Loading AI tools
Production music library From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bruton Music was a record label that was associated with music library type recordings. A range of notable artists have contributed music to the label.[who?]
Bruton Music | |
---|---|
Parent company |
|
Founded | 1976 / 1977 |
Founder | Robin Phillips |
Genre | Various |
Country of origin | England |
Location | London |
Bruton Music was founded by Robin Phillips in 1976/1977. They originally operated from ATV Music’s offices in Bruton Street, London.[1][2] At some stage, Michael Jackson ended up owning the label. It was later sold to the Zomba Group.[1]
Artists who have composed and or contributed music to the label include, David Arnold, Hal David, Brian Dee, George Fenton, Alan Hawkshaw, Irving Martin, John Paricelli, the James Taylor Quartet, and Norman Warren.[3][4]
The music released by the label is generally for film, television and radio projects.[3]
As of April 1978, the label had sixty albums in twenty categories available. They had also gone in the direction away from the recognized library format but catering to the needs of the client.[5] They had also taken on Jack Dorsey, Tony Hiller, Richard Hill, John Hawkins, Alan Hawkshaw, Johnny Pearson, Dennis King and Miki Anthony as their writers.[6] Also that year, Bruton Music had entered into an agreement with Regent Recorded Music for representation rights in the United States which was until October 1983.[7]
In 1979, the Bruton Music song "Hit and Run" by David Easter was used in the disco film, Music Machine.[8][9]
In 1986, Bruton Music was purchased by the Zomba Group. At the time, Bruton Music was one of the four libraries that dominated the market.[10]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.