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Melodian Records

Melodian Records
Founded1988
FounderIan Meldrum, Michael Gudinski and Amanda Pelman
Genre
Country of originAustralia
LocationMelbourne

Melodian Records was an Australian independent record label founded in 1988 by record producer and music journalist Ian Meldrum with Michael Gudinski and Amanda Pelman. The name Melodian is a combination of 'melody' and Meldrum and Ian.[1]

Background

In July 1987, Australian music television show Countdown ended. Meldrum had hosted the show since its induction in 1974. Meldrum wanted to start a record label as he felt "so many young pop acts weren't getting a go". The first two signings were Indecent Obsession (a pop band from the Gold Coast) and Roxus (a rock band from Melbourne).[2]

The first album released on the label was Indecent Obsession's Spoken Words in November 1989. It peaked in Australia at number 28.[3]

Indecent Obsession managed to have 1 Australian Top 10 single ("Say Goodbye"), the Top 40 hits "Tell Me Something" and "Come Back To Me", and in 1992, the single "Kiss Me" was very successful in South Africa, reaching No.1 (#27 in Australia).

In 1991, TV star Jo-Beth Taylor had a top 40 hit with song "99 Reasons".

Also in 1991, Juno Roxas and his band Roxus had success with debut album "Nightstreet" (#5 ARIA Albums chart) and a Top 20 ARIA single, "Where Are You Now".

Melodian Records' biggest selling artist was Peter Andre. His single in 1992/93, "Gimme Little Sign", spent over 6 months in the ARIA charts, went Platinum and became the biggest selling Australian released single of 1993.

Former artists

See also

References

  1. ^ Meldrum, Ian and Jenkins, Ian (2015). Ian Molly Meldrum:The Never, Um, Ending Story Stories (2ns ed.). Allen & Unwin. pp. 395–396. ISBN 9781760291372.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Meldrum, Ian and Jenkins, Ian (2016). Ah Well, Nobody's Perfect: The Untold Stories (1st ed.). Allen & Unwin. p. 306. ISBN 9781760294427.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "INDECENT OBSESSION - SPOKEN WORDS (ALBUM)". Australian Charts. Retrieved 23 January 2017.