The Construction of a New Hip-Hop Authenticity". Stylus Magazine.
  6. "Anticon Records' Why? Announces Tour Dates". Synthesis. July 9, 2008. Archived from the original on June 9, 2012.
  7. Petitti, Michael (November 10, 2005). "Indie plus rap equals Why?". Arizona Daily Wildcat. Archived from the original on November 3, 2007. Retrieved September 21, 2007.
  8. "Arspace Gallery". Art Business. November 4, 2006.
  9. "POP BEAT". SFGate.com. November 5, 2006.
  10. Martins, Chris (February 23, 2010). "Exclusive: Sole Discusses Leaving Anticon Records". LA Weekly.
  11. Martins, Chris (February 10, 2010). "Anticon's Sole Leaves The Label He Founded, Label Manager Shaun Koplow Responds". LA Weekly.
  12. Breihanon, Tom (February 9, 2010). "Sole Leaves Anticon". Pitchfork Media.
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