Tuff City Records

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Tuff City Records
Founded 1981 (1981)
Founder Aaron Fuchs
Distributor(s) self-distributed
Genre Hip hop, doo-wop, dancehall
Country of origin U.S.
Location New York
Official website www.tuffcity.com

Tuff City Records is a New York-based record label founded by journalist Aaron Fuchs in 1981.[1] Initially concentrating on hip hop music, the label's roster expanded to include doo-wop, dancehall, and hip hop-jazz fusion, and releases included reissues of music from as far back as the 1940s.[1]

History

Aaron Fuchs was a journalist with Cash Box, and Tuff City was one of the earliest hip hop labels, with Fuchs quitting his job as a journalist to run the label.[1] After the label's first two releases, a distribution deal was signed with CBS Associated Records, although Tuff City severed the link after only a year.[1] The label pioneered the release of albums of break beats—the building blocks for others to use in their recordings.[1] Fuchs also bought the rights to earlier recordings that were sampled by others, bringing money into the label via licensing costs.[1][2] One of these, "Impeach the President" by the Honey Drippers, was the subject of a court case with Fuchs filing a lawsuit against Sony Music and Def Jam Recordings for illegally sampling the track on recordings by LL Cool J and EPMD.[3] The case was settled out of court.[4]

In late 1980s and early 1990s Tuff City released a string new hip hop recordings by ANTTEX, Lakim Shabazz, Mark the 45 King and YZ. In the mid-1990s, Tuff City launched the Ol' Skool Flava sub-label for reissues of classic hip hop material.[5][6] Another sub-label, Night Train International, was established to re-release Academy, Lucky Four and Magic Touch blues and rhythm and blues music. Works of Professor Longhair, James Booker, Tuts Washington and Lenny LaCour, among others, have been released by the label.[7]

In subsequent years the label began reissue projects in soul with Soul-Tay-Shus Records, funk with Funky Delicacies, and New York latin music with Andale Records. Via its subsidiary Tufamerica, Tuff City became also known for suing artists like Kanye West and the Beastie Boys for their use of samples the rights to which Tuff City acquired for this purpose.[8][9]

In another case, Tuff City sued EMI records for its failure to pay royalties to Tuff City in connection with songs credited to the late George Patterson. In that case, EMI argued that Tuff City "does no due diligence because it has no interest in finding out whether its supposed grantors actually have any rights to convey. Instead, for the small price of $1000 (which [Tuff City] failed to pay here), it simply purchases a litigation lottery ticket. The 2001 Agreement [with Patterson] and other of [Tuff City's] supposed agreements that I have seen are unconscionable, overreaching agreements that take advantage of elderly artists and writers, who are usually unrepresented by counsel, poor and in dire need of money."[10] With respect to the Patterson recordings at issue, EMI argued further that Tuff City "simply elected to ignore the information provided to it, preferring to release an album of recordings it did not own (and for which, as will be shown below, it never paid anyone)."[11]

Fuchs was also sued by his condominium in 2014 for $200,000 for allegedly twice turning his bathtub faucet on and leaving the building, causing water to flood a number of floors below his unit each time.[12]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Verna, Paul (1994) "Tuff City Records Moves Forward and Looks Back," Billboard, July 16, 1994, retrieved 2010-08-29
  2. Aswell, Tom (2010) Louisiana Rocks! The True Genesis of Rock & Roll One, Pelican, ISBN 978-1-58980-677-1, p. 125
  3. Perkins, William Eric (1995) Droppin' Science: Critical Essays on Rap Music and Hip Hop Culture, Temple University Press, ISBN 978-1-56639-362-1, p. 9
  4. Forman, Murray & Neal, Mark Anthony (eds.) (2004) That's the Joint! The Hip-hop Studies Reader, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-96918-5, p. 455
  5. Reynolds, J.R. (1995) "Tuff City Plans Aggressive Campaign for Rap Reissues," Billboard, June 24, 1995, retrieved 2010-08-29
  6. Sansone, Glen (1995) "Bonus Beats," CMJ New Music Monthly, October 1995, retrieved 2010-08-29
  7. Tuff City Records, Night Train International Product Overview. Retrieved 2012-01-02.
  8. http://www.spin.com/articles/kanye-west-my-beautiful-dark-twisted-fantasy-sample-lawsuit-tuf-america/
  9. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/thr-esq/beastie-boys-beat-lawsuit-pauls-784233
  10. TufAmerica, Inc. v EMI Music, Inc. Supreme Court, New York County, 651197/2011, docket entry 49 at fn. 5
  11. TufAmerica, Inc. v EMI Music, Inc. Supreme Court, New York County, 651197/2011, docket entry 49 at fn. 6
  12. The Board of Managers of the Residences at Worldwide Plaza v. Aaron Fuchs, Supreme Court, New York County, 652791/2014, docket entry 4 at paras. 5-10.