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PolyEast Records

PolyEast Records
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryMusic
Founded1977 (as Canary Records)
1978 (as OctoArts International)
1995 (as OctoArts-EMI Philippines)
2002 (as EMI Philippines)
2009 (as PolyEast Records)
Headquarters
3/F, Universal Tower, 1487 Quezon Avenue, West Triangle, Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines
Key people
Ethel Cachapero
Jesmon Chua
Ton Ton Jose
Chito Ilagan
Richard Calderon
SubsidiariesGalaxy Records (Philippines)
PolyEast Entertainment Group
WebsiteOfficial Website

PolyEast Records (formerly Canary Records, OctoArts International, OctoArts EMI Music Inc. and EMI Philippines) is a Philippine record label in the Philippines.[1] It is a member of the Philippine Association of the Record Industry and from 2008 until 2013, the international licensee of EMI.

History

PolyEast Records was established in 1977 as Canary Records by Orly Ilacad after leaving Vicor Music Corporation due to a major conflict with co-founder and then co-owner Vic del Rosario. Canary Records became OctoArts International in 1978. It was the first record company that introduced "minus one" (music used for karaoke) in the market.

During the 1970s, the releases of EMI Records were distributed in the Philippines by Dyna Records under the name Dyna EMI (later remained in 1992 as Dyna EMI Virgin as a result of EMI's purchase of Virgin Records). OctoArts at that time was the distributor of Sony Music's international releases. In 1995, OctoArts began a distribution deal with EMI and became OctoArts-EMI, leading to the establishment of Sony Music Philippines. In 2002, after a series of restructure, Orly Ilacad sells their stake in the label to EMI full time and it became EMI Philippines, while Ilacad later brought Orbit Music and it eventually becomes OctoArts-Orbit Music.

The PolyEast Records label initially started as a sublabel of PolyGram Philippines (later became part of Universal Music Philippines) until it was eventually acquired by EMI Philippines. It continued being an imprint of the label until 2008 when EMI withdrew from the Southeast Asian market, it became simply PolyEast Records as a joint venture between EMI itself and Piper Paper Corporation.

In the period of 2012–2013, PolyEast became independent for the second time after EMI was absorbed into Universal Music Group (MCA Music for the Filipino market).

Notable musicians

Partnerships

See also

References

  1. ^ "PolyEast Records".
  2. ^ "Pinoy Albums » Ramrods – Can't Stop The Cha-Cha". Pinoy Albums. February 1, 1980. Retrieved October 29, 2024.
  3. ^ "Ramrods – Can't Stop The Cha Cha (1980, Vinyl)". Discogs. February 1, 1980. Retrieved October 29, 2024.
  4. ^ "Can't Stop The Cha Cha", eBay Philippines, February 1, 1980, retrieved October 29, 2024