Re: Darren Burn - Bubblegum kid of tragedy
They say "what goes around comes around" and "karma is a b.itch". A few weeks ago, EMI Records finally bit the dust itself. It has now been bought up by Universal Music, except for the Parlophone label which got taken by Warner Music.
EMI Records was once dubbed "The Greatest Recording Organisation In The World" in the 1960s, and indeed for the next couple of decades it was at the top of the chain of the major labels.
After the Britpop bandwagon crashed in the late 90's, EMI started to gradually flounder. Its offices at Manchester Square were relocated, and it sold its prized company trademark HMV to become a standalone retail chain. The HMV logo used to be synonymous with EMI being its main flagship rock, pop and classical label until 1968 when EMI closed it off to contemporary acts before Morrissey briefly revived it for his solo work from 1988 - 1993.
I could see the writing on the wall for EMI for some time. The Beatles sued the label over unpaid royalties and Paul and Ringo subsequently leaving the label to sign with Universal's labels Hear Music and Hip-O respectively. Eventually long-time best selling artists like Kate Bush, Queen, and Radiohead left the label to sign elsewhere. Ironically, the current No.1 single in the UK charts is on EMI's Positiva/Virgin label maybe as a last hoorah for the company.
It goes to show that no matter how big your company is, if you don't take care of what you've got or treat your artists or clients like human beings instead of just a number then you will eventually take a mighty fall. Not trying to be preachy here but the Bible warns "Love of money is the root of all evil" and "Greed is a form of idolatry".
If only those words were inscribed on every businessperson's heart, and if only EMI had adopted those policies back in the 60's and 70's it would still be in the league of the majors. Now we only have three left: Universal Music, Sony Music and Warner Music. Wonder which one will be next to go?
They say "what goes around comes around" and "karma is a b.itch". A few weeks ago, EMI Records finally bit the dust itself. It has now been bought up by Universal Music, except for the Parlophone label which got taken by Warner Music.
EMI Records was once dubbed "The Greatest Recording Organisation In The World" in the 1960s, and indeed for the next couple of decades it was at the top of the chain of the major labels.
After the Britpop bandwagon crashed in the late 90's, EMI started to gradually flounder. Its offices at Manchester Square were relocated, and it sold its prized company trademark HMV to become a standalone retail chain. The HMV logo used to be synonymous with EMI being its main flagship rock, pop and classical label until 1968 when EMI closed it off to contemporary acts before Morrissey briefly revived it for his solo work from 1988 - 1993.
I could see the writing on the wall for EMI for some time. The Beatles sued the label over unpaid royalties and Paul and Ringo subsequently leaving the label to sign with Universal's labels Hear Music and Hip-O respectively. Eventually long-time best selling artists like Kate Bush, Queen, and Radiohead left the label to sign elsewhere. Ironically, the current No.1 single in the UK charts is on EMI's Positiva/Virgin label maybe as a last hoorah for the company.
It goes to show that no matter how big your company is, if you don't take care of what you've got or treat your artists or clients like human beings instead of just a number then you will eventually take a mighty fall. Not trying to be preachy here but the Bible warns "Love of money is the root of all evil" and "Greed is a form of idolatry".
If only those words were inscribed on every businessperson's heart, and if only EMI had adopted those policies back in the 60's and 70's it would still be in the league of the majors. Now we only have three left: Universal Music, Sony Music and Warner Music. Wonder which one will be next to go?
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