Thursday, August 29, 2019
In this excerpt from our recent volume profiling industry ballers, we explore the backstory of the RCA chief and his early involvement with hip-hop.
Growing up near Coventry, England, Edge was drawn to the music his sister listened to: longtime hitmakers such as
Otis Redding and
Marvin Gaye. “I loved all those soul records; they really spoke to me,” he told the
New York Sun. As a student at Coventry Polytechnic studying Communication Studies —film, art, psychology and sociology—he DJ’d at local radio stations, clubs and parties, and after graduating with honors, he became a music researcher/DJ for
Channel Four’s TV series
Switch, where he booked artists such as
Sade and
Grace Jones.
His work there caught the eye of
Simon Fuller, who hired him as an A&R rep at
Chrysalis Music Publishing; he subsequently moved to the label side at Chrysalis and was tasked with launching the London-based
Cooltempo imprint in 1985, in tandem with producer
Danny D. In the U.K., the label would
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release music by
Erik B and Rakim,
EPMD,
The Real Roxanne,
Slick Rick and
Doug E. Fresh, who had a significant hit with “The Show” in 1985. Edge signed the British rapper
Monie Love; the first project he A&R’d was her debut, which included the
Grammy-nominated “Monie in the Middle” and her only U.S. Top 40 hit, “It’s a Shame (My Sister).”
To Edge, these were groundbreaking musicians who would pave the way for future hitmakers such as
The Fugees,
Arrested Development and
OutKast. “These artists couldn’t get a record deal at the time—no one was interested in hip-hop, really,” he recalled. “If it hadn’t been for acts like Jungle Brothers, he says, “I don’t know whether the artists who came later would have received the recognition they did.”
Read the entire profile here.