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American record label From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
TK Records was an American independent record label founded by record distributor Henry Stone and Steve Alaimo in 1972.[1] and based in Hialeah, Florida.[2] The record label went bankrupt in 1981.[1]
TK Records | |
---|---|
Parent company | Henry Stone Music |
Founded | 1972 |
Founder | Henry Stone & Steve Alaimo |
Defunct | 1981 |
Distributor(s) | Henry Stone Music Rhino Entertainment/Parlophone (since 2013; Sunnyview catalog) |
Genre | Various |
Country of origin | U.S. |
Location | Hialeah, Florida |
"TK" was inspired by the initials of sound engineer Terry Kane, who built a recording studio in the attic of Stone's office in Hialeah.[3]
TK Records is closely associated with the early rise of disco music, having in 1974 been the label that released the second bona fide disco song (after The Hues Corporation's "Rock The Boat") to reach No. 1 on the pop music charts, namely "Rock Your Baby" by George McCrae.[citation needed] A little more than a year after McCrae's hit, the record label struck gold with KC & The Sunshine Band, releasing five singles that reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100: including "Get Down Tonight", "That's the Way (I Like It)", "(Shake, Shake, Shake) Shake Your Booty", "I'm Your Boogie Man", and "Please Don't Go". The KC & The Sunshine Band single "Keep It Comin' Love" reached No. 1 on Billboard's erstwhile Hot Soul Singles chart and No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100.
TK had numerous subsidiary labels, which included Cat Records, Drive Records, Wolf Records, and Bold Records. At one point, they had established a gospel label named Gospel Roots. [4] Artists signed to TK Records and its subsidiaries included Betty Wright (Alston), Clarence Reid, a.k.a. Blowfly, Benny Latimore (Glades), Peter Brown (Drive), Foxy, Kracker (Dash), Jimmy "Bo" Horne (Sunshine Sound), Timmy Thomas (Glades), Little Beaver, Gwen McCrae (Cat), T-Connection (Dash), Bobby Caldwell (Clouds), and Anita Ward (Juana).
In 1980, TK Records encountered financial problems and the label was acquired by Morris Levy's Roulette Records; a merger of the two labels created Sunnyview Records, which had success with the electro hip hop group Newcleus.[5] The last single to be released on TK Records was "Weird Al" Yankovic's "Another One Rides the Bus" (1981), based on Queen's song "Another One Bites the Dust". In 1986, Henry Stone formed Hot Productions with Paul Klein and continued to re-release the TK Records catalog on CD until Sunnyview's acquisition by EMI-Rhino in 1989.[5] Rhino owns the North American rights to the Sunnyview/TK catalog; internationally, the catalog was managed by EMI until 2013,[5] when Rhino's newly acquired sister label Parlophone took over after Warner Music Group's purchase of the remaining EMI assets.
On October 12, 2013, Henry Stone received a proclamation from Hialeah's then-mayor, Carlos Hernandez, declaring it TK Records Day every year on October 12.[6][citation needed]
Wolf Records was a jazz subsidiary that released only three albums, each produced by Joel Dorn:
There is a present-day Austrian record label of the same name that was founded in 1982 and specializes in releasing blues music.[7]
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