Sugar Hill Records was the name of a
rap music record label
that was founded in 1979 by husband and wife
Joe and
Sylvia Robinson with
Milton Malden and financial funding of
Morris Levy, the owner of
Roulette Records. Joe Robinson had parlayed
a music publishing company that he established years before in New
York into the All Platinum, Stang, and Turbo record labels prior to
establishing the Sugar Hill label. Artists included his wife
Sylvia, of Mickey and Sylvia (Love is Strange) fame, The Moments
(Love on a Two Way Street), Brother to Brother,
Shirley and Company ("
Shame Shame
Shame"), Linda Jones, Jack McDuff and Chuck Jackson.
The Sugar Hill label's first record was "
Rapper's Delight" (1979) by
The Sugarhill Gang, which was also the
first Top 40
hip hop single.
Afterwards
The Sequence,
Grandmaster Flash,
Funky Four Plus One, Crash Crew,
Kool Moe Dee, The West Street Mob, and
Melle Mel joined the label. Sugar Hill's
in-house producer and arranger was
Clifton
"Jiggs" Chase. The in-house recording engineer was Steve
Jerome. Al Goodman, leader of The Moments, ran the show and George
Kerr was a major producer. Joe and Sylvia's sons Joey and Leland
were also active in the business.
In the early 1980s, the Robinsons bought Levy out. They enjoyed
several years of success, including 26 Gold Records. They also
pioneered the music video, with Sylvia producing several and a
young
Spike Lee making his first video
production depicting the White Lines record. Joe Robinson was
innovative in the business end. He was the first to introduce a
cassette single. He also worked with TVS Television Network
executive Tom Ficara to produce the
Fresh Groove TV series
to feature these music videos when MTV would not run them. The
success of
Fresh Groove forced MTV to establish
Yo! MTV Raps, and rap music videos were now on
a mainstream cable network.
However, a controversial distribution deal with
MCA Records ended up in protracted litigation,
and finally the label closed down in 1986.
In 1995,
Rhino Records purchased all
the released and unreleased masters owned by the Sugar Hill
label.
In 2002,
Sugar Hill Studios in Englewood
, New
Jersey
were destroyed by a fire. "Rapper's
Delight", "
The Message", and many
other Sugar Hill hits were recorded there.
See also