Colgems Records

Colgems Records
Parent company Columbia-Screen Gems and RCA Records
Founded 1966
Status Defunct
Distributor(s) RCA Records

Colgems Records was a record label that existed from 1966 to 1971. It was a joint venture between Screen Gems, the television division of Columbia Pictures, and RCA Records to issue records by the Monkees and other artists affiliated with Screen Gems. The label would also issue soundtrack recordings for Screen Gems and Columbia Pictures productions. RCA acted as manufacturer and distributor for Colgems. (Outside the United States, Colgems productions appeared on the RCA Victor label.)

An earlier label, Colpix Records, was dissolved to make way for the new company, and nearly all Colpix titles went out of print. (One Colpix album was reissued on Colgems, the soundtrack to the 1962 film Lawrence of Arabia.) Even before the Monkees began, Colpix had signed two future members Davy Jones, recruited to Screen Gems by Ward Sylvester, and Michael Nesmith, who recorded as "Michael Blessing". Eventually, the Colpix catalog was sold to Roulette Records. Today, the Colpix catalog is owned jointly by Rhino/Warner and EMI.

The non-Monkees Colgems roster included Sally Field (star of Gidget and The Flying Nun), Jewel Akens, Sajid Khan (star of the MGM film and short-lived TV series Maya), Paula Wayne, P.K. Limited, the Hung Jury, Fountain of Youth, The Lewis & Clarke Expedition (whose members included Michael Martin Murphy), Hoyt Axton (who went on to write "The Pusher" for Steppenwolf and "Joy to the World" for Three Dog Night), Alex Keenan and comedian Rich Little. Soundtracks to Casino Royale, Oliver!, In Cold Blood, Head and Guess Who's Coming to Dinner were also released on Colgems.

Decline and Phase Out

Colgems Records slumped after the critical and commercial failure of the last Monkees album Changes, which featured only Davy Jones and Micky Dolenz. The label's final release, titled Barrel Full of Monkees and showcasing its flagship act, appeared in 1971 but sold poorly. Colgems then closed, and its master recordings and artists were folded into the Bell Records family, which, unlike Colgems, was wholly owned by Columbia Pictures. Bell itself would later be closed and Columbia's music division would be reorganized into Arista Records, headed by Clive Davis.

In 1979, Columbia Pictures sold Arista (including the Colgems assets) to BMG-owned Ariola Records. Six years later, Ariola's parent company, BMG, merged with RCA Records.

Today, the assets of Colgems Records (except for the Monkees' output) is controlled by Sony Music Entertainment - incidentally, parent company Sony had acquired Columbia Pictures in 1989. All of the Monkees' recordings are currently owned by Rhino Records, who licensed the group's original Colgems LP's from Arista and reissued them in the mid-1980s.

Rhino acquired the entire Monkees audio catalog, the Monkees TV series, their 1968 feature film Head, as well as rights to the Monkees name and logo, in August 1994.

SME merged Arista into RCA Records in 2011.

SGC Records

A label related to Colgems was SGC (Screen Gems-Columbia) Records. SGC issued albums by Nazz through Atlantic Records in a distribution deal similar to the one Screen Gems held with RCA.

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