ASV Records explained

ASV Records
Founder:Harley Usill
Kevin Daly
Jack Boyce
Status:Defunct
Genre:Classical, jazz
Country:England
Location:London

ASV Records was a London-based record label set up by Harley Usill, founder of Argo Records, Decca producer and former Argo general manager, Kevin Daly, and producer Jack Boyce, after Argo's parent company Decca was bought by PolyGram in 1980.[1] ASV stood for "Academy Sound and Vision". The label was bought by the Sanctuary Records Group in May 1999.

ASV, which was founded in London in 1981, was mainly a classical label, but its catalogue included Bing Crosby, Cole Porter, The Ink Spots, and The Boswell Sisters.[2] Starting in 1986, ASV had an imprint called Living Era, created by Kevin Daly, which specialized in reissuing recordings (particularly American jazz recordings) that are in the public domain in the UK, which are all at least 50 years old. It also showcased American pop music, American country music, British dance bands, and British nostalgia.

Much of ASV's classical catalogue was reissued on Sanctuary's Resonance budget label. Sanctuary's UK recorded music business was shut down shortly after Universal Music Group bought the firm in 2007.[3] This also included the ASV and ASV/Living Era imprints.

As a fulfilment of conditions imposed by the European Commission following UMG's acquisition of most of EMI in 2012, Universal sold Sanctuary to BMG Rights Management in 2013.[4] Thus, Warner Music Group, through its Alternative Distribution Alliance division, handles the catalogue of reissues from ASV's artists' releases on Sanctuary's behalf after BMG designated ADA in March 2017 as its distributor.[5] [6]

Roster

Conductors:

Performers:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Northern Sinfonia: a magic of its own . Bill Griffiths . Bill Griffiths (poet) . Northumbria University Press . 2004 . 71. 9781904794073 .
  2. Web site: Cairns. David. Obituary: Jack Boyce. The Guardian. 22 July 2016. 1 October 2004.
  3. Web site: Sanctuary's UK music arm to close. BBC News. 5 September 2007.
  4. News: Universal Music agrees to sell Sanctuary Records. Los Angeles Times. Dawn C.. Chmielewski. 14 February 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130215162618/http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/cotown/la-et-ct-universal-music-agrees-to-sell-sanctuary-records-20130214,0,6072346.story. 15 February 2013.
  5. Warner Music's Global Deal for BMG's Catalog Sets Up Showdown With RED. Ed. Christman. 28 April 2016. Billboard.
  6. Web site: BMG moves distribution of 8,000 albums to Warner's ADA - Music Business Worldwide. 7 March 2017. musicbusinessworldwide.com. https://web.archive.org/web/20170313000938/http://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/bmg-moves-distribution-8000-albums-warners-ada/. 13 March 2017.