Half a Cow
Half a Cow Records | |
---|---|
Founded | 1990 |
Founder |
Nic Dalton Miles Ferguson |
Distributor(s) |
MGM Distribution Rocket Exports |
Genre | Various |
Country of origin | Australia |
Location | Strawberry Hills, New South Wales |
Official website | Half a Cow Records |
Half a Cow is an independent record label from Australia, established in 1990 by Sydney musician and music identity Nic Dalton.
History
In 1987 - 1989 Dalton ran a bookshop (owned by Dalton's parents) in the Sydney suburb of Glebe called Dalton's Books. In late 1989, Dalton and his friend Miles Ferguson, took over the store, renamed it Half A Cow and started stocking more comics, records and tee-shirts than the 'beat' books they had been concentrating on. At the same time, they started Half A Cow Records and started working on the label's first release, Billiepeebup (hac01, released October 1990) - a 4-track recorded album of songs made between 1985 and 1989 by the Love Positions, a duo of Dalton and his then girlfriend, Robyn St Clare from The Hummingbirds. That was the label's second release (out October 1990), the first being a 10" EP called Pleasure (cow01) by the Craven Fops in March 1990.
In 1991, Half a Cow released the single Don't Want To Be Grant McLennan by Smudge (about Go-Betweens co-founder Grant McLennan), which was an indie hit, and single of the week in music magazine NME
In late 1991 Evan Dando asked Dalton to temporarily join The Lemonheads. An offer he initially turned down, but as Dando pointed out that it'd make his label known worldwide, and with persuasion from friends he did indeed join, and as expected in 1992 it gave a huge boost for Half a Cow. Before he left Half A Cow assistant, Dave Chatfield, was appointed to run the label, along with Robyn St Clare. In 1992 the label also signed a deal with Festival Records to distribute the label. Dalton's time with the Lemonheads was extended from an initial six months to two years. In 1994 the label switched distributor to Mercury Records, which was followed by a change in 1998 back to Festival Records. In early 2000 Half A Cow ended its relationship with Festival Records and now the label is completely independent and distributed through MGM Distribution. Chatfield moved to Melbourne to pursue touring with Spunk and the label is managed by Dalton.
Since its establishment in 1990 Half A Cow has put out over a hundred and forty releases by a long line of bands, including work by Dalton and bands he has been in (such as Sneeze, Godstar, a re-issue of the The Plunderers' Banana Smoothie, Honey, and his current band Nic Dalton and his Gloomchasers). As of May 2006, the label is based back in Sydney (after six years in NSW's central west and a year in outer Melbourne) where it continues to release contemporary Australian music as well as a series of re-issues by bands from the 1960s (like The Missing Links, The Purple Hearts and the Wild Cherries). The label took a break from releasing any new recordings between 2012 and 2014 but will be back with a new album from Bernie Hayes to be released in early 2015.
Documentary
Melbourne filmmaker Jarrad Kennedy is completing a documentary about Nic Dalton, covering his work as a musician and label boss for Half A Cow.
"If It's Catchy, It Means You Stole It" will be released in 2015.
Past and present roster
- 2 Litre Dolby
- Agnes Kain
- Art of Fighting
- Bernie Hayes
- Bettie Serveert
- Booster Valves
- Bruce
- The Brutals
- Captain Denim
- Carton
- Crow
- The Daisygrinders
- Craven Fops
- Dog Trumpet
- Deezleteens
- The Eastern Dark
- Fragile
- Fuzzy
- Grandview
- Glovebox
- Godstar
- Hippy Dribble
- Khancoban
- Kid Cornered
- Kim Salmon and the Business
- Kim Salmon and the Surrealists
- Love Parade
- Love Positions
- Luke Russell
- The Missing Links
- Nic Dalton
- Nic Dalton and his Gloomchasers
- The Orange Humble Band
- Papas Fritas
- Pip Proud
- The Plunderers
- Pressed Meat & the Small Goods
- the Purple Hearts
- the Raylenes
- Ruby for Lucy
- The Savages
- She Loves You Too
- Sidewinder
- The Smallgoods
- Smudge
- Sneeze
- Spdfgh
- Swirl
- Swayback
- Tendrils
- The Triangles
- The Trouble Dolls
- Vermishus
- Warmer
- We Grow Up
- Whopping Big Naughty
- the Wild Cherries
See also
References
- Stranded: The Secret History of Australian Independent Music 1977-1991, Clinton Walker, Pan MacMillan, 1996, ISBN 0-7329-0883-3.
- Interview with Nic Dalton by Roo Simpson, June 2005, at evandando.co.uk