Puneet Varma (Editor)

Cold Chillin' Records

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Parent company
  
Traffic Entertainment

Location
  
New York, New York

Country of origin
  
United States of America

Status
  
Defunct

Founded
  
1985


Distributor(s)
  
Warner Bros. Records (1988–1993) Epic Street (1995–1997)

Genre
  
Hip hop Contemporary R&B

Parent organization
  
Traffic Entertainment Group

Artists
  
Big Daddy Kane, Biz Markie, Marley Marl, Kool G Rap, Juice Crew

Albums
  
Words from the Genius, Long Live the Kane, Road to the Riches, It's a Big Daddy Thing, Taste of Chocolate

Cold Chillin' Records was a record label that released some music in the golden age of hip hop from the late 1980s to the early 1990s. A producer-and-crew label founded by manager Tyrone Williams and run by Len Fichtelberg (d. November 4, 2010), most of the label's releases were by members of the Juice Crew, a loosely knit group of artists centered on producer Marley Marl. In 1998, the label shut down and the majority of its expansive catalog was bought by Massachusetts-based LandSpeed Records (now Traffic Entertainment).

Contents

Kool g rap cold chillin records had a great impact in hip hop 247hh exclusive


History

Initially, Cold Chillin’ was a subsidiary of Prism Records, but label head Tyrone Williams and Fichtelberg decided to merge their companies, and Prism was absorbed by Cold Chillin’. In 1988, it signed a 5-year distribution deal with Warner Bros. Records, which remained intact for its full duration. However, since Kool G. Rap & D.J. Polo's third album, Live And Let Die, was rejected by Warner Bros. on behalf of parent company Time Warner because of the anti-gangsta and anti-Time Warner sentiments that followed in the footsteps of the Cop Killer controversy involving hip hop artist Ice-T, Cold Chillin' opted to distribute the album independently, and, as such, it did so with various projects throughout the remaining years of activity, including its short-lived distribution deal with the Epic Street division of Epic Records, which released two albums by the label: the second album by Grand Daddy I.U. and the debut solo effort by Kool G. Rap.

Cold Chillin' also formed a sub-label named Livin’ Large, which released Roxanne Shanté's and YZ's second albums along with several titles by other artists, and was distributed by former Warner Bros. Records subsidiary Tommy Boy Records as part of its deal with Warner.

After it closed down in 1998, rights of the Cold Chillin' catalogue were purchased by Massachusetts-based LandSpeed Records, now known as Traffic Entertainment Group. Along with Ruthless Records, Death Row Records, and Rap-a-Lot Records, Cold Chillin' Records is widely respected for serious contributions to hip hop music during its formative years. In 2006, LandSpeed started releasing new versions of the classic albums in Cold Chillin’s’ catalog with their original artwork intact. However, the albums recorded by Big Daddy Kane remained with Warner Bros. Records, and Kool G. Rap's 4,5,6 remained with Epic Records.

Albums

Albums marked with (+) were distributed by Warner Bros. Records' sister label Reprise Records.
Albums marked with (*) were distributed by Epic Street.
Albums marked with (§) were distributed by Tommy Boy Records

1987
  • M.C. Shan—Down by Law
  • 1988
  • Biz Markie—Goin' Off
  • Big Daddy Kane—Long Live the Kane
  • Marley Marl—In Control Volume 1
  • MC Shan—Born to be Wild
  • 1989
  • Kool G Rap & DJ Polo—Road to the Riches
  • Big Daddy Kane—It's a Big Daddy Thing +
  • Biz Markie—The Biz Never Sleeps
  • Roxanne Shanté—Bad Sister +
  • 1990
  • 2 Deep—Honey, That's Show Biz +
  • M.C. Shan—Play it Again, Shan
  • Master Ace—Take a Look Around +
  • Kool G Rap & DJ Polo—Wanted: Dead or Alive
  • Grand Daddy I.U.—Smooth Assassin +
  • Big Daddy Kane—Taste of Chocolate +
  • 1991
  • Big Daddy Kane—Prince of Darkness +
  • Kid Capri—The Tape
  • Diamond Shell—The Grand Imperial Diamond Shell +
  • Biz Markie—I Need a Haircut
  • Marley Marl—In Control, Volume 2: For Your Steering Pleasure
  • The Genius—Words from the Genius +
  • 1992
  • Kool G Rap & DJ Polo—Live and Let Die
  • Roxanne Shanté—The Bitch is Back (released on Cold Chillin' sublabel Livin’ Large Records) §
  • Nubian M.O.B. - Nubian M.O.B. +
  • 1993
  • Big Daddy Kane—Looks Like a Job For… +
  • Biz Markie—All Samples Cleared!
  • TBTBT—Too Bad to Be True
  • YZ—The Ghetto’s Been Good to Me (released on Livin’ Large Records) §
  • T.C.F. Crew—Come & Play with Me
  • 1994
  • Grand Daddy I.U.—Lead Pipe *
  • King Sun—Strictly Ghetto
  • 1995
  • Kool G Rap—4,5,6 *
  • Non-album singles

  • Juice Crew All-Stars—"Juice Crew All-Stars"
  • Big Scoob—"Suckaz Can't Hang"
  • Juice Crew All-Stars featuring TJ Swan—“Evolution”
  • Madame Star—"Looking for a Dame"
  • Big Scoob—"Champagne on the Block"
  • Juice Crew All-Stars—"Cold Chillin' Christmas"
  • References

    Cold Chillin' Records Wikipedia