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Eleven A Music Company : ウィキペディア英語版
Eleven: A Music Company

Eleven: A Music Company is an Australian record label known for its small but successful roster, currently including Birds Of Tokyo, Cold Chisel, Daniel Johns, Dustin Tebbutt, Gotye, Missy Higgins, Paul Mac and Silverchair. The company was founded on 11 November 2000 by artist manager, John Watson.
==History==
John Watson grew up in Townsville, Queensland. He worked in independent record stores there while still at high school then left Townsville with local indie band, The Spliffs in 1986. In the late 1980s Watson worked as a freelance music journalist while completing an honours degree in politics at the University of New South Wales. In 1991 he became the Sydney-based Artist and Repertoire manager for Sony Music Australia and later also became the company's Director of International Marketing. In 1994 the young rock trio Silverchair came to Watson's attention. After being jointly responsible for signing the band to the new Murmur imprint he left Sony, became Silverchair's manager and founded John Watson Management. Under Watson's guidance Silverchair had immediate worldwide commercial success and have since gone on to sell more than six million CD's and achieve five No. 1 albums in Australia.
When Silverchair's deal with Sony ended in 2000, Watson formed Eleven: A Music Company to release their works. He also signed several other successful Australian artists to the label, including Missy Higgins, Paul Mac, Kisschasy, The Dissociatives and Little Birdy. John Watson Management represents all of these artists and co-manages the another artist, Gotye.
John Watson Management also represents some Australian artists who are not signed to the Eleven label: Pete Murray (who is co-managed with Dave MacGregor), Birds of Tokyo and Cold Chisel (who are co-managed with John O'Donnell). The company also managed Wolfmother from 2005 until standing down from that role six months before the release of that band's second album in 2009.
Eleven took its name from the amplifier in the cult comedy movie ''This Is Spinal Tap''. Like that amplifier the label "seeks to go one step further in its efforts on behalf of its artists".
Eleven's releases were originally distributed in Australia, New Zealand, and Asia (except Japan) by Virgin/EMI. In the rest of the world, however, the label is of independent status and some of its artists are signed to different labels in other territories.
In July 2008, Watson announced that Eleven would be leaving EMI and joining Universal on 11 September 2008. The new deal allows Eleven and its artists to have total control over marketing and promotion and to more closely link the marketing and promotion of recordings and tours. In a statement, Watson said "Instead of the traditional approach of having one group of people trying to sell CDs while others try to sell concert tickets, artists need to be in the broader business of building enduring relationships with their audiences in all the different forms that may take. Universal Music truly understands all this, so our new deal will allow us to integrate those processes much more seamlessly."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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