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Capricorn Records

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Status
  
Defunct

Country of origin
  
United States

Genre
  
Various

Founded
  
1991

Capricorn Records wwwtheuncoolcomwpcontentuploads201504capri

Distributor(s)
  
First Incarnation Atlantic Records Warner Bros PhonoDisc Second Incarnation RED Distribution PolyGram The Island Def Jam Music Group

Location
  
First Incarnation Macon, Georgia Second Incarnation Nashville, Tennessee Atlanta, Georgia

Founders
  
Alan Walden, Frank Fenter, Phil Walden

Artists
  
The Allman Brothers Band, Duane Allman, Gregg Allman, The Marshall Tucker B, Lynyrd Skynyrd

Albums
  
Eat a Peach, Brothers and Sisters, At Fill East, Idlewild South, Win - Lose or Draw

Capricorn records recording studio


Capricorn Records was an independent record label which was launched by Phil Walden, Alan Walden and Frank Fenter in 1969 in Macon, Georgia.

Contents

The allman brothers band statesboro blues


First incarnation

Capricorn was the label for many Southern rock and soul bands in the 1970s including the Allman Brothers Band, the Marshall Tucker Band, Delbert McClinton, the Outlaws, the James Montgomery Band, Elvin Bishop, Wet Willie, Jonathan Edwards, Captain Beyond, White Witch, Grinderswitch, Cowboy, Hydra, Kitty Wells, Dobie Gray, Alex Taylor, Travis Wammack, Sea Level (band) and Stillwater. Gregg Atwill was a recording and concert sound engineer with Capricorn through the 1970s.

Initially the label was distributed by WEA (first through Atlantic Records, then later Warner Bros. Records) and later by PolyGram Records. Capricorn went bankrupt in October 1979.

Second incarnation

The label was later relaunched out of Nashville, Tennessee, as a joint venture with Warner Bros. in the early-1990s. Distribution later jumped to Sony Music's independent RED Distribution network, then back to PolyGram, by way of its flagship label, Mercury Records. The first act to sign onto the resurrected label was Athens, Georgia's Widespread Panic.

After signing with the new version of the label the band celebrated by buying rounds of drinks and beers for attendees at a Macon Pirates game at Luther Williams Field. Cake and 311 were the most popular artists to come out of Capricorn during this period; a then-unknown Kenny Chesney also released his debut album on the label. Other artists ranged from Rabbitt to Big Sister, the Dixie Dregs, and to the jazz/rock fusion of Col. Bruce Hampton and the Aquarium Rescue Unit. Capricorn also released a series of box sets of vintage material in the blues and rhythm and blues genres, presenting the stories of such labels as Jewel/Paula Records and Cobra Records.

After moving back to Atlanta, the second incarnation of Capricorn eventually folded. Phil Walden sold the label's assets to Zomba subsidiary Volcano Entertainment in December 2000. By 2002, new releases on Capricorn ceased to appear, as remaining artists were dropped, transferred to Volcano (311), or moved to other labels (Cake).

Co-founder and partner, Frank Fenter died on July 21, 1983, at the age of 47 and Phil Walden died on April 23, 2006, at the age of 66.

References

Capricorn Records Wikipedia


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