Handsome Boy Records

Handsome Boy Records was a Canadian independent record label founded in 1994 in Toronto.[1] It was distributed by BMG Music in Canada, and by other labels internationally including Atlantic Records.[1]

Handsome Boy Records
Founded1994
FounderJeff Rogers
Statusactive
Distributor(s)BMG
Country of origin Canada

Background

Handsome Boy is owned by Jeff Rogers, a former manager of the band Crash Test Dummies.[2] After the Dummies achieved international success with their album God Shuffled His Feet, Handsome Boy was formed in 1994, with its first release being One Free Fall's Mud Creek. Initially the label was self-distributed by the staff of Rogers's management company Swell.[1]

Within less than a year, however, One Free Fall broke up and reformed as Rusty, who achieved greater success.[1]

This led Handsome Boy to signing more artists, many of which were discovered through "Elvis Mondays" nights at Toronto's El Mocambo nightclub. Other artists who released material on Handsome Boy included hHead, Groovy Religion, Meryn Cadell, The Monoxides, John Oswald and Slowburn.[1] The label also released the soundtrack to Jeremy Podeswa's film Eclipse.[1]

Through the 2000s, the label stopped releasing new material, although it remained in business as a "catalogue" label of its earlier releases while Rogers worked for Richard Branson and focused on tech, film and television projects. It did not release a new record until Street Pharmacy's album Divorce in 2012.

gollark: > @a rustian spy why yes?In order to not restrict freedom and in order to not have some government department decide what things are Clearly Badâ„¢.
gollark: I mean, we have mental hospitals and mandatory thingying into them.
gollark: If people WANT to torture themselves, why not?
gollark: I mean, I feel like trying to ban people from *emotionally* harming others is problematic, inasmuch as that is very broad and subjective.
gollark: imagine using javascript and not superior rust

References

  1. "Handsome Boy President Juggling Hit Acts". Billboard, September 2, 1995.
  2. "Music mogul follows beat of a different drummer". Toronto Star, December 31, 1998.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.