Blonde Vinyl

American independent record label From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Blonde Vinyl was an independent record label founded in 1990 by Michael Knott. The Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music describes the label as "one of Christian music's first true indie labels."[1]

Founded1990 (1990)
Defunct1993 (1993)
DistributorsSpectra, Diamante Music Group
Quick facts Founded, Founder ...
Blonde Vinyl
Founded1990 (1990)
FounderMichael Knott
Defunct1993 (1993)
DistributorsSpectra, Diamante Music Group
GenreChristian rock
Country of originU.S.
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Background

Blonde Vinyl signed bands with styles that were viable in the underground of the general market but rarely found their way into the Christian market[1]—old school punk, garage rock, grunge, gothic, EBM/industrial, synthpop/house, spoken word, acoustic pop.

A gambit in 1991 which saw Blonde Vinyl release 10 albums proved successful for a short period of time, with the company having a major fanbase among Christian teens and 20-somethings.[2] It would release albums for a two year period and carried the caption "New Alternative," which may have also introduced the official use of the word "alternative" to describe a style of music.[3]

Blonde Vinyl folded in 1993 when its distributor Spectra Distribution, Inc. went bankrupt [4] after owing Knott a great deal of money.[3][1] After bankruptcy, Knott attempted to resurrect Blonde Vinyl under the name Siren Records.[5] Siren managed two releases before going bankrupt: World Tour by LSU Cash in Chaos and Beautiful Dazzling Music No. 1 by Rainbow Rider (Dance House Children). After the failure of Siren, Knott started the band Aunt Bettys.[6]

Notable artists

Compilations

  • Blonde Vinyl Teaser I (BVCD007 - 1991)
  • Blonde Vinyl Teaser II / Food for Thought (BVCD0072 - 1991)
  • SLAVA Compilation - Voice of the People (BVCD3442 - 1992)
  • Radioactive Hits: The Definitive Blonde Vinyl Collection (84418-885-1 - 1993)[8]

See also

References

Further reading

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