Em:t Records (partially found albums of defunct record company; 1998-2004): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (a word)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{LMW
{{InfoboxLost
|title=em:t Records
|title=<center>em:t records</center>
|description=partially found albums
|startyear=1998
|timeframe=Yes
|endyear=2004
|image=emit1198.jpg
|image=emit1198.jpg
|imagecaption=Mockup of the cover art of "em:t 1198", one of the lost albums.
|imagecaption=Mockup of the cover art of "em:t 1198", one of the lost albums.
|status=Partially found
|status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Found'''</span>
|category=Lost music
}}
}}
em:t Records was a record label active from 1994 to 1998, and from 2003 to 2006. It specialized in releasing ambient music from artists such as Woob, Coco Steel & Lovebomb, Mat Jarvis (aka. Gas & High Skies), and more. The label initially went defunct in 1998 due to financial troubles, leaving two planned albums, em:t 1198 and Gas2 2298, unreleased. The first was going to be a Various Artists compilation<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20071019062630/http://www.emit.cc/release/emit1198/tracks</ref>, the other would be a second album from Gas<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20071019062153/http://www.emit.cc/release/emit2298/tracks</ref>. Some of the tracks from both albums exist on prior releases from the label, but it is unknown if all of them exist.
'''''em:t Records''''' was a record label active from 1994 to 1998, and from 2003 to 2006. It specialized in releasing ambient music from artists such as Woob, Coco Steel & Lovebomb, Mat Jarvis (aka. Gas & High Skies), and more. The label initially went defunct in 1998 due to financial troubles, leaving two planned albums, em:t 1198 and Gas2 2298, unreleased. The first was going to be a Various Artists compilation<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20071019062630/http://www.emit.cc/release/emit1198/tracks</ref>, the other would be a second album from Gas<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20071019062153/http://www.emit.cc/release/emit2298/tracks</ref>. Some of the tracks from both albums exist on prior releases from the label, but it is unknown if all of them exist.


The label had a second run from 2003 to 2006, having only 6 releases before closing down for good. One of the releases was going to be from James Murray, under the alias of Sub, in 2004<ref>https://jamesmurray.bandcamp.com/album/sub-untitled</ref>. However, only limited promo CDr copies were released. Some of the tracks were reworked into Murray's 2008 album "Where Edges Meet", but the other tracks still remain missing.
The label had a second run from 2003 to 2006, having only 6 releases before closing down for good. One of the releases was going to be from James Murray, under the alias of Sub, in 2004<ref>https://jamesmurray.bandcamp.com/album/sub-untitled</ref>. However, only limited promo CDr copies were released. Some of the tracks were reworked into Murray's 2008 album "Where Edges Meet", but the other tracks still remain missing.
==References==
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Lost music]]
[[Category:Partially found media]]

Revision as of 23:14, 24 April 2019

Emit1198.jpg

Mockup of the cover art of "em:t 1198", one of the lost albums.

Status: Partially Found

em:t Records was a record label active from 1994 to 1998, and from 2003 to 2006. It specialized in releasing ambient music from artists such as Woob, Coco Steel & Lovebomb, Mat Jarvis (aka. Gas & High Skies), and more. The label initially went defunct in 1998 due to financial troubles, leaving two planned albums, em:t 1198 and Gas2 2298, unreleased. The first was going to be a Various Artists compilation[1], the other would be a second album from Gas[2]. Some of the tracks from both albums exist on prior releases from the label, but it is unknown if all of them exist.

The label had a second run from 2003 to 2006, having only 6 releases before closing down for good. One of the releases was going to be from James Murray, under the alias of Sub, in 2004[3]. However, only limited promo CDr copies were released. Some of the tracks were reworked into Murray's 2008 album "Where Edges Meet", but the other tracks still remain missing.

References